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Ashley Rubio
   HIST 141
Episode # 2
“Order and Disorder”
        1825-1865

    As a city on the brink of
revolutionary growth, New York
transforms from one of American
simplicity to a metropolis in the
making.
    From the 1800s to the 1900s
we see population skyrocket fifty
times over.
    As the city grows its inhibitors
contemplate whether a new order
can be created or will the city
explode into anarchy…

   1825- The Erie Canal opens flooding the city of New York with people and culture
  world wide. City shore lines are developed miles at a time for years.
  1830- Industrialization of Manhattan booms creating workforce unmatched by
  anytime preceding. Manhattan becomes the first and largest district to be directly solely
  for the purpose of commerce. Hundreds and thousands of businesses and shops are built
  fueling competition.
Episode # 2
                                                                         “Order and Disorder”
                                                                                 1825-1865



  As growth became too overwhelming, society looked upon news papers to keep them
informed of their surroundings.
 1841- Walt Whitman came to the city like many others to find work. Found work at a
penny newspaper called the “Aurora” following in the same foot steps of the great James
Gordon Bennett.
          - Bennett founded the most successful paper of the time, The New York Herald, the first
          of which to be completely independent from a political party and play a master role in the
          birth of modern journalism .
 Influence by his years as a newspaper man, to entice the vast and diverse
public, Phineus T. Barnum opened the American Museum in 1841.
          --- Until this point on one had managed to cater to the differences in people.
          --- The museum included: a mermaid from Fiji, a midget named Tom Thumb, and a 3,000
          seat lecture room for the middle class.
 throughout Barnum’s 27 year run of the American Museum he sold an overwhelming
42 million tickets, 7 million more than the total inhibitors of the country at that point.
The Great Migration :1845 to 1855
                                      Began on the heels of the Great Potato
                                     Famine of Ireland in 1845.
                                     Caused a record setting migration of 1.5
                                     million Irish settlers by sail boat, as opposed
                                     to stream boat which was popular of the time.

Central Park
    To answer the lack of escape for dwellers of the great metropolis of
    commerce in New York City, Mayor Fernando Wood requested for entrees
    of a future park.
    Entry #33 submitted by both Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert
    Vaux, would soon become one of the most wondrous man made landscape
    of its time and its future.
     By the Spring of „59 only a portion of Central Park had been completed
    and already spanned 1,843 archers.
Episode # 3
“Sunshine and Shadow”
         1865-1898



   As we see ground          1865- Olmsted returns after the Civil War to complete
breaking                    Central Park eight years later.
happenings, such as the      It is estimated that for years following its finishing the
construction of Central     park draws nearly eight and a half million wanderers a
Park finish, we also are    year.
reminded of the             Leading into the 1870s the population of the city grows
overwhelming divide         to an alarming 5 million with the poles of its
between the poor and        socioeconomic scale spanning farther apart than ever
the wealthy that both       before.
reside in the confines of
the City.
   The decades
following the Civil War
will prove to be some of
the toughest
socioeconomically we
will see in New York’s
history.
Capitalizing on the City
 Cornelius Vanderbilt-
           -- After successfully maneuvering the shipping market, Vanderbilt locked
           in on the railroad industry.
           -- He understood the game of industry and epitomized the ideal of greed.
     “Put the roads there, and the people will live there.”
Jay Gould & Jim Fisk-
           -- In 1869, Gould and Fisk took to Wall Street in attempts to corner the
           Gold market.
           -- The money the two used was the amount embezzled from investments
           in the Erie Railroad.
John Augustus Roebling-
           -- On January 26, 1867 the East River froze over leaving all ships docked
           and shed light on a problem most had hoped would never surface.
           -- The need for a Bridge to open the doors to expansion of the every growing city
           was the answer. Roebling would draft a plan for the Brooklyn bridge that would
           stretch over 1,600 feet long and tower 275 feet high in order to connect Upper
           Manhattan to Brooklyn which could expand endlessly to Long Island.
Near the end of
the century during
the 1890s we see an
influx of millionaires
within the city of
New York. It has
become a mark of
wealth to flaunt the
riches one owns to
prove their status to
those around them.          However, with the unveiling of the Statue of
Nearly 1,800 from       Liberty on October 28, 1886 , the city is reminded of
cities like Chicago      the mass amount of “common” folk whom have long to
and Philadelphia         reach this New World where opportunity lives. Five
came to form what        days after the unveiling , Henry George united by the
would be 5th             Labor Party, attempted to run for Mayor of New York
Street, one of the       supported by the migrant poor. He was beat by a
wealthiest area of       wealthy tycoon.
the city.
A Merger That Puts
New York on Top
   By Mike Clough


  The article circles around the question
of whether or not New York can                 Clough also hints at the fact that
successfully dominate and capitalize         thought other regions are dominating
industry in the new American age as it       in their own right, they only manage
did in the old one.                          to monopolize on one market.
 the author believes that because of
New York’s overwhelming abilities from
its past there are no questions for its
drive in the future.
 Strong points that were true then and
now are: the ideally place port in w is
open to several industries and its ability
to grasp economic gains from profitable
markets originally from other regions.
 AOL is suggested to root itself in New
York to capitalize the e-commerce
market.
Immigrant and Cities:
                              The City in the Land of the Dollar


     What makes a good
            city?
    Around the country
even today we see fair
shares of cities whose
main purpose is to
produce and those whose
production comes
unforced but in lower
quantity.
    Is there a reason why
even tough American
cities are profitable, they
are by no means the
perfect post card image?
  We investigate Chicago.
 After the Great Fire in Chicago, to question of
how to rebuild the city arose. Chicago was built in
the commercialized and industrial time erected
much differently.
 They were able to adapt their new city to the
elevated technologies of the time capitalizing on
the invention of elevators allowing the city to
grow not only outward but upward as well.
 The use of steel benefited in several ways. A
steel frame not only was cheaper but allowed levels
to be built quicker and more soundly.
 It is in Chicago where the trend of skyscrapers
originator almost overnight .
 Housing also expanded and evolved as the city
grew. For the first time city living became
convenient to works who could rent a near by
apartment just blocks from work.
Rebuilding the city was not only able making what was there new, it was about
finding to new ways of profiting from the change. Like Olmsted did in New York, there
was a demand for urbanized parks and recreations to draw in the public. Also credited to
Olmsted was the creation of Midway Plaisance, created on fair grounds that span over
600 acres, which includes the worlds first Ferris wheel which carried 1,500 passengers.
          Chicago to this day had proved itself to be one of the most innovated city
always improving what it has and expanding the bounds it has reached.

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American urbanization & new york city

  • 1. Ashley Rubio HIST 141
  • 2. Episode # 2 “Order and Disorder” 1825-1865 As a city on the brink of revolutionary growth, New York transforms from one of American simplicity to a metropolis in the making. From the 1800s to the 1900s we see population skyrocket fifty times over. As the city grows its inhibitors contemplate whether a new order can be created or will the city explode into anarchy…  1825- The Erie Canal opens flooding the city of New York with people and culture world wide. City shore lines are developed miles at a time for years. 1830- Industrialization of Manhattan booms creating workforce unmatched by anytime preceding. Manhattan becomes the first and largest district to be directly solely for the purpose of commerce. Hundreds and thousands of businesses and shops are built fueling competition.
  • 3. Episode # 2 “Order and Disorder” 1825-1865  As growth became too overwhelming, society looked upon news papers to keep them informed of their surroundings.  1841- Walt Whitman came to the city like many others to find work. Found work at a penny newspaper called the “Aurora” following in the same foot steps of the great James Gordon Bennett. - Bennett founded the most successful paper of the time, The New York Herald, the first of which to be completely independent from a political party and play a master role in the birth of modern journalism .  Influence by his years as a newspaper man, to entice the vast and diverse public, Phineus T. Barnum opened the American Museum in 1841. --- Until this point on one had managed to cater to the differences in people. --- The museum included: a mermaid from Fiji, a midget named Tom Thumb, and a 3,000 seat lecture room for the middle class.  throughout Barnum’s 27 year run of the American Museum he sold an overwhelming 42 million tickets, 7 million more than the total inhibitors of the country at that point.
  • 4. The Great Migration :1845 to 1855  Began on the heels of the Great Potato Famine of Ireland in 1845. Caused a record setting migration of 1.5 million Irish settlers by sail boat, as opposed to stream boat which was popular of the time. Central Park To answer the lack of escape for dwellers of the great metropolis of commerce in New York City, Mayor Fernando Wood requested for entrees of a future park. Entry #33 submitted by both Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, would soon become one of the most wondrous man made landscape of its time and its future.  By the Spring of „59 only a portion of Central Park had been completed and already spanned 1,843 archers.
  • 5. Episode # 3 “Sunshine and Shadow” 1865-1898 As we see ground  1865- Olmsted returns after the Civil War to complete breaking Central Park eight years later. happenings, such as the  It is estimated that for years following its finishing the construction of Central park draws nearly eight and a half million wanderers a Park finish, we also are year. reminded of the Leading into the 1870s the population of the city grows overwhelming divide to an alarming 5 million with the poles of its between the poor and socioeconomic scale spanning farther apart than ever the wealthy that both before. reside in the confines of the City. The decades following the Civil War will prove to be some of the toughest socioeconomically we will see in New York’s history.
  • 6. Capitalizing on the City  Cornelius Vanderbilt- -- After successfully maneuvering the shipping market, Vanderbilt locked in on the railroad industry. -- He understood the game of industry and epitomized the ideal of greed. “Put the roads there, and the people will live there.” Jay Gould & Jim Fisk- -- In 1869, Gould and Fisk took to Wall Street in attempts to corner the Gold market. -- The money the two used was the amount embezzled from investments in the Erie Railroad. John Augustus Roebling- -- On January 26, 1867 the East River froze over leaving all ships docked and shed light on a problem most had hoped would never surface. -- The need for a Bridge to open the doors to expansion of the every growing city was the answer. Roebling would draft a plan for the Brooklyn bridge that would stretch over 1,600 feet long and tower 275 feet high in order to connect Upper Manhattan to Brooklyn which could expand endlessly to Long Island.
  • 7. Near the end of the century during the 1890s we see an influx of millionaires within the city of New York. It has become a mark of wealth to flaunt the riches one owns to prove their status to those around them. However, with the unveiling of the Statue of Nearly 1,800 from Liberty on October 28, 1886 , the city is reminded of cities like Chicago the mass amount of “common” folk whom have long to and Philadelphia reach this New World where opportunity lives. Five came to form what days after the unveiling , Henry George united by the would be 5th Labor Party, attempted to run for Mayor of New York Street, one of the supported by the migrant poor. He was beat by a wealthiest area of wealthy tycoon. the city.
  • 8. A Merger That Puts New York on Top By Mike Clough  The article circles around the question of whether or not New York can Clough also hints at the fact that successfully dominate and capitalize thought other regions are dominating industry in the new American age as it in their own right, they only manage did in the old one. to monopolize on one market.  the author believes that because of New York’s overwhelming abilities from its past there are no questions for its drive in the future.  Strong points that were true then and now are: the ideally place port in w is open to several industries and its ability to grasp economic gains from profitable markets originally from other regions.  AOL is suggested to root itself in New York to capitalize the e-commerce market.
  • 9. Immigrant and Cities: The City in the Land of the Dollar What makes a good city? Around the country even today we see fair shares of cities whose main purpose is to produce and those whose production comes unforced but in lower quantity. Is there a reason why even tough American cities are profitable, they are by no means the perfect post card image? We investigate Chicago.
  • 10.  After the Great Fire in Chicago, to question of how to rebuild the city arose. Chicago was built in the commercialized and industrial time erected much differently.  They were able to adapt their new city to the elevated technologies of the time capitalizing on the invention of elevators allowing the city to grow not only outward but upward as well.  The use of steel benefited in several ways. A steel frame not only was cheaper but allowed levels to be built quicker and more soundly.  It is in Chicago where the trend of skyscrapers originator almost overnight .  Housing also expanded and evolved as the city grew. For the first time city living became convenient to works who could rent a near by apartment just blocks from work.
  • 11. Rebuilding the city was not only able making what was there new, it was about finding to new ways of profiting from the change. Like Olmsted did in New York, there was a demand for urbanized parks and recreations to draw in the public. Also credited to Olmsted was the creation of Midway Plaisance, created on fair grounds that span over 600 acres, which includes the worlds first Ferris wheel which carried 1,500 passengers. Chicago to this day had proved itself to be one of the most innovated city always improving what it has and expanding the bounds it has reached.