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With Help from Susan M. Pojer

Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

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Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture. With Help from Susan M. Pojer. Megalopolis. Mass Transit. Magnet for economic and social opportunities. Pronounced class distinctions. - Inner & outer core New frontier of opportunity for women. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

With Help from Susan M. Pojer

Page 2: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Characteristics of Urbanization

During the Gilded Age1. Megalopolis.2. Mass Transit.3. Magnet for economic and social

opportunities.4. Pronounced class distinctions.

- Inner & outer core5. New frontier of opportunity for women.6. Squalid living conditions for many.7. Political machines.8. Ethnic neighborhoods.

Page 3: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

NewArchitectural

Style

NewUse ofSpace

NewClass

DiversityNew Energy

New Culture(“Melting Pot”)

New Form ofClassic “RuggedIndividualism”

New Levels of Crime,

Violence, &Corruption

Make a NewStart

NewSymbols ofChange &Progress

The City as aNew “Frontier?”

Page 4: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture
Page 5: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

William Le Baron Jenney

1832 – 1907

“Father of the ModernSkyscraper”

Page 6: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

W. Le Baron

Jenney:

CentralY.M.C.A., Chicago,

1891

Page 7: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Louis Sullivan 1856 – 1924 The Chicago

School ofArchitecture

Form followsfunction!

Page 8: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Louis Sullivan: Bayard Bldg., NYC, 1897

Page 9: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Louis Sullivan: Carson, Pirie, Scott Dept. Store, Chicago,

1899

Page 10: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Frank Lloyd Wright 1869 – 1959 “Prairie

House”School of Architecture

“OrganicArchitecture”

Function follows form!

Page 11: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Frank Lloyd Wright:Allen-Lamb House, 1915

Page 12: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Frank Lloyd Wright:“Falling Waters”, 1936

Page 13: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

F. L. Wright Glass Screens

Prairie wheat patterns.

Page 14: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Frank Lloyd Wright:Guggenheim Museum, NYC

- 1959

Page 15: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture
Page 16: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

New York City Architectural Style:

1870s-1910s1. The style was less innovative thanin Chicago.

2. NYC was the source of the capital for Chicago.

3. Most major business firms had their headquarters in NYC their bldgs. became “logos” for their companies.

4. NYC buildings and skyscrapers were taller than in Chicago.

Page 17: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Western

Union Bldg,. NYC - 1875

Page 18: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Manhattan

LifeInsurance

Bldg.

NYC - 1893

Page 19: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

SingerBuilding

NYC - 1902

Page 20: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Woolworth

Bldg.

NYC - 1911

Page 21: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

FlatironBuilding

NYC – 1902D. H.

Burnham

Page 22: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Grand Central Station, 1913

Page 23: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

St. Patrick’s

Cathedral

Page 24: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

John A. Roebling:The Brooklyn Bridge, 1883

Page 25: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

John A. Roebling:The Brooklyn Bridge, 1913

Page 26: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Statue of Liberty, 1876(Frederic Auguste Bartholdi)

Page 27: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

“Dumbell “ Tenement

Page 28: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

“Dumbell “ Tenement, NYC

Page 29: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Jacob Riis:

How the Other Half

Lived(1890)

Page 30: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Tenement Slum Living

Page 31: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Lodgers Huddled Together

Page 32: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Tenement Slum Living

Page 33: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Struggling Immigrant Families

Page 34: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Mulberry Street – “Little Italy”

Page 35: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Hester Street – Jewish Section

Page 36: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

1900Rosh

Hashanah

GreetingCard

Page 37: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Pell St. - Chinatown, NYC

Page 38: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Urban Growth: 1870 - 1900

Page 39: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Immigration

Page 40: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Changes in Immigration Patterns• The years between

1870 and 1920 saw one of the greatest surges of immigrants to America. Until 1890, most of these immigrants came from Northern and Western Europe, just like many of the original European immigrants to America.

Page 41: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Changes in Immigration Patterns

• On the west coast, immigrants from China began arriving for the Gold Rush in 1849, but many ended up working on the railroads or starting farms; after 1882 Congress limited Chinese immigration.

Page 42: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Changes in Immigration Patterns

• After 1890, the immigrating population changed to people coming from Southern and Eastern Europe, countries such as Italy, Austria-Hungary, and Russia. During this time almost a million people also immigrated from Mexico and the West Indies.

Page 43: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Why the New Immigration?

• Rapidly growing population in the Old World• Industrialization in Europe and the importation of American food disturbed the position of the peasant• “America Fever”• Persecutions of minorities in Europe• Birds of Passage

Page 44: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Being a New Immigrant• Discrimination at work• Generation Gap• Struggle to assimilate• Bintel Brief

Page 45: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Taking Care of the New Immigrants

• Originally taken care of by city “bosses”• “Christian Socialist” preachers• Jane Addams and Hull House

– Settlement Houses• Florence Kelley – Socialism, Rights, and the Henry Street Settlement (founded by Lillian Wald)

Page 46: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Changes Brought by the New Immigration

• Women in the work force– Mostly single– Helped family and still had some pocket money

• Brought more economic and social independence

Page 47: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Nativism• Nativism: Preferential treatment towards native born Americans

– Especially Anglo Saxon, Protestants– The American Protective Association (1887)

• Organized labor fought new immigration because poor immigrants were willing to take lower wages

Page 48: Urbanization As Seen Through Late 19c - Early 20c Architecture

Government Sponsored Nativism

• 1882: Close gates to all paupers, criminals, and convicts + Chinese Exclusion Act

• 1885: Prohibited the importation of foreign workers under contract

• 1890’s: Expanded list of undesirables to include: insane, polygamists, prostitutes, alcoholics, anarchists, and people with contagious diseases

• 1917: Literacy Test