American Society - Social Flashcards
Introduction:
Between the end of the Civil War in 1865 and 1890, the United States experienced the growing pains of a great nation. The dynamic expansion of the United States, in territory, in population, and in economic growth, led to massive social and cultural changes. These changes had many positive effects and were frequently regarded with enthusiastic approval by many Americans, foreign observers, and by millions of immigrants coming to America in search of freedom and a better economic future. But the rapid transformation of American society exacerbated existing divisions and also created new ones
Nation of immigrants:
Immigrants to the United States in the nineteenth century (1800s) came mostly from northern Europe. From the 1820s, many Scandinavians settled in the Midwest and the Great Lakes region. Many German-speaking immigrants came too, especially the ‘Forty-Eighters’ who left Europe after the failed 1848-49 revolution
From the 1840s there was a surge in emigration from Ireland after the great famine. Later waves of emigrants were drawn to areas already settled by their compatriots, reassured by familiar language and customs
Immigration to the United States, 1861-90
- 1861-70: 2.3 million
- 1871-80: 2.9 million
- 1881-90: 5.2 million
Mass immigration:
The United States was already a nation of immigrants long before 1865. The original Thirteen Colonies were populated by settlers from northern Europe. In the nineteenth century, new waves of immigrants landed in America, mostly Germans, Swedes, Irish and Scots. After the American Civil War a new surge began: from the 1860s to 1890 there were more than 10 million immigrants
Immigration to the United States was pulled in by powerful social and economic forces (pull factors). There was empty land to be filled, expanding industries in need of a labour force, and, among most Americans, a willingness to welcome new arrivals to the ‘land of the free’. The Statue of Liberty that dominated New York harbour from 1886 was a potent symbol of this. Many immigrants were actively recruited by shipping companies. Systems were put in place to facilitate entry to America, notably a reception centre for arriving immigrants at Castle Garden on the southern tip of Manhattan Island in New York
Where immigrants settled:
The early waves of Scandinavian and German immigrants mostly settled in rural areas. Irish immigrants were more likely to settle in urban areas, such as New York, Boston and Chicago. As industrialisation and urbanisation developed, more and more immigrants were sucked into the expanding towns and cities. The immigrants were not all from Europe. Many thousands of non-Europeans also arrived, many of them Chinese labourers employed in the construction of western sections of the great transcontinental railroads
Many Americans believed optimistically that the ‘melting pot’ of the United States would forge new American citizens, though there were also pessimists who worried about possible tensions between peoples of so many different languages and religions
Demographic change of immigrants:
Mass immigration was part of significant demographic change. The population increased sharply, not only because of immigration but also because death rates declined and more people lived longer. There was also a shift in population through urbanisation, as industrialisation and improvements in transportation drew people into the expanding towns and cities
The population patterns of the growing towns and cities reflected the influx of immigrants. Districts of big cities became ‘Irish’, or ‘German’, or ‘Chinatown’. The suburb of Over-the-Rhine in Cincinnati in Ohio became a community of unmistakably German cultural traditions. Milwaukee in Wisconsin became a German American city of breweries and German-language newspapers
The consequences of immigration and urbanisation for American society and culture:
The speed and intensity of immigration created tensions and social divisions. New immigrant communities were often regarded with suspicion and hostility; they were seen as a threat to jobs, or to existing social and cultural norms. Nativism (the preserving of American values against ‘alien’ ways from American’s whose parents were born in the US) grew, as groups tried to preserve established American values from foreign influences. There were tensions between ‘new’ immigrants and those who had settled in the previous generation. Within immigrant communities, even within families or within the same person, there were contradictory feelings: on the one hand wishing to be a good American, on the other hand wanting to cling to the old ways
Yellow Peril:
These tensions often reflected class prejudices and racial or religious prejudices. There was a particularly strong reaction against Chinese Americans, with newspapers and politicians campaigning fiercely to stop the ‘Yellow Peril’ of Chinese immigration. This pressure pushed Congress into passing the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882, stopping the immigration of skilled or unskilled Chinese workers. It prevented Chinese people already in the US from gaining American citizenship, and made it hard for them to return if they visited China
The term ‘Yellow Peril’ is thought to have been first used in 1895 by the German Emperor, Wilhelm II, but it expressed a race-conscious fear of the rise of China and Japan that was already current in Britain and the United States
Intolerance towards Chinese Americans:
American attitudes towards Chinese immigrants in the 1870s and 1880s were complex. Chinese immigrants had started coming into California at the time of the 1849 Gold Rush and had established settled communities in West Coast cities, especially San Francisco. In the 1860s, thousands of Chinese labourers were brought in to work on the construction of the western sections of the Union Pacific railroad. Afterwards, many of them moved to swell the existing Chinese American communities in California. Chinese workers provided half the labour force for San Francisco’s key industries: boots and shoes, wool textiles, tobacco and cigar-making, and sewing. Many Chinese also worked on the farms, especially in fruit-growing
Chinese workers were cheap, hard-working and caused few social disturbances. Many employers admired their disciplined work ethic; some Southern plantation owners thought the Chinese would make far better workers than black freedmen. But in many parts of white society, Chinese, African-Americans and Native Americans were lumped together as ‘coloured’ and ‘alien’. The economic depression that followed the 1873 stock market panic also accentuated fears that cheap Chinese labour would undermine white workers. By 1879, President Hayes was warning America about the ‘present Chinese invasion’ - the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed by Congress three years later. The Act was the first-ever restriction on immigration to specify a particular ethnic group. It was originally to run for ten years, but it was renewed in 1892 and again in 1902. It was finally repealed in 1943
Social divisions - Granger movement:
Social divisions were not all related to the consequences of mass immigration. Reacting against the rise of industrial capitalism, farmers and workers set up organisations such as the Granger movement and the Knights of Labor to defend their interests. The emerging middle classes organised pressure groups to fight back against the rise of big business
The National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry (Granger Movement) was founded in 1867 with the aim of bringing farmers together to promote agriculture and the community; the movement gained strong support in the South and West and was al forerunner of Populism (putting forward policies that your supporters want in order to secure their vote)
Social divisions - Female Suffrage:
Another widening division was the struggle for female suffrage (women’s right to vote) and social equality for women. The fight for women’s rights was already being fought before the Civil War. The Seneca Falls convention in 1848 launched the feminist campaign for female suffrage; women’s groups were active in the temperance movement - which campaigned for restrictions on alcohol, and the fight to abolish slavery. The struggle for women’s rights touched on many social divisions: between feminists and the men who resisted their cause, and between conservative and radical women’s groups, who split apart on the issue of voting rights for African-American males being given priority in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments at the expense of women, black and white
The split of female suffrage:
The split between radical women’s leaders such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, and the more conservative wing of the women’s movements, lasted for more than 20 years until 1890, when a unified National American Women’s Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was established. It was not until 1920 that Congress finally passed the Nineteenth Amendment, often referred to as the ‘Susan B. Anthony Amendment’, which ensured universal female suffrage; but the campaigns of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Anthony had lasting influence
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902):
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a leading figure in the fight for female suffrage from 1848, when she took part in the Seneca Falls convention; she was also a prominent campaigner for the abolition of slavery. After the Civil War, Stanton caused a split in the women’s movement by not supporting the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, because she insisted that women’s voting rights should be equal to those of African-American males. In 1890 she became president of the reunified National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). In 1892 she was part of a female delegation presenting the argument for female suffrage to Congress
Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906):
Susan B. Anthony was a social reformer and campaigner for voting rights for women, the abolition of slavery and the temperance movement. She worked closely with Elizabeth Cady Stanton; they founded the American Equal Rights Association in 1866. In 1872, Anthony was arrested and fined for voting in the mid-term elections. In 1878 she played a key role in presenting to Congress a constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote. Congress finally passed the ‘Susan B. Anthony Amendment’ in 1921, 15 years after she died
Regional divisions: The North and East
The effects of industrialisation, urbanisation and shifts in population were most notable in the North and East, in the booming cities and economic hubs of New York, Chicago, the Great Lakes, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Between 1860 and 1890, the population of New York City doubled; in those years the population of Chicago increased tenfold, from just over 100,000 to more than 1 million. It was in the North and East that urban populations grew fastest, railroads made their biggest impact, and big business had the greatest influence over state and federal governments
Tensions caused by the power of the railroads boiled over in the Great Railroad Strike of July 1877. This began at Martinsburg in West Virginia, with workers fighting wage cuts by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Unrest soon spread into Maryland, where there was street fighting between strikers and troops of the National Guard. Strikes then broke out in Pennsylvania, with violent clashes in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, where the Union rail depot was set on fire and more than 40 people were killed by militiamen. There were also major confrontations in Chicago and St Louis. After two weeks of upheaval, President Hayes sent several thousand federal troops to restore order
Mass immigration and rapid urbanisation brought ethnic tensions and social unrest to major cities, with threats of gang warfare and serious outbreaks of violence, such as the Orange Riots between Irish Protestants and Irish Catholics in New York in 1870 and 1871. Powerful Irish gangs dominated Chicago’s South Side from the 1870s, terrorising immigrant groups who arrived in the city, such as Italians, Jews and Poles