The
Rise of the American City

New
York City's first skyscraper, the Tower Building, 1889
"What shall we do with
our great cities? What will our great cities do with us...?[T]he
question...does not concern the city alone. The whole country is affected...by
the condition of its great cities.
Lyman
Abbott, 1891
"The greater part
of our population must live in cities--cities much greater than the world has
yet known. In due time we shall be a nation of cities."
Josiah
Strong, 1898
I. Sources of Urbanization
A. As steam replaced
water power for mills, industries concentrated geographically (ironmakers in
Pittsburgh, meat-packing in Chicago, Haverhill, Massachusetts in shoes, etc.)
B. Large-scale
production instantly created small cities of workers--company towns dominated
by one industry.
C. Gateways for
immigrants (New York, Boston, San Francisco) provided abundant cheap labor.
II. Problems of the
City
A. Mass transit
1. Until 1890, the
horsecar (using railroad tracks) accounted for 70% of city traffic.
Limitations:
a. Slow
b. Limited pulling
power
c. Left piles of
manure
2. Cable cars (first
used in San Francisco in 1873) and electric trolley cars (Richmond, 1887) with
overhead power lines replaced horses in many cities
B. Overcrowding in
tenements
C. Poor sanitation,
inadequate water supplies
IV. Corruption in
the City
A. Police forces
(separate from the military and controled by local officials) established to
maintain law and order
1. Poorly defined
duties
2. Ineffective in
controlling theft, prostitution, gambling
3. Symbiotic relationships
developed between police and institutions, such as saloons, they were supposed
to oversee
4. Reform came slowly,
as independent police commissions were established to control bribery and graft
B. Political bosses
emerged, controlling city machines
1. Ward captains
turned out voters on election day
2. Jobs handed out as
political favors, as were tax breaks and licenses
3. While some machines
provided welfare services, opportunities for corruption were great
a. Boss Tweed in New
York's Tammany Hall controlled 60,000 jobs. He was arrested, bribed his way out
of jail, escaped, re-caught and finally died in jail.
b. Big Jim Pendergast
held absolute power in Kansas City, controlling gambling and liquor licenses
V. Battling the City's
Problems
A. Reformers sought to
counter poverty and other urban problems by focusing on moral uplift
1. YMCAs and YWCAs
formed to provide housing and recreation opportunities
2. Salvation Army
effective in providing emergency aid, housing, street kitchens
3. Comstock laws
sought to close down gambling, pornography, prostitution, and Sunday liqour
sales.
B. Social Gospel
sought to apply teachings of Jesus' to the problems of urban society. Blame for
problems did not rest with the poor, but with society.
1. Washington Gladden--true
Christianity requires churchgoers to fight social injustice
2. Walter
Rauschenbusch--Christianity and the Social Crisis. Churches should unite to
reform the abuses of industry and fight for peace.
C. Settlement
Houses--founded by Jane Addams to offer literacy classes, crafts classes, job
training, and a sense of dignity to urban dwellers, particularly immigrants