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Bộ sách Scott foresman social Studies gồm các quyển sau: 5.1 Learning About the First Americans 5.2 His Name Was Amerigo 5.3 New World, New Neighbors 5.4 Choosing Freedom 5.5 The War for Independence 5.6 The People Who Gave Us the US Constitution 5.7 Heading West 5.8 The Growing United States 5.9 Women of the Civil War 5.10 Hard Times 5.11 The War at Home 5.12 3, 2, 1, Blastoff 5.13 The Heroes of 911 5.14 Growing and Changing Cities 5.15 Visiting States and Capitals

Trang 1

Fascinating Facts

• Between 1750 and 1850 the population of Europe

doubled This contributed to immigration to

America’s cities

• In the early 1900s increasing numbers of automobiles

contributed to the continuing growth of traffic

problems in cities In 1901 New York State became

the first state to require automobile license plates

• In 1931 Jane Addams became the second woman to

receive the Nobel Peace Prize

Scott Foresman Social Studies

Genre Comprehension Skill Text Features

Nonfi ction Sequence • Graph

• Political Cartoon

• Time Line

ISBN 0-328-14903-9

Growing and

Fascinating Facts

• Between 1750 and 1850 the population of Europe

doubled This contributed to immigration to

America’s cities

• In the early 1900s increasing numbers of automobiles

contributed to the continuing growth of traffic

problems in cities In 1901 New York State became

the first state to require automobile license plates

• In 1931 Jane Addams became the second woman to

receive the Nobel Peace Prize

Scott Foresman Social Studies

Genre Comprehension Skill Text Features

Nonfi ction Sequence • Graph

• Political Cartoon

• Time Line

ISBN 0-328-14903-9

Growing and

Trang 2

ISBN: 0-328-14903-9

Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc

All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of America This publication is protected

by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited

reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means,

electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise For information regarding

permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue,

Glenview, Illinois 60025.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05

Write to It!

Immigrants continue to come to the United States

What are some reasons people want to come to this country? Consider both why people might leave their homeland and why they want to come to the United States Write three paragraphs about how the immigrant experience today is like or different from what it was in the 1800s

Write your ideas on a separate sheet of paper.

Photographs

Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material

The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions

Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education

Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd).

Opener: ©Corbis

2 ©Corbis

4 ©Corbis

5 ©The Granger Collection, NY

6 ©The Granger Collection, NY

7 ©Bettmann/Corbis

8 ©Bettmann/Corbis

9 ©National Cancer Institute

10 ©Bettmann/Corbis

12 ©Bettmann/Corbis

13 ©Corbis

Vocabulary

urbanization mechanization tenement epidemic settlement house suspend

In this book you will read about changes in the

United States in the late 1800s and early 1900s

People were moving from rural areas into the cities

There was a dramatic rise in immigration As more

and more people crowded into cities, people faced

new problems, but they also found new solutions

Editorial Offices: Glenview, Illinois • Parsippany, New Jersey • New York, New York Sales Offices: Needham, Massachusetts • Duluth, Georgia • Glenview, Illinois Coppell, Texas • Sacramento, California • Mesa, Arizona

Growing and

by Kristin Cashore

Trang 3

Moving to the Cities

The population of the United States had grown all through

the 1800s However, in the late 1800s, there was more

changing than just an increase in numbers Where people

lived, how they lived, and where they came from began to

change too

The United States had always been largely a rural,

agricultural nation At least 85 percent of all Americans lived

either on farms or in rural communities near those farms in

1850 Farms were usually small, and most people could only

raise enough food for themselves Farmers had to hire a lot of

extra workers if they wanted to raise enough crops to provide

food for nearby towns

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, urbanization contributed to

the rapid growth of cities in the United States.

3

In the late 1800s people who had lived in the country all their lives started moving to the city This move from rural

areas to cities, or urbanization, would change the United

States The country was becoming a nation of city dwellers

But why was this happening?

People from rural areas were moving to the cities to find

jobs In the 1800s mechanization had revolutionized

farming Machines now did the work that people once did

by hand Farmers could now feed far more people than ever before This meant that suddenly a lot of farm workers were without jobs

In the cities, factories were hiring many workers There were

a lot of jobs in the cities

Almost all cities in the United States grew during this period, but some cities grew more than others.

Trang 4

Immigration Increases

People in other countries also noticed that there were a lot

of jobs in America’s cities Between 1890 and 1910 more

than 10 million immigrants flooded into the country Never

before had so many come to the United States in such a short

period of time This increased the size of the cities

There were a lot of jobs, but there were not enough for

everyone Immigrants were often willing to work for lower

wages, which meant they took jobs away from American

workers This angered many workers Labor organizations and

other groups often tried to keep immigrants from entering the

country The Know-Nothing Party protested against immigrants

in the early 1850s

Job shortages and protestors were not the only problems in

the cities, however People would soon have to face a wide

range of issues, as populations continued to grow

The Know-Nothing Party held meetings to try to stop immigrants from

taking American jobs.

Opportunities and Difficulties

For most immigrants, the United States was seen as the land

of freedom and hope for a better life Because of increased opportunities, many poor people, both Americans and immigrants, did improve their lives during this period They worked hard, and many succeeded Some even became very wealthy

With more people earning and spending money, more opportunities opened up America became the most productive nation in the world However, not every story was a success story Also, the rapid growth of cities was creating new problems

This photograph shows an Italian immigrant family

in their home

Trang 5

Many immigrants and rural poor who had come to the

city could not escape poverty Those who did not have skills

or an education often had to take low-paying jobs As more

people arrived, housing became harder to find Buildings were

divided into smaller and smaller apartments, and large families

often crowded into these tiny tenements New tenement

buildings were built quickly Some were badly constructed

Cities were growing too fast! Garbage removal could not

keep up with the growth Soon streets and rivers were filthy

and unsafe There were also few parks and not enough police

or firefighters

Because so many people were living so closely together,

diseases spread quickly Epidemics of polio, tuberculosis,

smallpox, cholera, and typhoid fever killed thousands of

people An epidemic is the rapid spreading of a disease

One problem of rapid urban growth was a lack of facilities

for children, both for play and for school.

7

Political Machines Gain Strength

The cities’ problems helped political machines gain strength

A political machine is an organization that controls votes to gain power Political machines promised immigrants that they would help them if they had their vote Once elected, these candidates did what the political machine told them to do

A powerful political machine in New York City was Tammany Hall Perhaps the most famous Tammany leader was

“Boss” William M Tweed, who bribed leaders and cheated people out of money

Although most political machines were dishonest, many immigrants wanted their help They believed someone was taking their side

This political cartoon shows “Boss” Tweed welcoming a cholera epidemic Political machines benefited from the suffering

of others.

Trang 6

People Look for Real Solutions

City and federal governments worked hard trying to

solve the problems in the growing cities Individuals and

organizations helped create solutions too Organizations such

as the YMCA, YWCA, and the Salvation Army—still

well-known today—got started during this time Immigrants who

had succeeded formed groups that offered help to others

coming from their respective homelands

Scoring Points for Health

James Naismith worked at the YMCA in Springfield,

Massachusetts and later taught college He believed that

exercise was important for health He also thought it should be

fun He was worried because city children had little chance for

exercise during the winter So in 1891, with a leather ball and

two peach baskets, he created a new game—basketball The

popularity of basketball spread across the country and around

the world

James Naismith invented the game

of basketball to give city children something they could play indoors during the winter.

9

People worked to improve public health In 1870 Congress created a national health agency New immigrants arriving in the late 1800s were checked for contagious diseases Authorities treated the sick before letting them move into the cities

In New York City, Dr Joseph Kinyoun set up a laboratory in

1887 There he could study the contagious diseases that were killing so many people In 1891 Kinyoun moved his laboratory

to Washington, D.C In time, the small laboratory grew into the National Institutes of Health

Jane Addams started her famous settlement house, Hull

House, in Chicago in 1889 Jacob Riis, an immigrant from Denmark, published a book of photographs titled How the Other Half Lives in 1890 The book’s pictures of the urban

poor had a powerful effect It helped persuade New York State to pass a law in 1901 to make tenements more safe

This laboratory was set up by 27-year-old Joseph Kinyoun, a doctor who wanted to study diseases that were epidemic in the United States.

Trang 7

Growing Pains

Efforts were being made to improve health and education

Many people were working to make life better for the poor

and to create cleaner, prettier cities But cities were still

running out of space

People needed more than buildings to live in They needed

water, sewers, and garbage collection They needed stores,

doctors, and post offices

Cities had a limited amount of land on which to build As

urban populations increased, space became a real problem

What could be done?

11

Building Answers

Two things came together to help cities create more space

The first was the invention of the safety elevator Elevators were not new, but there was no way to stop them if they fell So elevators were initially used to move products, not people Then Elisha Graves Otis invented a braking system for elevators If the elevator cable broke, this system would grip the tracks on either side of the elevator, bringing the elevator

to a stop People could now ride safely Otis installed the first passenger elevator in a five-story department store in New York City in 1857

The second part of the solution was steel The Bessemer process for producing steel had been brought to the United States by Andrew Carnegie in the 1870s Because of that, good steel was suddenly widely available Steel and elevators were used in a new type of building called a skyscraper

Skyscrapers could be very tall because of the steel frame

Otis developed the safety elevator, an elevator that would stop if the cable broke

Trang 8

The Great Chicago Fire destroyed Chicago’s downtown

area in 1871 As a result, Chicago seemed like the best place

to experiment with skyscrapers The first skyscraper, the Home

Insurance Building, was completed in Chicago in 1885 It was

just ten stories tall, but it was the tallest building in the country

Taller buildings were soon being built

Rivers posed another problem Water transportation was the

main reason for the location of many big cities Many cities

had grown up with rivers running either through, or alongside

them The ferry boats used to carry people across these rivers

were getting overcrowded

Skyscrapers were soon transforming cities all around the country

This photograph of New York City was taken from the top of the

Empire State Building shortly after it opend in 1931 It has 102

floors! You can see many other skyscrapers that are not as tall.

John Roebling, a German immigrant and building engineer, thought suspension bridges might help Bridges that are

suspended are hung from massive overhead cables stretched

between tall towers at either end of the bridge They could cross rivers without blocking them Roebling combined new building methods with the strong, steel cable he had developed and built the world’s first steel suspension bridges

The New York state legislature asked him to design and build a bridge that would connect Brooklyn and the island of Manhattan Roebling designed the bridge, but he died before

it was completed His son, Washington, finished the bridge

Washington’s wife, Emily, helped him after he became ill

When it opened in 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge was the longest bridge in the world

The Brooklyn Bridge in New York City connected Brooklyn to the island of Manhattan.

Trang 9

Cities also began to create new forms of public

transportation Some cities built elevated trains, trains that

were supported by steel structures that held them one or two

stories above street level New York’s elevated train opened in

1870 and Chicago’s in 1892

Next, engineers began to consider going down, under

the streets Many cities began experimenting with this idea,

but it was Boston, Massachusetts, that, in 1897, opened the

country’s first successful underground train system, or subway

1852 Elisha Graves Otis creates the first safety elevator.

1845 World’s first modern

suspension bridge

completed in Pittsburgh, PA.

1856 English inventor Henry Bessemer invents a new way

of producing strong steel at affordable prices.

Some Events that Changed

City Life in the United States

15

Cities Yesterday and Today

During the late 1800s and early 1900s, the United States began to change from a rural nation to an urbanized nation It was a period that began to create the modern United States

It gave rise to much of what we consider normal for big cities today, from traffic jams to subways to skyscrapers

Many of the things that started during this time are still part of our lives The first department stores opened during this period The first shopping catalogs came out Street lights began to line the roads And as you read, elevators, skyscrapers, and public health programs were introduced

Today, city governments still struggle to keep up with city growth And today, immigrants continue to arrive, looking for opportunities in a land that still offers hope

1882 First power station opened

in New York.

1885 First skyscraper completed in Chicago.

1897 Country’s first successful subway system opened in Boston, MA.

1887 Joseph Kinyoun builds a laboratory that is the foundation of the National Institutes of Health.

1871 Great Chicago Fire

1889 Jane Addams opens Hull House.

1891 James Naismith invents basketball.

Trang 10

epidemic the rapid spread of a disease, so that many

people have it at the same time

mechanization the use of machines to do work

settlement house a place that provides help for

immigrants and the poor

suspend to hang by fastening to something above

tenement a building divided into many small

apartments

urbanization the movement of people from rural areas

to the city

16

ISBN: 0-328-14903-9

Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc

All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of America This publication is protected

by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited

reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means,

electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise For information regarding

permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue,

Glenview, Illinois 60025.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05

Write to It!

Immigrants continue to come to the United States

What are some reasons people want to come to this country? Consider both why people might leave their homeland and why they want to come to the United States Write three paragraphs about how the immigrant experience today is like or different from what it was in the 1800s

Write your ideas on a separate sheet of paper.

Photographs

Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material

The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions

Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education

Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd).

Opener: ©Corbis

2 ©Corbis

4 ©Corbis

5 ©The Granger Collection, NY

6 ©The Granger Collection, NY

7 ©Bettmann/Corbis

8 ©Bettmann/Corbis

9 ©National Cancer Institute

10 ©Bettmann/Corbis

12 ©Bettmann/Corbis

13 ©Corbis

Vocabulary

urbanization mechanization tenement epidemic settlement house suspend

In this book you will read about changes in the

United States in the late 1800s and early 1900s

People were moving from rural areas into the cities

There was a dramatic rise in immigration As more

and more people crowded into cities, people faced

new problems, but they also found new solutions

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