Tuesday, February 28, 2017

newspaper articles as artifacts of progressivism

welcome back history fans!! it's been a while since i have written a blog post lol! today we got to research this awesome newspaper archive to find different terms used during the Progressive Era. the term that i decided to research about was "factory fire", it brought up almost 4 million results!! once i narrowed it down into a more specific time era (1916-1917) the number was still pretty large, 235,965! what this number means is that the phrase "factory fire" appeared in newspapers 235,965 times!

here are my notes from source #1:

  • talked a lot about how much the city lost from all the damages caused by the fires
  • talked about one massive chemical plant that exploded in London
  • 217 fires occurred just in the city of Topeka, Kansas and only during July
  • most causes for the fires
    • 2 fires caused by hot or malten metal (resulted in the greatest losses)
    • 53 fires that the cause was unknown
    • 9 fires caused by fireworks/firecrackers
    • lightning caused 28 fires
    • matches were the cause of 20 fires
  • total damages cost $224,272
seeing how many fires happened in just one month of a very small town in kansas i was shocked, and i was like, hmmm if that small city had 217 fires in july I wonder how many fires happened in the bigger cities like pennsylvania or new york. i decided to research on the web and find one of the worst fires in US history and i found one.

  • the great chicago fire 1871
    • entire newspaper is all about the damages of chicago fire
    • "the business portion of the city in ashes. 50,000 people left house-less. no hope for the city. the fire covers thirty-three squares in length and thirteen in breadth."
    • the wind was the biggest culprit of the fire spreading
      • "the flames swept through the city with the rapidity of a prairie fire, and many must have perished."
    • the water works are entirely destroyed
      • "they are now blowing up buildings on the line of the fire to attempt to arrest the progress of the flames."
      • they were literally blowing up buildings to get the fire to stop moving
      • i mean they were desperate
    • most of the buildings claimed to be fire proof
    • cost 150 million to repair
    • bakeries and penitentiaries were busy working every night cooking bread and meats to send to chicago
    • had reports on all the different cities in indiana and ohio talking about the fire and all the excitement and preparation the this fire caused
      • it made cities more aware that this could happen to them and the started to make preparations for this

in the end, i was astonished at not only the quantity of the fires in the US but also the affect of the chicago fire on all these different states. even though the fire never even reached those states, it kinda did. what i mean is that all the cities started preparing for the worst (like doomsday lol) and started saving their money just in case something like this happened. it was nice to see all the collaboration and support that the surrounding states gave to the citizens of chicago. 

thanks for reading!!
xoxo ellie

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

progressivism

welcome back history lovers!! happy valentine's day!! today in class we were just researching some topics on progressivism. while researching the food safety regulations during the progressive era, a lot came up about a book called "The Jungle", which talked mostly about what i was researching. several people were trying to expose the food industry by writing about them in newspapers or in magazines. the authors of these exposes would not just write about the packaging of the food, but also the working conditions. this is a quote from a boss at a meat packaging factory, "the men who fell into the vats; and when they were fished out, there was never enough left of them to be worth exhibiting."

thanks for reading!!!
xoxo ellie 

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

history homework

welcome back history addicts!! two posts in one day, boy are you lucky!! these are just some history questions that was for homework. but read and enjoy if you want to!!!

1. I define progress by seeing someone advance from one thing to another
2. The period of time that was the Progressive Era was between 1865-1918, this was called the Progressive Era due to all the progress made in this time period. This era really tried to fix the problems caused by immigration, industrialization, urbanization, and the corruption in the government.
3. Progressive reforms also had many goals and also many accomplishments, as did progressives.
4. Major goals during the progressive reform:

  • remove corruption (1)
  • women's suffrage (1)
  • women's rights (1)
  • limitations on child labor (1)
  • protect social welfare (1)
  • income tax (2)
  • improve treatment of workers and customers (2)
  • promote efficient for government and businesses (2)
  • promote fairness (2)
  • housing conditions (2)
  • serve and protect natural resources (2)
  • health and safety codes (2)
  • banning alcohol (3&4)
  • control big businesses (4)



thanks for reading!!!
xoxo ellie

Future Predictions from 100 years ago

welcome back history lovers!! today we are learning about the future *cue images from The Jetson's* we are learning what people from 100 years ago predicted about the 21st century!! (and boy were they wrong)

1. The predictions people made 100 years ago includes, just to name a few, mobile phones, digital color photographer, pre-prepared meals, the rising height of Americans, television, one world-wide currency, and facetime, no mosquitos of flies, the letters C, X, Q would be taken away from the alphabet, we will be able to control the weather, deserts would become tropical forests, space elevators, there will only be three languages in the world - English, Spanish and Mandarin. 
2. The list is definitely a wish list, I have not come across any "warnings" for the future. All the predictions must have sounded very exciting at the time, but what I have read there are no warnings.
3. The predictions that have come true includes mobile phones, television, gay marriage, pre-prepared meals, and space travel. Some predictions that were actually CRAZY includes a lot of underwater travel, like a whale bus, scuba divers that would ride on sea horses backs and people would race on sharks.
4. The trends/patterns that I saw was a lot of travel into the unknown, like under the sea, or in space, most of them are very futuristic in the fact of robots and machines literally doing everything. I also saw a lot of air travel, like cops being able to fly after a criminal, aerial fireman, and of course the classic, flying cars.
5. What I see in the future includes also a big leap in technology, like no more going to school, you were born already knowing everything or having an injection for eternal life. It reminds me of the movie, Host, they had injections for every type of illness/disease that existed. The future can be scary to think about because their might not be a future for us, the world could end in a matter of seconds. I bet that prediction wasn't made 100 years ago.


Sources:

Friday, February 3, 2017

Public Safety during Urbanization

During the time era of 1870-1915, urban growth was occurring rapidly. Since all the cities were growing at such a rapid pace, this caused the city to forget about the important things like public safety. During urbanization, public safety really wasn't a big concern, the different concerning matters that were present in this era includes disease, crime, transportation and fire. With the notice of these issues comes the organizations trying to battle against them, like the fire department or the police department.

Amongst the cities during urbanization, poverty was all over, with poverty comes illnesses and disease, easily passed on from one person to another. Sanitation was a massive problem during urbanization, without having proper plumbing systems all their waste would usually just go out onto the streets where people walked and other people slept at night (S#1). Massive outbreaks of yellow fever and cholera caused many cities to introduce systematic sewerage. Edwin Chadwick, was the creator of the water-carriage sewerage system, which saved thousands of lives from bacteria born viruses. The National Board of Health was also created during the era, to help contain and control outbreaks of illnesses such as the yellow fever.

Since the field of medicine and hygiene was not very significant, many people who got sick with smallpox or even the flu would usually die pretty early in their life. "Between 1840 and 1870, nearly 25% of 20 year olds did not make it to 30." (S#2) In that short time frame of 30 years, there were no such thing of grandparents, and since people died early in life, they had to have children at such a young age some would usually die during child birth. "Urban families realized that one of their children wouldn't make it past the age of 5." Having to accept that one of their children was gonna die must have been awful during this era, but with the advances in medicine and vaccinations, this helped raise the death ages up from dying at 30 to dying around 60 or 70 years. Not everyone was killed due to a virus, with the outbreaks of gangs, some people were murdered!

With the cities not having much protection around, crimes and violence run amongst the streets. The rise of gangs and criminal organization helped bring the police to the cities. Before urbanization, murder was very rare due to the towns being very spread out and having no place to hide. During the 1850s the police started to appear in the cities, but were not very active. Most detectives were only hired to retrieve stolen goods. Due to the lack of technology and intelligence, the detectives were not able to help with murders or kidnappings. During the 1870s, crime was marked more as an "organized violence". (S#3) Which means people wouldn't just go out murdering everyone in sight, they would create gangs and have to "lay low" so they wouldn't get caught by the police. But after the city started gaining more police officers, the crime rates started to dwindle in the 1880s. "There were 2.2 murders out of 100,000 people in the year 1890." (S#4) Due to public school and work in factories people became more robotic since their behavior was constrained by the boss. But when there was a murder by a gang or a homicide, transportation became an aid to felonious homicide since the revolver was invented.

During the beginning of urbanization, cars started to appear. Not having any laws for speed limits or having any traffic cops, people could drive however the wanted. This obviously caused many car accidents and a lot of people died due to this fault. Not only were people dying in car accidents but also in train accidents. These accidents were more fatal and caused more deaths due to the train being able to hold hundreds of people at one time and caused the destruction of towns if the train crashed through one. There were 9003 train accidents from 1870-1915, and there were 2089 car accidents from 1870-1915 (S#5). The numbers started to fall for car accidents when new improvements came about. Creations like the electric headlight in 1889 and pneumatic tires in 1895 helped the car accident reports to dwindle over the years (S#6). However, train accidents had bigger problems, it was harder to identify the problem with the train because the train is five times as big as a car. Not only were there hundreds of controls but the problem could've been caused by the tracks. If the train were to derail in or close to a town, major damage would not only be caused to the train but to the town also.

Due to buildings being made of wood, this caused many fires in the cities, and with all these fires, it caused destruction to the buildings, cities and people. One of the greatest but most terrifying example of a nasty fire outbreak, was the Chicago fire in 1871. This caused destruction to the entire town, houses, buildings and families were destroyed due to this great fire. Even though the first fire station was created in 1853, the fire was so hard to contain and control due to high winds and wood everywhere. (S#7) Fires weren't such a bad thing because once city planners and architects started noticing that the more buildings that were made of wood would burn down, they started making the buildings out of steel. Due to urban growth, steel became more available and it created more jobs for the homeless and unemployed. Fires became less of a concern during urbanization, but the fire departments were still very organized, "the fire department of New York was very well organised and divided that it may well be taken as a model for all cities." (S#8)

After all the outbreaks of disease, fires and crimes occurred, the government and the cities became more aware that they need to have laws to protect the public. Even though this protection detail came a little late, it is still saving lives today. We should thank the inventors of the stop light, modern plumbing and the fire extinguisher for saving thousands of lives each year. But we can't really blame the people in 1870-1915 because there were more important things happening around them like the first skyscraper and amusement parks were being invented and they were pretty cool back then. But thanks to this era of urban growth, we now have public safety laws that protect the people of the United States.


Sources:

S#1: Sanitation Reform in Wake of Epidemics
S#2: Immigrants, Cities, and Disease
S#3: Murder in America: A Historian's Perspectives
S#4: Homicide Trends in America: 1850-1950
S#5: Disasters of 1870
S#6: The History of Automobile Safety
S#7: Fire Prevention
S#8: Men of Valor: A History of Firefighting 1886-1986



Pictures:
Related image
chicago fire 1871

Image result for car wrecks in 1870
car wreck 1878

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train wreck 1880

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transportation 1870

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disease struck horses 1880

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crime 1871