3) What was happening politically in Chicago itself, and around the world? Immigration issues, laws,…
What was going on in Chicago in the late 60‘s and early 70‘s? - There was a lot of construction going on. The City was getting bigger and getting modernized and expanding with new skyscrapers, buildings and expressways. The Mayor of Chicago was Richard J. Daley Sr.. Chicago had not grown much since the Great Depression. Daley was a big part of the growth in the 60‘s and 70‘s. The 1968 Democratic Convention was held in Chicago. There were lots of civil right issues at the time. There was the Chicano Movement which was the empowerment of Mexican Americans.…
I feel the single biggest problem facing American cities at the end of the 19th century was disease.…
The small community of Canton, Illinois was booming in the 1960’s. From coal mining to factory work there were many growing opportunities that drew more and more citizens to the community. Along with the growing population, came the demand for more facilities. As the late 1960’s rolled…
During the 19th century, the United States underwent a great awakening in sanitation and public health. The nation was experiencing unprecedented levels of population growth as a result of the rise in immigration and industrialization. The accepted theories of how disease spread were based on false premises, ultimately diminishing any incentive to implement sanitary reforms. However, through international travel, the contagious disease, cholera, spread to the United States from Europe. Cholera ravaged the cities, such as Chicago in several epidemics, brutally damaging its victims' physical health and frequently leading to death.…
The Roaring Twenties is a eventful era that is filled with rich history. Cities such as New York and Chicago were known to be over-populated during this time because everybody came from different parts of the country to have their dreams come true, since there were more opportunities in the cities. Chicago was known for being a magical city with the best jazz musicians, amazing trading routs, the greatest pizza, and a amazing place to have a drink. Until 1920, when Prohibition had hit and had forever tainted the history of Chicago. The forbidding of alcohol had caused mayhem throughout the city, which resulted in the nickname “the most corrupt city” in the whole United States. Overtime, the blame for corrupting Chicago in the 1920’s was forever…
The 20th century was a time of great inventions and innovations, radically transforming all aspects of society in less than 100 years. At the turn of the century Memphis was still rebuilding from the Civil war and recovering from yellow fever, but the economy was strong and the city was growing… but so were racial tensions. And by the late 60s almost all white people had left the downtown area for the suburbs. But when they left, they left an impact in the community, leaving businesses to struggle, and when the businesses went down, so did the rest of the neighborhood. As the Suburbs began to grow, the funds in the city shrank, causing the city to cut funding to several public services. Moving to the suburbs created many problems, 1. In the…
What started as a small spark , possibly in a barn, ignited one of the most destructive and largest catastrophes, in Chicago’s history. The Great Chicago fire of 1871 is still a mystery. MAny have speculated, pointed fingers, and taken blame for the devastating fire that destroyed hundreds of acres, took many lives, and charred the Windy City to ashes. The truths to what really happened on that late night on the eighth of October may never be unravelled. Many do however feel that the evidence suggests that it was an accidental or a freak of nature and environmental conditions fueled the fire into rage letting it get out of control. The raging fire of almost 145 years ago still has scientists baffled, and remains a mystery today.…
San Francisco was a hub and continues to be through the entire history of our state in reards to the architecture. Between 1906 and 1909 leading architects from “Paris”1 using Mediteranian style. College and Universities were updgraded. The population due to this revival at the time grew from 1910 to 2.3 million, half of which were located in and around the very popular Bay Area. In San…
Definition: Chicago has hosted the democratic convention ever since 1860. Chicago was quickly taken off that lists after the encounters between protesters and the police during the 1968 democratic convention. The nation was in a state of turmoil. The ongoing Vietnam War, assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy the country was outraged. Mayor Richard J. Daley was not pleased with the thought of hosting the Convention. The conflicts between Eugene McCarthy and Robert F. Kennedy, even after his death, posed challenging threats on the re-nomination of Lyndon B. Johnsons Presidency. Daley predicted that the convention would become the center of attention for civil rights and anti-war demonstrators, especially with the knowledge…
Chicago has become one of the largest cities in the United States, ranking the third largest in 2012. Housing nearly 2.7 million civilians, it has shown exponential growth throughout the century and is now an icon for metropolitan cities (Largest). However, modern day Chicago is drastically different from its past. This topic has been widely researched to discover what molded Chicago into the city is it today. Numerous books, articles, and other publications discuss several possibilities of this question, ranging from religious backgrounds to widespread violence and the “Great Migration.” To understand modern day Chicago, it is essential to know the history of the city and the wide range of influences that helped shape it.…
Carl Sandburg’s “Chicago” is look into the doubling sides of America the ugly appearance but beautiful land. Sanburg’s deep look into america claiming that “under the smoke, dust all over his mouth, laughing with white teeth” (Sandburg 765) shows the two sides of america that people see. Some may look to America for hope and freedom and others look at it as trash and corrupt. Whoever it may be can come to america and see that under the possibly corrupt government that it is a place of hope and freedom. Sandburg does a great job of displaying the ugliness and beauty in both chicago and america. America has become a place of redemption for many and although at first glance america maybe damaged, and run down there is true beauty within.…
My second elaboration paper is based on this week’s readings on architecture and modernism. My focus is on my hometown of Oak Park and the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright. The Village of Oak Park is internationally known for its historic architecture, with styles including Queen Anne, Prairie School and Colonial Revival. Oak Park is known particularly as the home of Frank Lloyd Wright. Oak Park is located 8 miles west of downtown Chicago and holds the largest collection of Prairie School architecture in America, which includes 25 homes and business designs by Wright. The Village of Oak Park is often described as a “living museums” of American architecture. It hosts a large selection of modern architectural styles from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Of the buildings within the historic district over 20 of them were designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Besides the structures designed by Wright there are over 60 other buildings designed by other architectures of Wright's Prairie School of architecture. The National Register of Historic Places…
Urban studies aims to develop an understanding the modern city metropolis. As Savage et al. have pointed out, the urban encompasses far more than just the physical city itself; understanding the city help us to understand many aspects of modern life (2003, pp.4). Many of its features, such as mass media and public transport systems have spread throughout society over the past century. Sociological studies of urban life began with the landmark publication of 'The City' in 1925 by sociologists Robert Park, Ernest Burgess and Louis Wirth from the University of Chicago, students of Georg Simmel who shared his belief that the urban environment changed man's personality and made relationships impersonal. They sought to explain different features of the urban environment within this theory and predict its development, starting with their own city Chicago, which they believed to be paradigmatic of new cities, designed to serve the needs of industrial capitalism (Park 1925, pp. 17, 40). Park and his colleagues posited a largely deterministic view of the city as a logically developing space ordered primarily by economic needs. Ernest Burgess developed the 'concentric zones model' to explain urban development and expansion of the modern city according to a predictable, ecological pattern (Burgess 1925). Louis Wirth has contributed to the school prominently in his essay "Urbanism as a Way of Life" in 1938, which sought to further develop a theoretical basis for the expanding field of urbanism (Wirth 1964, pp. 83). This text became one of the most influential works on understanding the social consequences of the city, and had real consequences; future sociologists have used his theory to help plan cities' layout (Knox & Pinch 2010, pp. 149). Although now over 80 years old and dated in many respects by economic change, the Chicago School remains highly influential in the urban studies today, which…
Further west, the city of Chicago became the other major site in the development of early skyscrapers. In contrast to New York, Chicago emerged as a major metropolis only in the mid-19th century, growing from a village of around fifty inhabitants in 1830, to a city of 30,000 in 1850 and nearly 300,000 by 1870. Chicago became the railroad hub for the American West and the primary trading city for the emerging territories, famous for its commercial culture. It saw itself as different from the cities on the east coast and was immensely proud of its status as a growing, vibrant center. This was a great innovation because we could now build less buildings that are taller instead of a lot of…