Life for the people in the 1840s-1860s was changing and it was changing dramatically. Western movement increased due to manifest destiny that many believed it was God's will for the american people to move coast to coast. There was some technological advancements also going on people could now send messages through morse code which was good for sending Political messages commercial messages and also emergency messages. Railroads even became a huge hit amongst the people of that time this turned Chicago into the number one commercial hub because of all these advancements city growth and wages also increased. Homes were also starting to change homes made of wood were now being replaced with brick row houses. The upper/middle class had beautiful homes and also beautiful furniture. (Article continued on …show more content…
Some of the luxuries where; stoves and railroads made their diets more diverse. The new water system brought fresh water to cites. But there were also many Inconveniences for the less wealthy. Since some could not afford fruit salt was used to preserve meat. The cities also smelled completely horrible some people couldn't take baths some had to use the restroom outside and also there was no street cleaning. The average life expectancy for a person living in the 1840s-1860s was 24 and that was due to diseases and also the inability to understand what was going on with people. But in the 1840s something big happened something we can be happy that was invented Anesthesia. Because anesthesia was invented it allowed for longer and more complicated procedures to take place. Just like now there were popular health movements like Hydropathy which used baths and wet packs to clean and rejuvenate the body system and also there was the sylvester Graham Diet which was no alcohol switch from meat to strictly veggies and also whole grain bread only and practice
This period allowed the American people to enjoy an increased standard of living. Jobs were plentiful due to industrial expansion. Connected cities, via railroad, allowed greater access to retail products, that were previously unavailable to the masses. Rising productivity freed labor for tertiary fields such as the services traded for food, clothing and shelter (Hughes & Cain 2011, p. 355).
Around the 1920s, everything was changing-technology and life was advancing.There were automobiles, radio and so much more.
Back then, there was new technology that opened many job positions which were given to the people; in which that overcame everything. There was a big difference from 1865-1900 because there was a lot of new and advanced technology that was created. The first thing that was built in 1866 was by Alfred Nobel which was dynamite. There many other inventions which were iron and steel production, railroad refrigerator cars, and elevators.
It made it easier to travel and spend which they were happy to spend it on something they will need. The automobile industry was booming especially in Detroit where General Motors was located. Another company that was expanding was the construction industry, they built highways, suburbs, houses, schools, churches, and many more. The houses were also affordable, and they built more houses faster due to William Levitt, where he got the idea to mass produce houses that look similar and built about twenty houses all at once. With this it gave more of an incentive to be like their neighbors, if a one bought a TV eventually all would, if one got a new grill, car, refrigerator, or a product that just hit the market, everyone would eventually have one. People wanted to be like one another so when new products arrived they were eager to buy. Conformity played a huge role in their society which led to mostly everyone having what everyone else had. They also wanted to be like those in the shows where they are a perfectly happy family. People were happy that they could buy the new products and could buy them faster with the rate of
Medicine and health care was much different in the late 1800s and early 1900s than it is today. Most ill people were treated in their homes with concoctions that had little to no effect on the sickness. While hospitals did exist at the time, their methods were underdeveloped and very unlike the ones we see today. Mortality was at an all time high prior to the discoveries made in the early 20th century. According to the article “Immigration and Health Concerns in Late Nineteenth Century America” by Ted Brackemyre, “Large waves of immigration in the nineteenth century, made New York City America’s largest and most diverse city, but also its most unhealthy, as the large spike in population made it more susceptible to disease.” As compared to other urban cities in America at
As American towns industrialized all through the nineteenth century, irresistible ailments developed as a genuine danger. The presentation of new workers and the development of vast urban zones permitted already confined sicknesses to spread rapidly and contaminate bigger populations. Consider as industrialization occurred, towns developed into cities, and people relocated to them. The expanded interest for shoddy lodging by urban vagrants prompted ineffectively assembled homes that poorly accommodated individual cleanliness. Outside laborers in the nineteenth century frequently lived in cramped dwellings that consistently lacked fundamental comforts, for example, running water, ventilation, and toilets. These conditions were perfect for
Life in the 1900’s was hard. We had segregation and we had women that couldn’t vote.
There were a huge number of diseases in the mid nineteenth century due to the unsanitary living conditions and the lack of proper medical equipment. The diseases were very hazardous. They wiped out a huge population during this time period.
Not only were the working conditions less than desireable, the medical field was next to none. There were three factors that lead to the ability for disease to run rampant through the cities, the lack of medical knowledge, the housing in the cities, and the Industrial Revolution. "Cholera, tuberculosis, typhus, typhoid, and influenza ravaged through new industrial towns, especially in poor working-class neighborhoods. In 1849, 10,000 people died of cholera in three months in London alone ("Public Health Timeline"). Tuberculosis claimed 60,000 to 70,000 lives in each decade of the 19th century” (Robinson 7). More people died due to tuberculosis alone in ten years, than the entire casualties caused during the American Civil War. The doctors
nativism increased- different languages, hard to unionize, worked for low wages, unskilled jobs, mostly Catholic
Living in the city in the late nineteenth century had a good amount of positive and negative aspects. One of the positives was that there were very many new job opportunities with all the factories and construction being built. More means of transportation were available in the city, such as trolleys, railroads, and steam driven cars. There was a common focus of increasing and improving the museums, art galleries, amusement parks, and skyscrapers. Many people in the city were ready to move forward technologically to better progress in America. However, there are arguably more amount of negative aspects than there are positive. There were little to no rules and regulations, that in modern times would seem absurd not to have in place. Poor
In the late 18th, early 19th century folks were drawn to urban life but urban life was not all that it was cracked up to be, there was much poverty, overcrowding, and it was significantly unhealthy for those that lived there. Changes and improvements to quality of living would bring changes to some of the horrendous conditions that people had been living in.
Quality of life had improved for the average person by the Victorian Era. People expected to live long lives and when young people died, which they frequently did, it was seen as tragic and terrible. During the 19th century death was a constant fact of life. People died from disease, lack of proper medical care, inadequate food, poor sanitary conditions, accidents on the farm, fire, and war. The Industrial Revolution just added on to the list of things you could die from. It created an environment in which accidents led to the deaths of many workers who were men, women, and even children. The most common death for women was related to childbirth complications. The average person’s lifespan was around 50 years of age. The mortality rate for children was especially high. One- third of all
Victorian Era (1837-1901), the reign of Queen Victoria. The Victorian age was flourished with various social and religious movements and sometimes been called as "Second English Renaissance". The year 1830 is usually considered as an end to Romantic period in Britain and marked the starting date for Victorianism. The Victorians were often called "prudish and repressive". They seem to be the great enemies of sexuality. Middle-Class Victorians attempt to hide, evade, repress, deny the idea of sexuality. This was the period where women do not have sexual desires and work in the service of men. The sexual desire was thought to be only present in men and if a women shows sexual desire, it was considered as a disease which need to be removed as soon
Victorian Short Victorian Short Stories Discuss the role of women – as villains, victims and heroes in a selection of Victorian short stories. In the 19th Century the only type of people who could read and write were people in upper class families. Remembered for being such a class conscious society, the 19th century rarely ever mixed regarding their status in the society, this was the greatest divide ever between rich and poor. As well as their being a division between rich and poor, there was also a division between the sexes.