New York State Tenement House Act

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    The Tenement Museum The Tenement Museum is prestigious for its fine architecture and history that continues to relive itself. The tours of the museum show the lives of the people who once lived inside the tenements. The tours educate the visitors on historical events and display a museum unlike any other. The following essay will incorporate my experience at the museum along with the stories of the families that once dwelled in these tenements and lived during a time of economic struggle. In

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    the difficulties the people before us had to overcome. In particular, an era which helped us establish some of our freedoms is the Progressive era. The Progressive era was a period of widespread social activism and political reform across the United States, and the Progressive reformers within the era made sure that future generations would benefit from the reforms they pursed for improved industrial conditions, living conditions, and politics. Before people of the Progressive era would see reforms

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    immigrants, starting with its original inhabitants, who crossed the land bridge connecting Asia and North America years ago. By the 1500s, the first Europeans, the Spanish and French, had set up establishing settlements in what would become the United States. Immigrants came to America seeking economic opportunities. Europeans who made the journey became indentured servants (an employee within a system of unfree labor who is bound by a signed or forced contract to work for a particular employer for a

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    The Progressive Era

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    Through a multitude of significant changes physically, conceptually, economically, and more, the societal reformation of cities in the Progressive Era had set themselves as the foundations of American civilization. The juxtaposition between the rich and poor statuses in these urban areas show the drastic separation within developing cities. Through this division caused a wide variety of living conditions, the majority of which held the overcrowded sections of cities where the population mostly stayed

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    Indians from their land and later created the Dawes Act. During the Industrial era, technology was expanding, population was increasing, and cities became overcrowded. Settlement houses were created a few years later by Jane Addams. The Westward Expansion caused many problems for the Indian tribes. New settlers forced the removal of tribes from their lands so the settlers can claim the territory. The Indians were then placed under the Dawes Act and converted to the living the “American life” with

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    preeminent life. When people read what these children had gone through, they fail to remember to put themselves in the children’s situation; therefore, they don’t understand, nor cease how horrendous life was for the children. Numerous factual documents state how deplorable life was for the children during this era. Furthermore, these documents include the Union-made Cigars, Finding of the Commission, the Law of 1913, the letter from WPA Teacher Union to Governor Lehman, and lastly a telegram from Mrs.

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    Sweatshops In The 1920's

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    were most common in the United States during the Industrial Revolution, throughout the years 1880 through 1920. During this time period, about half of the clothing that people wore were made in sweatshops. During the 1880 through 1920’s period, tenement sweatshops were most common. Sweatshops were often put together in

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    United States Social Security is the commonly used term for the federal Old Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance program. The original Social Security Act was signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1935, and the current version of the Act, as it is encompasses several social welfare and social insurance programs. Over time the SSA was admitted t o give money to states to provide assistance to the elderly. With few exceptions, all legal residents working in the United States now have

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    In the 1800s and 1900s one problem was the poor living conditions in New York City and other cities. In the 19th century, more and more people began crowding including immigrants seeking a better life than the one they left behind. In New York City, buildings that had once been single family dwellings were increasingly divided into multiple living spaces (known as tenements) to accommodate this growing population. These buildings were most often cramped from the number of people who lived there,

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    largest chunks of America’s financial interests these same women were looking outside. By this I mean, the very important job they had raising the family was getting increasingly more difficult as many families were forced into tenement situations. The unbidden squalor of the tenement with its poor sanitation, substandard water, as well as increasingly poor education were directly

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