History 346  The Gilded Age
Roger Williams University
SB 316
M - Th 3:30- 4:50
Spring Semester, 2016
Michael R. H. Swanson, Ph. D.
Office:  GHH 215
Hours:  M, W, F,  12:00 - 1:30
Phone:  254-3230
E-mail:  mswanson@rwu.edu
For Monday, February 8    
For Thursday, February 11
Download and Read, from the Internet.
Report of the Immigration Service (1873)
(The excerpts are already selected for you in the document I've uploaded). 

These excerpts will give you a picture of what immigration was really like, and if you have relatives who made this kind of journey, I think your appreciation for their courage and fortitude will rise accordingly.    If you choose to make your persona an immigrant, the documents this week will give your historic imagination plenty of fodder to chew upon. The immigrant in the picture is Polish, but the story behind the picture is of a Norwegian immigrant gunsmith in the wild and wooly west. Check it out.

I’ll also see how you’re doing playing with the historic census tools.  We’ll continue working with these until we get good at them.  Don’t let yourself get too discouraged too early.
Pauper labor steals the bread out of the mouths of an honest American working family, in this anti-immigrant cartoon from Judge.

Anti-immigrant propaganda focussed on "The New Emmigration" from Southern and Eastern Europe, especially Italians and Jews.  Click on the image to the right to read more about the 19th century Jewish experience.

The complaint about immigrant labor depressing wages is still heard from time to time.
Click for more information about anti-Chinese sentiment.
Chinese immigrants arrived largely through the ports of California, first recruited to work on the building of the transcontinental railroad and later to work in agriculture.  The Chinese were subjected to intense interest on the one hand and intense prejudice upon the other.  They seemed very exotic, even alien, to those whose families had migrated from Europe.  The picture at the top lleft links to information about ongoing efforts to exclude chinese altogether.
The image above is curious for its demonstration of American interest in technology, as well as the intense anti-Chinese feeling it displays.  The washing machine will chase the Chinese from San Francisco to back to China.  The picture links to a photo book interspersed with short vignettes about life in "Chinatown"  It isn't long and is worth a read, so read it.  The "Great Disaster" of which the book speaks is shown in the last photograph.  For the curious, and I hope that includes many of you, it will be an interesting exercise to look the the streets mentioned on one of the panoramic maps, or on one of the tools we have available to ourselves today:  Google Earth or Google Maps.
Finally, humor can be a wicked and vicious weapon as some of us have discovered from time to time.  "Polite Society" in the gilded age was not very politically correct, as is witnessed by attempts from time to time to either edit books like Huckleberry Finn or exclude them from libraries altogether.

Stage Humor thrived on making fun of African Americans and immigrants.  Choice Dialect is a book chock full of examples.  IReach it by clicking on the image. to the right. 

ASSIGNMENT:  I want each of you to read or tell an ethnic story or joke from the book.   I'll circulate a table of contents in class Monday and ask people to initial two or three which seem of special interest to them.  Read them, and let me know which is your final choice.  Extra credit for trying a "Choice Dialect"
Many of you have been aware of the controversies surrounding immigration policy and "controlling our borders" which have flooded the news in the last several years.   Nativism of one kind or another has been part of the American political and social scene for well over 160 years.  It tends to be particularly vigorous during times of economic uncertainthy.

All our resources for this class are on the Internet, and the variety is immense.   By exploring this page you should find five links, four behind pictures and one in the text. Two of them are short summaries -- read all of each. 

One is a book of gilded age pictures.  Read as much as you can of the interspersed vignettes,  but do look at all the pictures.  If they don't move you check your pulse.  Read all of the document linked by text, and as far as the jokes go, the instructions should be self-explanatory.  I'll do show and tell to help explain all of this.
The immigrant in  the picture is Polish,  but the story behind the picture is of a Norwegian immigrant gunsmity in  the wild and wooly west.  Check it out.