America has transformed from agriculture to an industrialized and urbanized society. This transformation created new economic opportunities, but also created social problems that were resolved by various reform efforts.
In the era of gold plating and progress, the formation of contemporary America is closely related to immigrants and ethnic and ethnic problems. Immigrants themselves and immigrants as social and demographic factions have helped to create unique ethnic and ethnic categories in modern America. In this chapter, we will look at how historians changed how immigrants understand through the global and international approach in the past few decades. We will explore the core changes of the times, including industrialization, labor class change, political and social reform, and clarify the causal relationship with large immigrants.
The era of golden and progressive era is the era when the development of American society plays an important role. The era of gold plating was the era of American history from 1870 to 1900. This term was made by Mark Twain in the late nineteenth century. Through this, he means that this period shines on the surface but is damaged down ("Understanding the gold plating era"). The era of gold plating is known for its political scandal and luxury wealth. A: Research as a progressive era of gang and feminist Question Nellie Bly has any effect. In order to judge the influence of Nellie Bly as a leader, she checks publicity obtained from the media. In addition, her achievements in reforming psychiatric hospitals as journalists and her progress in feminism are also reviewed.
Traditionally, historians divided this period between two contrasting eras from 1877 to 1919. It is a gold medal era at the end of the 19th century and a progressive era of the early 20th century. In this model, the gold-plated era has created problems related to economic inequality, industrialization, urbanization and immigration - the era of progress is trying to be solved by social reform and law. But now many historians believe that the problems that occurred in the 1970s continued until the 1910s and fighting it was a hard work. In particular, labor history scholars discovered that many of the demands industrial workers raised in the 1870s - for example 8 hours a week - did not happen until the First World War even in the 1930s. Therefore, the subsequent document covers the "long gold age" depicting Chicago's working conditions, workers' groups, and demonstrations from the Haymarket case in 1886 to the reform movement in the 1910s.