True
YES
Yes, one of the main reasons people moved to cities during the latter part of the nineteenth century was to find employment in factories and other industrial establishments. The Industrial Revolution led to an increase in urbanization as people sought job opportunities in growing industrial cities. Movement from rural areas to cities also offered the promise of better wages and improved living standards for many.
Cities provided greater economic opportunities than rural areas
The nineteenth century.
Tenement and apartment housing rose in popularity in cities around industry in the early nineteenth century. Renting better accommodated immigrants with little investment for owning a home.
Explain the response to laissez- faire eonomics during the nineteenth century
Nineteenth
In the second half of the 18th century, Americans began to increase the immigrant populations of the large colonial cities such as Boston, Philadelphia and New York. These cities offered employment in factories.
Cities grew slowly because their way of life was so unfamiliar to 19th century Americans. They were well established in a rural economy.
The nineteenth century. Most likely during the 1860s.
more chromatic
During the nineteenth century, the center of cotton production was in England. The invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney revolutionized cotton production.