What Is The Economy In The Early 1900's

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1900’s: In the early 1900’s, the United States had a huge boom of immigrants seeking greater economic opportunity. An estimated 4 million Italian immigrants arrived in the United States in the early 1900’s, many of who had low-wage manual labor jobs, especially in the construction industry. Immigrants moved throughout the north, migrating to industrial states in the Midwest looking for work. After the Civil War, Indiana experienced an economic boom. In the years leading up to the 1900’s Indiana’s population grew by nearly 30%, paving the way heavy industrial construction work.

1920’s: About thirty miles east of Chicago, the U.S. Steel corporation founded cheap land for their huge steel production center. A previously unfounded city, Gary, was named after Elbert Henry Gary, founding chairman of U.S. Steel. Anticipating the growth around the new mill, the steel titan created a city plan and begun construction on residential areas. Gary Works steel mill quickly began supplying steel to the Midwest’s industrial centers and brought thousands of industrial foreign-born workers from Mexico, Italy, Greece, Poland and Russia. Northern Indiana continued to expand as the Public Buildings Act of 1926 provided funding for large governmental buildings.
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In 1933, the New Deal was enacted and the federal aid helped support the struggling economies. The Works Progress Administration (WPA) relief program created an exponential number of public works projects, including construction of roads and buildings. This created a huge number of jobs throughout the United States and helped gear the country toward a growing