| History
of Philadelphia
The history
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, goes back to 1682, when the
city was founded by William Penn. Before then, the area was
inhabited by the Lenape (Delaware) Indians and Swedish settlers
who arrived in the area in the early 1600s. Philadelphia quickly
grew into an important colonial city and during the American
Revolution was the site of the First and Second Continental
Congresses. After the Revolution the city was chosen to be
the temporary capital of the United States. At the beginning
of the 19th century, the federal and state governments left
Philadelphia, but the city remained the cultural and financial
center of the country. Philadelphia became one of the first
U.S. industrial centers and the city contained a variety of
industries, the largest being textiles.
After
the American Civil War Philadelphia's government was controlled
by a corrupt Republican political machine and by the beginning
of the 20th Century Philadelphia was described as "corrupt
and contented." Various reform efforts slowly changed
city government with the most significant in 1950 where a
new city charter strengthened the position of mayor and weakened
the Philadelphia City Council. At the same time Philadelphia
moved its support from the Republican Party to the Democratic
Party which has since created a strong Democratic organization.
The city began a population decline in the 1950s as mostly
white and middle class families left for the suburbs. Many
of Philadelphia's houses were in poor condition and lacked
proper facilities, and gang and mafia warfare plagued the
city. Revitalization and gentrification of certain neighborhoods
started bringing people back to the city. Promotions and incentives
in the 1990s and the early 21st century have improved the
city's image and created a condominium boom in Center City
and the surrounding areas that has slowed the population decline.
Founding
Before Philadelphia was founded, the area was inhabited by
the Lenape (Delaware) Indians. Europeans arrived in the Delaware
Valley in the early 1600s, with the first settlements being
founded by the Dutch, British and Swedish with Swedes making
the first first formal claim on the area, calling it New Sweden,
in 1638. The Swedes sought to expand their influence by creating
an agricultural (tobacco) and fur-trading colony to bypass
French and British merchants. The New Sweden Company was chartered
and included Swedish, Dutch and German stockholders. The first
Swedish expedition to North America embarked from the port
of Gothenburg in late 1637. Part of this colony eventually
included land on the west side of the Delaware River from
just below the Schuylkill River.
The first
English settlement was around 1642 when 50 Puritan families
from the New Haven Colony in Connecticut led by George Lamberton
attempted to establish a theocracy at the mouth of the Schuylkill
River. The New Haven Colony had earlier struck a deal with
the Native Americans to buy much of New Jersey south of Trenton
(although the tribes Lenape were to be accused of selling
the same land twice).[1] The Dutch and Swedes in the area
burned their buildings. A Swedish court under Swedish Governor
Johan Björnsson Printz was to convict Lamberton of "trespassing,
conspiring with the Indians."[2] The New Haven colony
received no support and Puritan Governor John Winthrop testified
that the New Haven colony was dissolved owing to summer "sickness
and mortality."[3] The disaster was to contribute to
New Haven's ultimate loss of its home colony to the Connecticut
Colony.
In 1644,
New Sweden supported the Susquehannocks in their victory in
a war against the English Province of Maryland. A series of
events led the Dutch — led by governor Peter Stuyvesant
— to move an army to the Delaware River in the late
summer of 1655. Though New Netherland now nominally controlled
the colony, the Swedish and Finnish settlers continued to
enjoy a degree of local autonomy, having their own militia,
religion, court, and lands. This status lasted officially
until the English conquest of the New Netherland colony, in
October 1663-1664, and continued unofficially until the area
was included in William Penn's charter for Pennsylvania, in
1682.[4] By 1682 the area of modern Philadelphia was inhabited
by about fifty Europeans, mostly subsistence farmers.[5]
In 1681,
as part of a repayment of a debt, Charles II of England granted
William Penn a charter for what would become the Pennsylvania
colony. Shortly after receiving the charter, Penn said he
would lay out "a large Towne or Citty in the most Convenient
place upon the [Delaware] River for health & Navigation."[6]
Penn wanted the city to live peacefully in the area, without
a fortress or walls, so he bought the land from the Lenape.
The legend is that Penn made a treaty of friendship with Lenape
chief Tammany under an elm tree at Shackamaxon, in what is
now the city's Kensington section.[7] Penn envisioned a city
where all people regardless of religion could worship freely
and live together. Having been a Quaker, Penn had experienced
religious persecution. He also planned that the city's streets
would be set up in a grid, with the idea that the city would
be more like the rural towns of England than its crowded cities.
The homes would be spread far apart and surrounded by gardens
and orchards. The city would grant the first purchasers, the
landowners who first bought land in the colony, land along
the river for their homes. The city, which he named Philadelphia
(philos, "love" or "friendship", and adelphos,
"brother"), would have a commercial center for a
market, state house, and other key buildings.[8]
Penn
sent three commissioners to supervise the settlement and to
set aside 10,000 acres (40 km²) for the city. The commissioners
bought land from Swedes at the settlement of Wicaco and from
there began to lay out the city towards the north. The area
went about a mile along the Delaware River between modern
South and Vine Streets. Penn arrived in Philadelphia in October
1682. He felt the area was too cramped and expanded the city
west to the bank of the Schuylkill River, making the city
a total of 1,200 acres (4.8 km²). Streets were laid out
in a gridiron system. Except for the two widest streets, High
(now Market) and Broad, the streets were named after prominent
landowners who owned adjacent lots. The streets were later
renamed in 1684; the ones running east-west were renamed after
local trees and the north-south streets were numbered. Within
the area, four squares (now named Rittenhouse, Logan, Washington
and Franklin) were set up as parks open for everyone. Penn
designed a central square at the intersection of Broad and
what is now Market Street that would be surrounded by public
buildings.[9]
Some
of the first settlers lived in caves dug out of the river
bank, but the city grew with construction of homes, churches,
and wharves. The new landowners did not share Penn's vision
of a non-congested city. Most people bought land along the
Delaware River instead of spreading westward towards the Schuylkill.
The lots they bought were subdivided and resold with smaller
streets constructed between them. Before 1704, few people
lived west of Fourth Street.[10]
Early
Growth
Philadelphia
grew from a few hundred inhabitants in 1683 to over 2,500
in 1701. The population was mostly English, Welsh, Irish,
Germans, Swedes, Finns, Dutch, and African slaves. Before
William Penn left Philadelphia for the last time on October
25, 1701 he issued the Charter of 1701. The charter established
Philadelphia as a city and gave the mayor, aldermen, and councilmen
the authority to issue laws and ordinances and regulate markets
and fairs.[11]
As Philadelphia
became established it gradually became an important trading
center. Initially the city's main source of trade was with
the West Indies. However Queen Anne's War, which lasted between
1702 and 1713, cut off trade and hurt Philadelphia financially.
The end of the war brought brief prosperity to all of the
British territories, but a depression in the 1720s stunted
Philadelphia's growth. The 1720s and '30s saw immigration
from mostly Germany and Northern Ireland to Philadelphia and
the surrounding countryside. The countryside around Philadelphia
was soon turned into farmland and exports of breadstuffs,
along with lumber products and flax seeds, to Europe and elsewhere
in the American colonies helped bring Philadelphia out of
the depression.[12]
Philadelphia's
pledge of religious tolerance attracted many other religions
beside Quakers. Mennonites, Pietists, Anglicans, Catholics,
and Jews had moved to the city and soon Quakers were a minority
although they were still powerful politically. However, there
were still political tensions between and within the religious
groups. A series of riots in 1741 and 1742, whose causes ranged
between bread prices and drunken sailors, climaxed in October
1742. The "Bloody Election" riots had sailors attack
Quakers and pacifist Germans whose peace politics were strained
by the War of Jenkins' Ear.[13] The city was also plagued
by pickpockets and other petty criminals. Working in the city
government had such a poor reputation that fines were imposed
on citizens who refused to serve an office after being chosen.
One man fled Philadelphia to avoid serving as mayor.[14]
In the
first half the 18th century, the city was dirty, with garbage
and animals littering the streets. The roads were unpaved
and in some cases impassable. Early attempts to improve quality
of life were ineffective as laws were poorly enforced.[15]
However, by the 1750s, Philadelphia was turning into a major
city. Structures such as the Christ Church and the Pennsylvania
State House, better known as Independence Hall, were giving
the city a skyline. Streets were paved and illuminated with
gas lights.[16] Philadelphia's first newspaper, Andrew Bradford's
American Weekly Mercury, began publishing on December 22,
1719.[17]
The city
also developed culturally and scientifically. Schools, libraries
and theaters were founded. James Logan arrived in Philadelphia
in 1701 as a secretary for William Penn. He was the first
to help establish Philadelphia as a place of culture and learning.[18]
Logan, who was the mayor of Philadelphia in the early 1720s,
created one of the largest libraries in the colonies. He also
helped guide other prominent Philadelphia residents, which
included botanist John Bartram and Benjamin Franklin. Benjamin
Franklin arrived in Philadelphia in October 1723 and would
play a large part in the city's development. To help protect
the city from fire, Franklin founded the Union Fire Company.[19]
In the 1750s Franklin was named one of the city's post master
generals and he established postal routes between Philadelphia,
New York, Boston, and elsewhere. He helped raise money to
build the American colonies' first hospital, which opened
in 1752. That same year the College of Philadelphia, another
project Franklin led, received its charter of incorporation.[18]
Threatened by French and Spanish privateers, Franklin and
others set up a volunteer group for defense and built two
batteries. When the French and Indian War began Franklin was
able to allow the creation of militias. During the war, the
city became home to many refugees from the west. When Pontiac's
Rebellion occurred in 1763, refugees again fled into the city,
including a group of Native Americans hiding from other Native
Americans angry at their pacifism and violent white frontiersmen.
A group called the Paxton Boys attempted to enter Philadelphia
and kill the Native Americans, but was prevented by the city's
militia and Franklin who convinced them to leave.[20]
Revolution
In the
1760s the Stamp Act and the Townshend Acts, combined with
other frustrations, were causing anger against England in
the colonies, Philadelphia included. Both the Stamp and Townshend
Acts led to boycotts of the importation of British goods.
After the Tea Act in 1773, there were threats against anyone
who would store tea and any ships which brought tea up the
Delaware. In December, after the Boston Tea Party, a shipment
of tea had arrived on the ship the Polly. The captain left
after a committee told him to leave without dropping off his
cargo.[21]
A series
of acts in 1774 further angered the colonies and there was
a call for a general congress. The Massachusetts Assembly
of June 17, 1774 suggested the general congress meeting be
held in Philadelphia. The First Continental Congress was held
in September in Carpenters' Hall. The American Revolutionary
War began after the Battles of Lexington and Concord in April,
1775 and the Second Continental Congress met the next month
at the Pennsylvania State House where they would sign the
Declaration of Independence more than a year later. Besides
being the location of the Continental Congress, Philadelphia
was important to the war effort, as Robert Morris described
"You will consider Philadelphia, from its centrical situation,
the extent of its commerce, the number of its artificers,
manufactures and other circumstances, to be to the United
States what the heart is to the human body in circulating
the blood."[22]
Philadelphia
was vulnerable to attack by the British. There were efforts
to help protect the city from invasion from Delaware Bay and
to recruit more soldiers, but there was no serious defense
for the city. In March 1776 two British frigates began a blockade
of the mouth of Delaware Bay and the British were moving south
through New Jersey. In December the fear that the city was
about to be invaded led to half of Philadelphia's population
fleeing the city, including the Continental Congress which
had fled to Baltimore.[23] General George Washington pushed
back the British advance at the Battles of Princeton and Trenton
and the refugees and Congress returned. In September 1777
the British invaded Philadelphia from the south. General George
Washington intercepted them at the Battle of Brandywine but
was driven back. Thousands fled north into Pennsylvania and
east into New Jersey; Congress fled to Lancaster then to York.
British troops marched into the half-empty Philadelphia on
September 23 to cheering Loyalists crowds.[24]
The occupation
lasted ten months; with the French now helping the Americans,
the last British troops pulled out of Philadelphia on June
18, 1778 to help defend New York City. The American troops
arrived the same day and began reoccupying the city under
supervision of Major General Benedict Arnold, who had been
appointed the city's military commander. The city government
returned a week later and the Continental Congress returned
in early July. While no longer under serious threat by the
British, Philadelphia was experiencing serious inflation issues,
with the poor suffering the worst. This led to unrest in 1779,
with people blaming the upper class and Loyalists. One riot
in January which had sailors striking for higher wages ended
up dismantling ships. The Fort Wilson Riot on October 4 had
a group of men target James Wilson, a signer of the Declaration
of Independence but accused of being a Loyalist sympathizer.
Soldiers broke up the riot, but five people had died and seventeen
were injured.[25]
Temporary
Capital
After
the war ended the U.S. Congress had moved out of Philadelphia,
eventually settling in New York City. Besides the Constitutional
Convention in May 1787, United States politics was no longer
centered in Philadelphia. Philadelphians tried to lobby and
petition the Congress to move back to Philadelphia or southeastern
Pennsylvania. However, a permanent capital was selected to
be along the Potomac River and Philadelphia was selected to
be the temporary United States capital for ten years starting
in 1790. Congress occupied the Philadelphia County Courthouse
and the Supreme Court worked at City Hall. Robert Morris donated
his home on Market Street to be the residence for President
Washington.[26]
With
the end of the war the city began cleaning up the damage and
after 1787 the city's economy experienced accelerated growth.
The growth was interrupted by yellow fever outbreaks in the
1790s. Benjamin Rush identified the first outbreak in August
1793. Fear of contracting the disease caused thousands to
flee the city and trade virtually stopped as people were fearful
of coming to the city or interacting with its inhabitants.
The fever abated at the end of October with the onset of colder
weather. The death toll is believed to be more than 5,000,
about a tenth of the population. Yellow fever continued to
resurface over the next few decades with none as bad as the
one in 1793. The closest came in 1798 where again thousands
fled the city and led to the deaths of an estimated 1,292.[27]
Industrial
Growth
The Pennsylvania state government left Philadelphia in 1799
and at the time the United States government left Philadelphia
in 1800, the city had become one of the United States' busiest
ports and the country's largest city with 67,787 people living
in Philadelphia and its contiguous suburbs.[28] Philadelphia's
maritime trade was interrupted by the Embargo Act of 1807
and then the War of 1812. After the war, Philadelphia's shipping
industry never returned to its pre-embargo status and New
York City would soon become the United States' busiest port
and largest city.[29]
The embargo
and lack of foreign trade helped establish factories in and
around Philadelphia to make goods that were no longer available
from foreign markets. Manufacturing plants and foundries were
built and Philadelphia became an important center of paper-related
industries and the leather, shoe, and boot industries.[30]
Coal and iron mines, and the construction of new roads, canals,
and railroads helped Philadelphia's manufacturing power grow
and the city became the United States' first major industrial
city.[31] Major industrial projects included the Waterworks,
iron water pipes, a gasworks, and the U.S. Naval Yard. Along
with its industrial power, Philadelphia was also the financial
center of the country. Along with chartered and private banks,
the city was the home of the First and Second Banks of the
United States and the first U.S. Mint.[32] Cultural institutions
such as the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the Academy
of Natural Sciences, the Athenaeum and the Franklin Institute
also developed. Public education became available after the
Pennsylvania General Assembly passed the Free School Law of
1834.[33]
Immigrants,
mostly from Germany and Ireland, streamed into the city, swelling
the population of Philadelphia and its suburbs.[34] In Philadelphia,
as the rich moved west of 7th Street, the poor moved into
the upper class' former homes, now converted into tenements
and boarding houses. Many small row houses crowded alleyways
and small streets, and these areas were filthy, filled with
garbage and the smell of manure from animal pens. During the
1840s and 1850s, hundreds died each year in Philadelphia and
the surrounding districts from diseases like malaria, smallpox,
tuberculosis, and cholera, with the poor being affected the
worst.[35]
Along
with sanitation, violence was a serious problem. Gangs like
the Moyamensing Killers and the Blood Tubs controlled various
neighborhoods. During the 1840s and early 1850s when volunteer
fire companies, some of which were infiltrated by gangs, responded
to a fire, fights with other fire companies would usually
break out. The lawlessness among fire companies virtually
ended in 1853 and 1854 when the city took more control over
their operations.[36] The 1840s and 50s also saw a lot of
violence directed against immigrants. Nativists had a strong
presence in the city and often held mostly anti-Catholic,
anti-Irish meetings. Violence against immigrants also occurred,
the worst being the nativist riots in 1844. Violence against
African Americans was also common during the 1830s, 40s, and
50s. Deadly race riots led to African American homes and churches
being burned. In 1841, Joseph Sturge commented "...there
is probably no city in the known world where dislike, amounting
to the hatred of the coloured population, prevails more than
in the city of brotherly love!"[37] Despite the formation
of several anti-slavery societies, and being a major stop
on the Underground Railroad, much of Philadelphia was against
the abolitionist movement. Abolitionists were also the target
of violence which included several of their meetinghouses
being burned.[citation needed]
The lawlessness
and the difficulty in controlling it, along with a large population
shift just north of Philadelphia, led to the Act of Consolidation
in 1854. The act passed on February 2, made Philadelphia's
borders coterminous with Philadelphia County, incorporating
various districts, boroughs, townships, and any other unincorporated
communities within the county.[38]
Once
the American Civil War began in 1861, Philadelphia's southern
leanings changed and hostility moved from abolitionists to
southern sympathizers. Mobs threatened a secessionist newspaper
and the homes of suspected sympathizers and were only turned
away by the police and Mayor Alexander Henry.[39] Philadelphia
supported the war with soldiers, ammunition, war ships and
was a main source of army uniforms. Philadelphia was also
a major receiving place of the wounded, with more than 157,000
soldiers and sailors treated within the city. Philadelphia
began preparing for invasion in 1863, but the southern army
was repelled at Gettysburg.[40]
Late
19th Century
In the
years following the Civil War Philadelphia's population continued
to grow. The population grew from 565,529 in 1860 to 674,022
in 1870. By 1876 the city's population stood at 817,000. The
dense population areas were not only growing north and south
along the Delaware River, but also moving westward across
the Schuylkill River.[41] A large portion of the growth came
from immigrants, still mostly German and Irish. In 1870 twenty-seven
percent of Philadelphia's population was born outside the
United States. By the 1880s immigration from Russia, Eastern
Europe, and Italy started rivaling immigration from Western
Europe. Much of the immigration from Russia and Eastern Europe
were Jews. In 1881 there were around 5,000 Jews in the city
and by 1905 there were around 100,000. Philadelphia's Italian
population grew from around 300 in 1870 to around 18,000 in
1900, with the majority settling in South Philadelphia. Along
with foreign immigration, domestic immigration from African
Americans gave Philadelphia the largest African American population
of a Northern U.S. city. In 1876 there were around 25,000
African Americans living in Philadelphia and by 1890 the population
was near 40,000.[42] While immigrants moved into the city
Philadelphia's rich emptied out. During the 1880s much of
Philadelphia's upper class moved into the growing suburbs
along the Pennsylvania Railroad's Main Line west of the city.[43]
Politically
the city was dominated by one party, the Republican Party,
and a political machine. The Republicans dominated the post-war
elections and corrupt officials made their way into the government
and continued to control the city through voter fraud and
intimidation. The Gas Trust was the hub of the city’s
political machine. The trust controlled the gas company which
supplied gas for lighting to the city. The board came under
complete control by Republicans in 1865, and they used their
power to award contracts and perks for themselves and their
interests. Some government reform did occur during this time.
The police department was reorganized and volunteer fire companies
were eliminated and were replaced by a paid fire department.[44]
Education was reformed as well with a compulsory school act
passed in 1895 and the Public School Reorganization Act which
freed the city's education from the city's political machine.
Higher education changed as well. The University of Pennsylvania
moved to West Philadelphia and reorganized to its modern form
and Temple University, Drexel University and the Free Library
were founded.[45]
One of
the biggest projects of the time was the Centennial Exposition,
a World's Fair that celebrated the United States Centennial.
The Exposition was held in Fairmount Park and exhibits included
Alexander Graham Bell's telephone and the Corliss Steam Engine.
The Exposition began on May 10, 1876 and when the fair ended
on November 10 over nine million people had visited the fair.[46]
Another project was the construction of a new city hall. Construction
of Philadelphia City Hall was graft-ridden and it took twenty-three
years to complete. The building was completed in 1884 and
was the tallest building in Philadelphia until the 1980s.[47]
Philadelphia's
major industries of the era were the Baldwin Locomotive Works,
William Cramp and Sons Ship and Engine Building Company, and
the Pennsylvania Railroad. Westward expansion of the Pennsylvania
Railroad helped Philadelphia keep up with nearby New York
City in domestic commerce as both cities fought for dominance
in transporting iron and coal resources from Pennsylvania.
Along with the Pennsylvania Railroad, Philadelphia's other
local railroad was the Reading Railroad, but after a series
of bankruptcies it came under control of New Yorkers. However
the Panic of 1873, which occurred when the New York City branch
of the Philadelphia bank Jay Cooke and Company failed, and
another panic in the 1890s hampered Philadelphia's economic
growth.[48] While the depressions hurt the city, the depressions’
effect on Philadelphia was less serious than it was in other
cities because of the variety of industries that inhabited
the city. There were numerous iron and steel-related manufacturers,
including Philadelphian-owned iron and steel works outside
the city, most notably the Bethlehem Iron Company. The largest
industry in Philadelphia was textiles. Philadelphia produced
more textiles than any other U.S. city and in 1904 textiles
employed more than 35 percent of the city's workers. The cigar,
sugar, and oil industries also made an impact on the city.[49]
During this time the major department stores, Wanamaker's,
Gimbels, Strawbridge and Clothier, and Lit Brothers, sprung
up along Market Street.[50]
Early
20th Century
In the
beginning of the 20th century Philadelphia had taken on a
poor reputation. People both inside and outside of the city
commented that Philadelphia and its citizens were dull and
contented with its lack of change. Harper's Magazine commented
that "The one thing unforgivable in Philadelphia is to
be new, to be different from what has been."[51] Along
with the city's "dullness" Philadelphia was known
for its corruption. The Republican controlled political machine,
run by Israel Durham, permeated all parts of city government.
One official estimated that US$5 million was wasted every
year from graft in the city's infrastructure programs. The
majority of Philadelphians were staunchly Republican, but
voter fraud and bribery were still common. Reformers had some
success, the first in 1905 when election reforms such as the
providing of personal voter registration and the establishment
of primaries for all city offices was enacted. However, Philadelphians
quickly became complacent and the reforms did not prevent
control from the city's political bosses and the city government
went back to its characteristic corruption. After 1907 Boss
Durham retired and his successor, James McNichol, never controlled
much outside North Philadelphia. The Vare brothers, George,
Edwin, and William had created their own organization in South
Philadelphia and, in the lack of central authority, Senator
Boies Penrose took charge. Reformers saw success again in
1910 when infighting between McNichol and the Vares allowed
reform candidate Rudolph Blankenburg to be elected mayor.
During Blankenburg's time as mayor there were numerous cost-cutting
measures and improvements to city services, but Blankenburg
only served one term and the machine again gained control.[52]
The policies
of Woodrow Wilson's administration reunited reformers with
the city's Republican Party and World War I temporarily halted
the reform movement. In 1917 the murder of George Eppley,
a police officer defending City Council primary candidate
James Carey, ignited the reformers again and led to the shrinking
of the City Council from two houses to just one, and gave
council members an annual salary.[53] With the death of McNichol
in 1917 and Penrose in 1921, William Vare became the city's
political boss. In the 1920s the public flaunting of Prohibition
laws, mob violence, and police involvement in illegal activities
led Mayor W. Freeland Kendrick to appoint Brigadier General
Smedley Butler of the U.S. Marine Corps as director of public
safety. Butler cracked down on bars and speakeasies and tried
to stop corruption within the police force, but political
pressure made the job difficult and Butler saw little success.
After two years, Butler left in January 1926 and most of his
police reforms were repealed. On August 1, 1928 Boss Vare
suffered a stroke and two weeks later a grand jury investigation
into the city's mob violence and other crimes began. Numerous
police officers were dismissed or arrested as a result of
the investigation, but the investigation provided no permanent
change.[54] However 1928 was a turning point for the city's
Republican Party when strong support for Presidential Democratic
candidate Al Smith among some Philadelphians marked the city's
first movement away from the Republican Party in the 20th
century.[55]
During
this time Philadelphia continued to grow with immigrants coming
from Eastern Europe and Italy and African Americans from the
South.[56] Foreign immigration was briefly interrupted by
World War I when the city's factories, including the new U.S.
Naval Yard at Hog Island, constructed ships, trains, and other
items needed in the war effort. In September 1918 the influenza
pandemic arrived at the Naval Yard and began to spread. Some
days saw several hundred people die and by the time the pandemic
began to subside in October, over 12,000 people had died.[57]
The rising popularity of automobiles led to widening of roads
and creation of Northeast (Roosevelt) Boulevard in 1914, the
Benjamin Franklin Parkway in 1918, the changing of many existing
streets to one-way streets in the early 1920s, and the Delaware
River (Benjamin Franklin) Bridge in 1926. Philadelphia began
to modernize with the ever more frequent construction of steel
and concrete skyscrapers, the wiring of old buildings for
electricity and the city's first commercial radio station.[58]
Other projects included the city's first subway constructed
in 1907, the less than successful Sesqui-Centennial Exposition
in South Philadelphia, and the opening of the Philadelphia
Museum of Art in 1928.[59][60]
Depression
and World War II
In the
three years after the stock market crashed in 1929, fifty
Philadelphia banks closed. Of those only two were large, Albert
Greenfield's Bankers Trust Company and the Franklin Trust
Company. Savings and loan associations also faced trouble
with mortgages of 19,000 properties being foreclosed in 1932
alone. By 1934, 1,600 of 3,400 savings and loan associations
had shut down.[61] Hospitals were reporting definite cases
of starvation as early as 1931 and unemployment peaked in
1933 when 11.5 percent of whites, 16.2 percent of African
Americans, and 19.1 percent of foreign-born whites were out
of work. Mayor J. Hampton Moore blamed people's economic woes,
not on the Depression, but on laziness and wastefulness, and
claimed there was no starvation in the city. Soon after Moore's
observations, he fired 3,500 city workers, instituted pay
cuts, forced unpaid vacation and reduced the number of contracts
the city awarded. This saved Philadelphia millions of dollars,
and the efforts kept the city from defaulting on its debts,
but were unpopular among the unemployed. The city relied on
state money to fund relief efforts, and when Moore's successor,
S. David Wilson, became mayor he instituted numerous programs
financed by the New Deal's Works Progress Administration despite
condemning the program during his mayoral campaign. At its
peak in 1936, 40,000 Philadelphians were working in WPA financed
jobs.[62]
Encouragement
from the state and the creation of the Congress of Industrial
Organizations turned Philadelphia into a union city. Dissatisfaction
with working conditions caused numerous strikes in the already
existing textile unions and the creation of the CIO led to
the organization of labor unions in other industries and more
strikes. Another significant change during the 1930s was the
rise of the Democratic Party in Philadelphia. With the newly
organized Independent Democratic Committee, Philadelphia's
Democrats organized and expanded. In 1936, the Democratic
National Convention was held in Philadelphia and the majority
of Philadelphians reelected Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt
as President and put Democrats in Congress and the Pennsylvania
Assembly. City government remained Republican, but Republicans
increasingly were elected by small margins.[63]
The beginning
of World War II in Europe and the threat of the U.S. becoming
involved helped bring Philadelphia out of the Depression as
new jobs appeared in defense-related industries. After the
U.S. became involved in the war in 1941 the city mobilized.
Philadelphia consistently met war bond quotas and when the
war ended in 1945 there were 183,850 Philadelphians in the
U.S. armed forces. With many Philadelphians in the military
there was a labor shortage and businesses turned to women
and workers from outside the city. This caused problems in
1944 when African Americans were promoted to motormen and
conductors on Philadelphia Transportation Company's public
transportation vehicles. Other PTC worker's protested the
move and began a strike that nearly immobilized the city.
President Roosevelt sent troops to replace the workers. After
an ultimatum the workers returned after six days of striking.[64]
Reform
and Decline
After World War II ended Philadelphia was experiencing a serious
housing shortage. Around half of the city's housing had been
built in the 19th Century, and many lacked proper facilities,
were overcrowded, and in poor condition. Adding to the housing
problem was white flight as African Americans and Puerto Ricans
moved into new neighborhoods resulting in racial tension.
After a population peak of over two million residents in 1950
the city's population declined while the suburban neighboring
counties grew.[65] Philadelphia lost five percent of its population
in the 1950s, three percent in the 1960s and more than thirteen
percent in the 1970s.[66] Manufacturing and other major Philadelphia
businesses were also leaving or shutting down. Development
projects included University City in West Philadelphia, the
area around Temple University, the removal of the "Chinese
Wall" elevated railway and development of Market Street
East, specifically the construction the Gallery at Market
East. There was gentrification of certain neighborhoods such
as Society Hill, Rittenhouse Square, Queen Village, and the
Fairmount area. The airport expanded, the Schuylkill Expressway
and the Delaware Expressway (Interstate 95) were built, SEPTA
was formed, and there was residential and industrial development
of undeveloped land in Northeast Philadelphia.[67] Preparations
for the United States Bicentennial in 1976 began in 1964.
By the early 1970s US$3 million had been spent but no plans
were set. The planning group was reorganized and multiple
city wide events were planned. Events included the already
planned completions of the restoration of Independence National
Historical Park and the completion of Penn's Landing. Less
than half the expected visitors came to the city for the Bicentennial,
but the event inspired future annual neighborhood events and
fairs.[68]
Richardson
Dilworth was selected as the Democratic candidate in the 1947
election, but lost to incumbent mayor Bernard Samuel. However,
during the campaign Dilworth made numerous and specific charges
about corruption within city government, which led to the
City Council to set up a committee to investigate, which was
followed by a grand jury investigation. The five year investigation
and its findings garnered national attention. US$40 million
in city spending was found to be unaccounted for and the president
judge of the Court of Common pleas had been tampering with
court cases. The fire marshal went to prison and an official
in the tax collection office, a water department employee,
a plumbing inspector, and head of the police vice squad committed
suicide after criminal exposures.[69] The public and the press
demanded reform and by the end of 1950 a new city charter
was drafted. The new charter strengthened the position of
the mayor and weakened the City Council. The Council would
be made of ten councilmen elected by district and seven at
large. City administration was streamlined and new boards
and commissions were created. After the 1951 election Joseph
S. Clark became the first Democratic mayor in eighty years.
Clark filled administration positions based on skill and not
on political connections and worked to weed out corruption
left over from previous administrations.[70] Despite reforms
and the Clark administration a powerful Democratic organization
ended up replacing the old Republican one.[71] Clark was succeeded
by Richardson Dilworth who mostly continued the policies of
his predecessor. Dilworth resigned to run for governor in
1962 and city council president James H. J. Tate became the
city's first Irish Catholic mayor. Tate was elected mayor
in 1963 and reelected in 1967 despite opposition from reformers
who opposed Tate for being an organization insider.[72]
As elsewhere
in the United States the 1960s was a turbulent decade for
the city. There were numerous civil rights and anti-war protests
including large protests led by Marie Hicks to desegregate
Girard College.[73] Students took over the Community College
of Philadelphia in a sit-in, race riots broke out in Holmesburg
Prison and a 1964 riot along West Columbia Avenue killed two
people, injured over 300 and caused around US$3 million in
damages. Crime was also a serious problem. Primarily drug
related gang warfare plagued the city and in 1970 crime was
rated the city's number one problem in a City Planning Commission
survey. The court system was overtaxed and the tactics of
the police department under Police Commissioner Frank Rizzo
were controversial.[74] However Frank Rizzo was given credit
for preventing the level of violence seen in other cities
at the time and was elected mayor in 1971. The outspoken Rizzo,
who was reelected in 1975, was a divisive figure who had loyal
supporters and passionate opponents. Police and fire departments
and cultural institutions were well supported under Rizzo,
but other city departments like the Free Library, the Department
of Welfare and Recreation, the City Planning Commission and
the Streets Department experienced large cuts.[75] The radical
back-to-nature group called MOVE formed in 1972 and tension
soon developed with the city. The first major clash occurred
in 1978 at the group's Powelton Village headquarters resulted
in the death of a police officer and nine MOVE members were
sent to prison. The second major clash occurred in 1985 when
a stand off occurred at the group's new headquarters in Southwest
Philadelphia. The stand off ended when police dropped a satchel
bomb from a helicopter on the house. The bomb set off a fire
that killed eleven MOVE members, including five children,
and destroyed sixty-two neighboring houses.[76]
Crime
continued to be a problem in the 1980s. Deadly mafia warfare
plagued South Philadelphia, drug gangs and crack houses invaded
the slums of the city, and the murder rate skyrocketed. William
J. Green became mayor in 1980 and in 1984 W. Wilson Goode
became Philadelphia's first African American mayor. Development
continued in areas in Old City and South Street, and large
glass and granite skyscrapers were constructed in Center City.
City employee labor contracts signed during the Rizzo administration
helped set up a city financial crisis that Green and Goode
were unable to prevent and left the city near bankruptcy at
the end of the 1980s.[77][76]
Into
the 21st Century
Ed Rendell was elected the city's first Jewish mayor in 1992.
When Rendell became mayor the city had numerous unpaid bills,
the lowest bond rating of the top fifty largest U.S. cities,
and a budget deficit of US$250 million. Rendell was able to
attract investment in the city and was soon able to stabilize
the city's finances and even produce small budget surpluses.[76]
Revitalization of parts of Philadelphia continued in the 1990s.
In 1993 a new convention center was opened creating a hotel
boom with seventeen hotels opening between 1998 and 2000 and
the city began promoting its historic sites, festivals, and
entertainment to attract tourists.[78] In 2005 National Geographic
Traveler named Philadelphia America's Next Great City citing
its recent revitalization and general cityscape.[79]
Former
city council president John F. Street was elected mayor in
1999 and city revitalization continued into the 21st century.
The Street administration targeted some of the city's worst
neighborhoods for revitalization and has seen considerable
progress.[80] Tax breaks created in 1997 and 2000 helped create
a condominium boom in Center City, increasing the population
of Center City and helping slow down the city's forty-year
population decline. The population of Center City rose to
88,000 in 2005 from 78,000 in 2000 and the number of household
grew by 24 percent.[81] Corruption still continued into the
21st century. A series of scandals in the 1990s plagued the
police department which included the systematic underreporting
of crime to give the impression of low crime rates.[76] The
Street administration has also been plagued with scandal where
people in his administration were accused of awarding contracts
based on campaign donations for Street's 2003 reelection campaign.[80]
There has also been a rise of violent crime after a decline
in the 1990s. In 2006 Philadelphia's murder rate was 27.8
per 100,000 inhabitants versus a rate of 18.9 in 2002.[82]
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Kraybill, Susan Lewis, Dave Nelson and Carol Turkington (2005).
in Zoë Ross: Insight Guides: Philadelphia and Surroundings,
Second Edition (Updated), APA Publications. ISBN 1585730262.
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Source
of Article:
Wikipedia.
(2008). History of Philadelphia. Retrieved May 15,
2008 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Philadelphia
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you can find various external links about Philadelphia History!
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