Primary Source Learning: Gilded Age Teaching Resources & Strategies
This morning I saw a tweet mentioning primary sources related to immigration in the Gilded Age and I began to wonder . . . What learning activities related to the Gilded Age could we imagine using Library of Congress primary sources? What other teaching resources and strategies are available on LOC.gov and elsewhere? See the results below and feel free to comment on learning activities and resources that you’ve created or uncovered in the Speak Your Mind section.
Teaching ideas
Read “A Political Satire of the Gilded Age” (Library of Congress), then use the illustrations and political cartoons from Puck magazine (1871-1918) to consider differing viewpoints on issues of the time.
Have students compare and contrast song lyrics about high society with those about poverty. Alternatively, you might have them consider the portrayal of ethnic groups in song lyrics from 1870-1885.
Have students compare and contrast America at work and America at leisure in films from 1894-1915. How does this particular set of primary sources reinforce or alter their understanding of this era in history?
Have students read The Gilded Age by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner and compare passages in the book to information presented by different primary sources. Alternatively, you might choose to have students “illustrate” the book with various primary sources and provide justification for their choices in an illustrator’s edition foreward.
Have students read these Gilded Age Ideology documents compiled by Dr. Kathleen A. Brown (St. Edward’s University). Next, have them answer the suggested questions, then consider how other primary sources support or refute the claims or purpose of these documents.
Have students watch the video or read the transcript of author and historian Steve Fraser on Gilded Ages (PBS). Then have them look for historical and modern-day primary sources that support or refute the views Fraser presents.
Lesson plans
- 1900 America: Primary Sources and Epic Poetry
- African American Identity in the Gilded Age: Two Unreconciled Strivings
- Child Labor in America
- The Immigrant Experience: Down the Rabbit Hole
- Labor Unions and Working Conditions: United We Stand
Collection Connections: teaching resources & strategies
- Primary Source Learning: Chicago Anarchists & the Haymarket Affair
- “California as I Saw It”: First-Person Narratives of California’s Early Years, 1849-1900
- Chinese in California 1850-1925: collection connections search for collection items with this finding aid
- History of the American West, 1860-1920 search for photos using Denver Public Library’s Western History Photo Collection
- Inside An American Factory: Westinghouse Works, 1904
- Railroad Maps, 1828-1900
- Touring Turn-of-the-Century America: Photographs from the Detroit Publishing Company, 1880 – 1920
Library articles & more resources
- American Business History in “The Gilded Age” Inside Adams
- But Was She Really the “Witch of Wall Street” Inside Adams
- Capital and Labor – Life of the People: Realist Prints and Drawings from the Ben and Beatrice Goldstein Collection, 1912-1948 online exhibition
- The Gilded Age: Technology & Invention Headlines & Heroes
- Murder in Manhattan: The Death of Jim Fisk Headlines & Heroes
- Stories from the Gilded Age America’s Library
Video recordings
- Donn Piatt: Gadfly of the Gilded Age
- King of the Lobby: The Life and Times of Sam Ward, Man-About-Washington in the Gilded Age
Resources outside the Library
- The Gilded Age from PBS
- The Gilded Age Schmoop
- Illinois During the Gilded Age Northern Illinois University