STD-10 SS Work, Life and Leisure Notes
Characteristics of
City: Ancient cities developed when food became surplus to support a wide range
of non-food producers. Cities were the centres of political power,
administrative network, trade and industry, religious institutions and
intellectual activity. The cities supported various social groups.
Industrialization and the Rise of the
Modern City of England
Many decades after
the beginning of the industrial revolution, most Western countries were largely
rural. In the early industrial cities of Britain, most of the people were
migrants from rural areas.
By 1750, one out of
every nine person of England and Wales lived in London. It was a big city with
a population of about 675,000. Between 1810 and 1880, the population of London
multiplied fourfold; increasing from 1 million to about 4 million.
The city
of London was a powerful magnet for migrant populations; although there was no
large factory in London. The London dockyard was among the major employer.
Additionally, large numbers of people were employed in clothing and footwear,
wood and furniture, metals and engineering, printing and stationary and
precision products.
During the
First World War (1914 – 1918), manufacturing of motor cars and electrical goods
began in London and this marked the beginning of large factories in the city.
Over due course of time, about one-third of all jobs in the city were created
in these factories.
Marginal Groups
When the city of
London grew in size, crime also flourished. As per estimates, about 20,000
criminals were living in London in the 1870s. Many people who failed to find
gainful employment often resorted to petty crimes. Sometimes, the crime
provided a better source of earning than doing some of the low paying jobs in
the small factories.
Many women, who were
employed in the factories during war years, lost their jobs and were forced to
work within households. Many of them tried to earn by renting their homes or by
other activities; like tailoring, washing or matchbox making.
Many poor children
were forced into low-paid work, often by their parents. Compulsory Elementary
Education Act was passed in 1870 and the factory acts were passed in 1902.
These acts ensured that the children could be kept out of industrial work.
Housing: The flow of
migrants to cities created problems of housing. Housing facilities were not
provided by the employers. Private landowners provided cheap but unsafe
tenements for the migrant workers. According to a survey done by Charles Booth
(a Liverpool shipowner) in 1887, about 1 million Londoners were very poor. This
comprised about 20% of the population of London at that time. The life
expectancy of the poor was 29 years; compared to 55 years among the gentry and
the middle class. Charles Booth concluded that London needed to rebuild at least
400,000 rooms to house its poorest citizens.
The large number of
one-room houses occupied by the poor was seen as serious threat to public
health. Those rooms were poorly ventilated and there was no arrangement for
sanitation. They also posed fire hazard. People living in poor conditions were
also potential hotspots for social disorder. To prevent the London poor,
workers’ mass housing schemes were planned.
Cleaning London
Various steps were
taken to clean up the city of London. Steps were taken to decongest localities,
green the open spaces, reduce pollution and landscape the city. Large blocks of
apartments were built. Rent control was introduced during the First World War,
to reduce the burden on people.
Between the two World
Wars, the British state accepted the responsibility for housing the working
class. Local authorities built about one million houses. Most of them were
single-family cottages.
During this period,
the city expanded beyond the range where people could walk to work. This
necessitated the development of new forms of mass transport.
Transport in the City
This was the period
when the London underground railway was built. The first section of the
Underground opened in 1863 between Paddington and Farrington. The train service
was expanded by 1880 to carry 40 million passengers a year.
Initial public
reaction towards the Underground was negative. Many people were critical of the
way many houses were demolished to make way for construction of underground.
Many people were not comfortable of the idea of travelling in smoke filled
underground railway. But ultimately, the Underground proved to be a huge
success.
Social Change in the City
The family
became smaller and individualism increased. The institution of marriage tended
to break down among the working class. Women of the upper middle classes in
Britain faced increasing levels of isolation. Many social reformers felt a need
to save the family by pushing the women back into the home.
Most of
the political movements of this period were largely participated by male. It
took some time before women could actively participate in political movements.
The
positive aspect of these changes was that the family became the focus of the
new market.
Leisure and Consumption
For
wealthy British, there had been a tradition of ‘London Season’. For the elite
families, many cultural events were organized.
People
from the working classes met in pubs. The pub was the centre of exchanging news
and views for them. Libraries, art galleries and museums were established in
the nineteenth century to provide people with a sense of history and pride in
the British achievements. Music halls were popular among the lower classes. By
the early twentieth century, cinema became a popular entertainment across all
classes.
The trend
of spending holidays on beaches increased among the working classes.
Politics in the City
A large
city population was both a threat and an opportunity from political perspective.
This was a period when many mass strikes and protests erupted in the city. Some
of them were brutally suppressed by the police. The State authorities worked
towards reducing the possibility of rebellion and enhance urban aesthetics.
The City in
Colonial India
The situation in India was
somewhat different from that in Western Europe. The pace of urbanization was
slow during colonial rule. In the early twentieth century, no more than 11% of
population was living in cities. A major chunk of the urban dwellers were
living in the three Presidency cities, viz. Bombay, Madras and Calcutta.
The Presidential cities were
multi-functional cities. These cities had major ports, warehouses, homes and
offices, army camps, educational institutions, museums and libraries. Because
of being the hubs of business and political activities, these cities grew in
population.
Bombay expanded rapidly from the
late 19th century. The population of Bombay grew from 644,000 in 1872 to
1,500,000 in 1941.
Bombay: The Prime City of India
In the
seventeenth century, Bombay was under Portuguese control. It was a group of
seven islands. In 1661; after the marriage of Britain’s King Charles II to the
Portuguese princess; the control of Bombay passed into British hands. After
that, the East India Company shifted its base from Surat to Bombay.
Initially,
Bombay was the major outlet for cotton textiles from Gujarat. Later, in the
nineteenth century, it became the transit hub for large quantities of raw
materials; like cotton and opium.
Gradually,
it became an important administrative centre. By the end of the nineteenth
century, Bombay became a major industrial centre.
Work in The city
After the
defeat of the Maratha in the Anglo-Maratha War, Bombay became the capital of
Bombay Presidency in 1819. With the growth of trade in cotton and opium, large
communities of traders, bankers, artisans and shopkeepers settled in the city.
Opening of textile mills initiated a fresh round of migration to the city.
The first
cotton textile mill in Bombay opened in 1854. By 1921, there were 85 cotton
mills. About 146,000 workers worked in these mills. Between 1881 and 1931, only
about one-fourth of the inhabitants of the city were born in this city.
Between
1919 and 1926, women formed about 23% of the mill workforce. After that their
number dropped steadily to less than 10% of the total workforce.
The
railways encouraged migration into the city at even larger scale. Famine in the
dry regions of Kutch forced a large number of people to migrate to Bombay in
1888 – 89. In 1898, the district authorities were so much worried during the
plague epidemic that they sent about 30,000 people back to their places of
origin by 1901.
Housing and Neighbourhoods
Bombay was
a much crowded city; compared to London. In the late 1840s, each Londoner
enjoyed an average space of 155 sq yards. In Bombay, each person had to manage
with just 9.5 sq yards. About 8 persons lived per house in London, while in
Bombay this figure was 20 persons per house.
The Bombay
Fort area formed the heart of the city in the early 1800s. It was divided
between a ‘native’ town and a European of ‘white’ section. This racial pattern
was similar in all three Presidency cities.
The city
developed in an unplanned way; which led to huge crisis of water supply and
housing by the mid 1850s.
The rich
people lived in sprawling bungalows. But more than 70% of the working people
lived in the thickly populated chawls of Bombay. About 90% of millworkers used
to live in Girangaon. This was not more than 15 minutes’ walk from the mills.
A chawl
was a multi-storeyed structure. These houses were usually owned by private
landlords. Each chawl was divided into smaller one-room tenements. The
tenements had no private toilets. The rent was so high that people were forced
to share a tenement with relatives or caste fellows.
Since
homes were small; so streets and neighbourhoods became the place for various
activities; like cooking washing and sleeping. Liquor shops and akharas came up
in any empty spot. Street entertainers and hawkers also used those empty
spaces.
People
from the lower castes found it difficult to find housing. These people were
kept out of many chawls. They often had to live in shelters made of corrugated
sheets, leaves or bamboo poles.
The City
of Bombay Improvement Trust was established in 1898. Its focus was clearing
poorer homes out of the city centre. In 1918, about 64,000 people were evicted
from their homes but only 14,000 were rehabilitated. A Rent Act was passed in
1918, in an effort to keep the rents under control. But this led to a severe
housing crisis because landlords withdrew houses from the market.
Land Reclamation in Bombay
Bombay had
largely been built on the land which was reclaimed from the sea. The earliest
reclamation project began in 1784. William Hornby; the governor of Bombay;
approved the building of the great sea wall to prevent flooding of the low
lying areas.
Many
reclamation projects were taken up from time to time. By 1870s, the city had
expanded to about 22 sq miles. Even the famous Marine Drive had been built on
the reclaimed land.
The City of Dreams: Cinema and Culture
The first
Hindi movie; Raja Harishchandra; was made by Dadasaheb Phalke in 1913. By 1925,
Bombay had become the film capital of India. In 1947, about Rs. 756 million was
invested in about 50 films which were produced in that year. By 1987, about
520,000 people were employed in the film industry.
Most of
the people in the film industry were migrants from different places. In a way,
they also contributed to the national character of the industry.
Cities and the challenge of the environment
The
development of cities resulted in long lasting damage to the environment. Use
of coal in homes and industries in the nineteenth century England raised
serious problems. In most of the cities, black smoke from the chimneys gave a
permanent gray tone to the sky. Many people suffered from bad tempers,
smoke-related illnesses and dirty clothes. By the 1840s, some towns such as
Derby, Leeds and Manchester made laws to control smoke in the city. But it was
difficult to implement these laws because industrialists did not want to invest
in cleaner technologies.
Similar
problems were witnessed in the Presidential cities in India. Burning of biomass
and coal by homemakers, industries and railways created lot of smoke and black
soot in the cities. Much legislation was passed to control air pollution but
they could not produce the desired results.
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