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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/railroads.jpeg]]
2->''"Every age has its temptations, its weaknesses, its dangers. Ours is in the line of the snobbish and the sordid."''
3-->-- '''UsefulNotes/RutherfordBHayes'''
4
5The Gilded Age is one of the most common terms for the period in American history between the end of the [[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar Civil War]] until the presidency of UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt at the turn of the 20th century. During this period, the expansion of industrialization in the United States initiated a period of rapid economic growth. Due to American wage levels increasing at a much higher level compared to that of Europe, extensive European immigration (primarily from Germany, Italy, and Eastern Europe) caused significant changes to the demographics of the United States.
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7The "native" [[WhiteAngloSaxonProtestant WASPs]] welcomed the 'pure' Nordic and Germanic immigrants but lamented the racial watering-down that came with the influx of Irish, Italians, and various groups from Southern and Eastern Europe. Particularly alarming to WASP America was the large influx of Ashkenazi Jews (many of whom were trying to escape a series of especially violent pogroms in UsefulNotes/TsaristRussia after Tsar Alexander II was assassinated) and Chinese (many of whom were fleeing from extreme poverty and instability caused by [[UsefulNotes/NoMoreEmperors the deterioration of the dying Qing dynasty]]). While anti-miscegenation laws making Chinese-White and Black-White marriages illegal were successfully enacted in a number of states, there was no success with preventing intermixing between European emigrant ethnicities - though immigration quotas restricting their numbers were soon implemented. All these immigrants came chasing UsefulNotes/TheAmericanDream; the vast majority were treated to slums and sweatshops in America's rapidly-growing cities. It should come as no surprise, then, that the name "Gilded Age" comes from a story co-written by Creator/MarkTwain and Charles Dudley Warner in 1873, and refers to the [[CrapsaccharineWorld extreme opulence of the era contrasted with widespread poverty on the ground]], compared to a "gilded" item: one coated in gold, but actually made of something less valuable.
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9As you might imagine, this era is particularly [[{{Pun}} rich]] in tropes. J. P. Morgan, Jay Gould, the Vanderbilts, and other [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Robber Barons]] populate the posh districts of UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity, {{UsefulNotes/Boston}}, and {{UsefulNotes/Philadelphia}}, while the poor new immigrants [[AnImmigrantsTale find life hard]] in the vast slums. The Republican Party runs everything in [[UsefulNotes/AmericanPoliticalSystem Washington]] as a [[CorruptPolitician political machine]] despite the protests of the reforming "Mugwumps" within the GOP. The only Democrat to win the White House during these 35 years was UsefulNotes/GroverCleveland, a reformer who only won because he had support from the Mugwumps--indeed the term "Mugwump" arose as a term of abuse for Republicans who supported Cleveland (it's a long story, but in essence people who used the term "mugwump" accused them of being HolierThanThou).
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11In the South, there is Reconstruction and then its end: the aftermath of the abolition of slavery, with Carpetbaggers coming from the North to take advantage of business opportunities and African-Americans getting their rights only to see them stripped away in the wake of the deal to put UsefulNotes/RutherfordBHayes in the White House in the election of 1876. Expect to see the former SouthernBelle as a PrincessInRags and the SouthernGentleman as a member of TheKlan.
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13As for the economy, deflation and banking panics were huge problems, big monopolies crushed local competition, and unions and farmers struggled to find their voice. Eventually, people got so fed up with everything going on that a widespread reform movement began in the country around the 1890s. This is known as UsefulNotes/TheProgressiveEra, and it brought us UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt and UsefulNotes/WoodrowWilson.
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15Out West is TheWildWest, which is of course a trope of its own. The {{Steampunk}} and its offshoot, GaslampFantasy, can take place in this period.
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17Not be confused with the Creator/{{HBO}} series [[Series/TheGildedAge of the same name]], though it does take place during that period. No relations to the GildedCage trope either.
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19See also: UsefulNotes/VictorianBritain[=/=]VictorianLondon and TheEdwardianEra (which covers this time period across UsefulNotes/ThePond). For Japan see UsefulNotes/MeijiRestoration.
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21NOTE: WildWest examples should go on that page.
22----
23!!Tropes associated with that period in fiction include:
24* AllJewsAreAshkenazi: As this is an American trope, it's tied to American history. Until the post-Civil War period, the American Jewish population was quite small and was relatively balanced--possibly even mostly Sephardi. The massive influx (mostly from the Russian Empire, some from Austria-Hungary) changed that perception.
25* BigFancyHouse: The affluent nouveau riche started to build mansions all over the country, whose styles include a mishmash of every trendy European architecture packed together in one house, much like the [=McMansions=] of the 2000s. Due to the changing tastes of a new generation of elites for simpler aesthetics, and due to their size and upkeep, by the end of the era, those houses were difficult to maintain and were considered hazardous due to the usage of gaslight, asbestos, and toxic materials containing lead, mercury, cadmium, and arsenic in paint and fabric dyes, and much of the owners were forced to abandon or demolish those houses. Such houses in this era were given reputations as gaudy, excessive, and {{haunted|House}} by anyone in the 1920s onwards.
26* BombThrowingAnarchists: "Propaganda of the deed" was very popular among anarchists everywhere, of course, but American anarchists took the cake by assassinating UsefulNotes/WilliamMcKinley at the end of this era (in 1901). Anarchism in general spread to America via the massive immigration from Southern, Central, and Eastern Europe (where radical leftist ideologies were more popular).
27* ConspicuousConsumption: Practiced by industrialists and other newly-rich folks; gaudy bombast was very popular then. The term "conspicuous consumption" dates from the tail end of this era, with Thorstein Veblen's ''Theory of the Leisure Class'' in 1899.
28* CorruptCorporateExecutive: While greedy merchants are of course nothing new, the corporations grew to even greater heights in in this era, being founded to support the new railroads and other business ventures; the first modern general incorporation statute was passed by UsefulNotes/NewJersey in 1888; Delaware passed its famously business-friendly statute in 1899, and has been the standard for large corporations ever since. Corporate executives were called "captains of industry" by those who supported them, and "robber-barons" by those who didn't. The "trusts" were probably the most famous expression; the first competition legislation--the Sherman Anti-Trust Act--appeared in this era.
29* DimeNovel hero Literature/NickCarter was created in TheGildedAge.
30* TheGayNineties: From the last full decade of the era (all definitions of the Gilded Age have it end during TR's administration).
31* HighClassGloves: The old money decided the type of gloves to wear at certain events. Opera gloves, not seen since the end of the Regency/Federal era, came back in style, and remained in evening wear up until the 1960s.
32* AnImmigrantsTale: They didn't first show up during this era, but the immigration boom brought millions to the United States. Although it doesn't really appear in fiction of the era quite so strongly--since said immigrants were mostly too illiterate to write--the better-educated children and grandchildren of the immigrants who came during this period of massive immigration often set immigration stories in this time.
33* TheKlan: First showed up in the South during the Reconstruction period, but only lasted until 1874. The Klan didn't come back until the middle of the [[UsefulNotes/WoodrowWilson Wilson]] Administration, 10-15 years after the end of the era.
34* NobilityMarriesMoney: Many British noble families were saved from poverty by marrying into wealthy American families. Consuelo Vanderbilt is a RealLife example, marrying the Duke of Marlborough in an arranged marriage. These women were known as "dollar princesses".
35* NouveauRiche: The "robber barons" were rarely well-off to begin with.
36* PimpedOutDress: After the crinolines of the Civil War era, came the bustle dresses of the most sumptuous of fabrics and they were often loaded with fancy decorations.
37* RailroadBaron: The period saw the beginning of the golden age of American railroading, with both eras being inspeparately interweaved. The term "Robber baron" originated in this era, a recent new kind of dishonest industrialist, with many of them being railroad tycoons who purportedly used exploitative practices to amass their wealth. The page image, the cartoon "Modern Colossus of (Rail) Roads", features William Henry Vanderbilt, President of the New York Central Railroad, Cyrus West Field, who controlled the New York Elevated Railroad Company, and Jay Gould, who controlled the Union Pacific Railroad and other western railroads, depicted as puppet masters and highwaymen robbers.
38* SelfMadeMan: Of whom John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, and Thomas Edison were the most prominent, but really there were quite a few. Of course, there were far more who never made it, or even tried to make it.
39* UglyAmericanStereotype: The first record of the term "Ugly American" is from about this era.
40* WealthyPhilanthropist: John D. Rockefeller was widely considered to be the wealthiest man as his monopoly of the American oil industry, though raising several ethical questions, made him millions. Retired from his day to day experiences, Rockefeller donated more than $500 million dollars to various educational, religious, and scientific causes through the Rockefeller Foundation. He funded the establishment of the University of Chicago and the Rockefeller Institute, among many other philanthropic endeavors.
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42!! Works set in this time period
43* ''Series/TheGildedAge'', [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin for obvious reasons]].
44* ''Series/GhostsUS'': The episodes “He Sees Dead People” and “Holes Are Bad”, have flashbacks set in this era; the year 1875 and 1895 to be exact.
45* ''Film/GoneWithTheWind'', the parts after the war.
46* ''Film/TheBirthOfANation1915''
47* Many of the works of Creator/MarkTwain (who, as noted, named the era with his book ''Literature/TheGildedAge'').
48* ''WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTail''
49* ''VideoGame/BioShockInfinite'' (especially since Columbia seemed to be made to extend this era)
50* A good portion of ''Literature/TheEmigrants'', although the rural Minnesota setting straddles it with the West/frontier.
51* ''Literature/TheJungle'' was written in 1906 (a few years after the accepted end of the Gilded Age), but is set a few years earlier.
52* ''WesternAnimation/AmericanPop'' begins with the first generation arriving in the 1890s.
53* ''Literature/FromTheEarthToTheMoon'', and its sequel, takes place shortly after The Civil War where the Baltimore gun Club, faltering after their services are no longer needed, plan to win the admiration of the world with a grand plan to shoot a rocket to the moon.
54* WebVideo/CrashCourse US History [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Spgdy3HkcSs has an episode]] on this period. (Actually, it has [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRhjqqe750A a]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6tRp-zRUJs few]].)
55* Most of ''Literature/TheAgeOfInnocence'', except the last chapter.
56* About 9/10 of ''Comicbook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'' revolves around Scrooge trying to make his fortune in turn-of-the-century America.
57* Ride/DisneyThemeParks: The American "Main Street USA" areas are completely designed around the most nostalgic version of this time; the international ones also use it as a starting point but diverge to greater or lesser degrees. The American Waterfront at Tokyo [=DisneySea=] has a New York area set around this time period, with a [[Ride/TheTwilightZoneTowerOfTerror Tower of Terror]] based around a robber baron explorer.
58* ''VideoGame/TheOuterWorlds'' takes place in an alternate universe where the Gilded Age ''never'' ended, even after achieving interstellar colonies.
59* ''Literature/TheBuccaneers'', following five "dollar princesses" who, after being deemed too new-money for New York City's social set, marry into English nobility.
60* ''Literature/RedsARevolutionaryTimeline'' begins during the period. It is an AlternateHistory and one of its main [[PointOfDivergence point of divergence]] is the continuation of the Gilded Age because President [=McKinley=] is never assassinated and therefore the Roosevelt Presidency and the UsefulNotes/TheProgressiveEra never happen (Progressives also failing to pass their legislation), allowing a much more united socialist movement to grow in influence instead.

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