Industry Comes of Age Theme: American accomplished heavy industrialization in the post-Civil War era. Spurred by the transcontinental rail network, business.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Industrial America in the Late 19 th Century. Corporate consolidation of industry Transformation of farming, mining, and ranching industries by Big Business.
Advertisements

Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 LaborRRPeopleTermsCommerceChanges.
Big Business Emerges Businesses consolidate into big industries or ________________ These are run by businessmen who become very wealthy and become known.
Industrialization. The “Steel Horse” Five main lines Great Northern Northern Pacific Central/Union Pacific Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Southern Pacific.
JEOPARDY Industrialization in the U.S. Categories
The Second Industrial Revolution John D. Rockefeller Standard Oil Trust Controlled 95% of all oil refineries in the U.S. Ruthless Business Practices, Spies.
* The Iron Colt Becomes an Iron Horse * Describe the growth of railroads after the Civil War. * Why did the transcontinental railroad require.
An Age of Big Business Chapter 19 Section 3.
The Rise of Industrial America
Gilded Age.
Ch. 24 Notes Industry Comes of Age. The Rise of Industry 1.After the Civil War, agriculture was still the largest economic activity of the U.S. and the.
Chapter 19, Section 2 Big Business
Industry Comes of Age Although railroads instigated a great post Civil War industrial transformation in America, workers struggled with ineffective labor.
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute January 31, 2011 A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
The Gilded Age The Rise of Big Business. The Gilded Age and Progressive Era ( 1865 – 1917) Modern America really begins to emerge in this period  This.
THE INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY
Chapter 14 A New Industrial Age. Natural Resources Fuel Industrialization.
THE RISE OF BIG BUSINESS
The Rise of Industry Overview Perfect Storm – cheap labor, resources, capital, tech RR’s & new tech spur increase in steel production The dominance of.
CHAPTER 18 THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA. INDUSTRIALIZATION Reasons for rapid expansion Cheap energy New technology Low production costs Unskilled and.
Chapter Twenty-Four Industry Comes of Age,
Was the Industrial Revolution “Good” for the United States?
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute January 30, 2015 A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
Chapter 17 Industrialism. Natural Resources As America grew in size, settlers began to find new minerals Enormous lodes (a rich deposit or supply) of.
The Rise of Big Business
Corporation Separate unions of skilled workers, united together Knights of Labor Child Labor Group formed by workers to improve working conditions Theory.
After the Civil War, the North and West grew quickly. Railroads helped the West grow, while industrial cities sprang up all over the north employing many.
Chapter Twenty-Four Industry Comes of Age,
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute February 4, 2014 A/A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
The Expansion of Industry
Big Business Emerges. Panic of 1893 Brief, severe depression caused by over - investing in and failure of railroads & banks. Enabled purchase of assets.
The Rise of Industrial America, 1865 – 1900 Chapter 18.
Big Business and Labor Section 14-3 pp. 447 – 455 January 13, 2010.
Big Business -corporations develop -limited liability leads to public investment -mass market selling.
THE RISE OF INDUSTRY AND THE GROWTH OF UNIONS IN THE GILDED AGE Industrialization.
EXPANSION OF INDUSTRY Chapter 6. Fuel industrialization OIL— 1859 Edwin drake successfully drills for oil in Pennsylvania  Starts Oil Boom  Popularity.
1/8/2015 p APUSH Agenda Mr. Jackson Walsingham Academy.
1/7/2015 p APUSH Agenda Mr. Jackson Walsingham Academy.
U.S. History Chapter 14 Lecture Notes. Inventions make people’s lives easier 1.Used the Steam Engine to drill for oil in the United States, “Black Gold”.
Big Business.
Mr. Hood U.S. History.  Because of Industrialization we see the development of expanding markets.  That means that old markets were expanded and new.
AIM: What do we need to study for the midterm? Do Now: List 3 topics we have studied so far. HW: Study.
Key terms dealing with mines? Comstock Lode Boom town Ghost town problems Silver strike in the Sierra Nevadas Town that quickly grew up at a gold strike.
Industry Comes of Age By David Brooks Logan County High School.
THE RISE & DEVELOPMENT OF AMERICAN INDUSTRY IN THE LATE 19 TH CENTURY OBJECTIVE: WHAT FACTORS LED TO THE GROWTH OF AMERICAN INDUSTRY & HOW DID GOVERNMENT.
Chapter 18 THE INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY. “Robber Barons” or “Captains of Industry”?  Andrew Carnegie  Steel Pioneered vertical integration Pioneered vertical.
Ch 24 Industry Comes of Age. Transcontinental Rail The Union-Pacific Rail Co. - Commissioned by Congress to go from Omaha, Nebraska to the West. Given.
Warm-up How might expansion into the West help to define or redefine the national identity? How do interactions with native Americans shape national identity?
14-3: Big Business emerges –What is it? –Andrew Carnegie- Tycoon or Robber Baron?
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute February 2, 2016 A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green.
U.S. History Chapter 6 Edwin L. Drake First to successfully use a steam engine to drill for oil.
Indirect routes The Golden Spike 1869 Promontory Point, Utah.
Objective: Students will understand the role that industry played in the United States during the Gilded Age.
Click to begin. CorrectWrongHome Greek gods 100 Greek Cities Greek Philosophy Greek Battles Potpourri
Resources/Inventions
Day 80: Industry Comes of Age
The Rise of Industrial America
Rise of Industry and the Effect on America
Chapter 24, Industry Comes of Age
The Rise of Industrial America
Expansion of Industry.
Expansion of Industry.
Topic: Assessing the impact of Corporate Consolidation of American Industry and Technology Do Now: “Industrialists like Carnegie, Vanderbilt, and Rockefeller.
Find your new seat Get out AR Grab Writing Notebook.
Railroads: Precursor of the Industrial Revolution
Industry Comes of Age Part 1.
The Industrial Revolution ( )
Chapter 24 Industry Comes of Age.
Technology and Greed at Its Best
Industry and Westward Expansion
Presentation transcript:

Industry Comes of Age Theme: American accomplished heavy industrialization in the post-Civil War era. Spurred by the transcontinental rail network, business grew and consolidated into giant corporate trusts, as epitomized by the oil and steel industries. Theme: Industrialization radically transformed the practices of labor and the condition of American working people. But despite frequent industrial strife and the efforts of various reformers and unions, workers failed to develop effective labor organizations to match the corporate forms of business. Theme: With the concentration of capital in the hands of a few, new moralities arose to advance justifications for the social and economic phenomenon. A “survival of the fittest” theory emerged, a popular theory based on the thought of Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner, which argued the millionaires were products of natural selection. Another theory known as the “Gospel of Wealth” argued that societies well-to-do had to prove themselves morally responsible.

I. Railroads A.Railway Pacific Act, Generous govt. subsidy with cash payments and land grants 2.Paddies (Irish on Union Pacific), Coolies (Chinese on Central Pacific), Big 4 (investors of Central Pacific) are notable people with the Transcontinental RR. B.Railroad Expansion 1.Partial govt. subsidy for additional transcontinental RR’s with only land (no cash) 2.Vanderbilt and Steel 3.One exception: Panic of 1873 in which RR overspeculation caused depression brought hard times for all C.Revolution and Challenges 1.Mr. T’s Impact of RR’s Memory Device: Manufacturing, Mining, Moo (agriculture), Millionaires and Municipals 2.Robber Barons used illegal techniques of “stock- watering,” rebates, and “pools” to increase profits. 3.Wabash Case said that states could NOT regulate interstate commerce. a. Reformers in Congress agreed to do something about the courts decision from the Wabash case and created the ICC to regulate interstate commerce, 1887 Ceremony at Promontory Point, Utah

You can identify the four transcontinental railroads by their titles, the fifth is the Atchinson/ Topeka/Santa Fe RR.

II. Industrialization A.Factors of Postwar Industrialization 1.Increase in available capital from the federal govt and investors 2.Exploitation of natural resources especially in Mesabi Range 3.Unskilled labor used to make steel was readily available, thanks immigration 4.American ingenuity motivated by huge profits namely Edison and Bell B.Trust Titans Emerge 1.A. Carnegie used vertical integration to control all aspects of industry. 2.J. Rockefeller controlled competitors by controlling their stock called “Trusts” 3.J.P. Morgan controlled competition through control of Board of Directors C.Reactions to Industrialization 1.Moral responsible to “Gospel of Wealth” was the attitude of JP Morgan a. Gave away $350 of fortune 2.Survival of the fittest was the attitude of Spencer & Sumner-rich don’t need to give anything away to better society, they won the economic battle and were should enjoy the benefits 3.Politicians fostered a plutocracy that frustrated the consumers to action a.Congress hammered through the Sherman Anti-trust Act, 1890 which forbade combinations of trade but ended up curbing labor. 4.In South, industrialization was limited with the exception of textile mills.

III. Labor: “The Sweat of Industrialization” A.Employer tools 1.Unlimited capital due to ability to sell stocks 2.“scab” workers, “lockouts,” courts that issued injunctions, federal troops, “iron-clad oaths” or “yellow-dog contracts,” “blacklists,” and company towns that charged high food prices and rent. 3.Middle class grew deaf to labor strife and viewed labor as radical revolutionaries when they simply wanted a little more return for their labors. B.Labor Groups 1.National Labor Union fought social reform until 1873 and Great RR Strike, Knights of Labor created one big union under T. Powderly but Haymarket damaged labor’s reputation because they were viewed as anarchists and trouble-makers (when in reality the Knights of Labor preferred socialism to capitalism) 3.AFofL was a nonpolitical federation under S. Gompers in which pushed “closed shop” but labor disputes continued with Homestead Strike and Pullman Strike of 1890’s.

Putting Things in Order (Put the following events in correct order by numbering them 1 to 5) 1._____ J.P. Morgan buys out Andrew Carnegie to form the first billion-dollar U.S. corporation 2._____ The first federal law regulating railroads is passed 3._____ The killing of policemen during a labor demonstration results in the execution of radical anarchists and the decline of the Knights of Labor 4._____ A teacher of the deaf invents a machine that greatly eases communication across distance 5._____ A golden spike is driven, fulfilling the dream of linking the nation by rail

Answers