Problems of the Industrial Revolution
Businesses Business Owners looking to make as much $ as possible, used strategies like: –Vertical Integration – buy all industries needed to make your product so its cheaper to make Ex. Standard Oil, Carnegie Steel –Horizontal Integration – Monopolies and Trusts Ex. Standard Oil –Ruthlessness Vanderbilt – railroad magnate – said “Cant I do what I want with my own?” –Corruption Ex. Bribes and discounts for better rates – usually railroads and Standard Oil, Carnegie Steel
No Regulation on Businesses Monopolies = no competition = price soar No Regard for wildlife or land preservation Products made were not always sanitary –Ex. The Jungle
Conditions for Workers Avg. income of American worker was $400-$500 a year, below the $600 figure considered the minimum for a reasonable level of comfort. No job security 10 hours a day, 6 days a week, Steel worked 12 hours a day Unsafe, unhealthy factories – accidents were frequent/severe, little or no compensation for injuries Workers had no control over their workplace Women - $6-8 a week = Avg. women salary $314 a year Avg. Men salary $ million children under 16 employed in 1900.
HUGE GAP BETWEEN THE POOR AND WEALTHY
The Breakers Mansion, Newport, RI The 70 room Italian Renaissance- style palazzo inspired by the 16th century palaces built for Cornelius Vanderbilt
Built on 11 acres of oceanfront property in Newport, RI
The Breakers Mansion Ballroom
The Breakers Mansion Front Entrance
The Breakers Mansion
Andrew Carnegie’s home on 91 st Street in NYC
Andrew Carnegie’s Mansion in New York City
J.P. Morgan’s Home Madison Avenue at 36th Street
J.P. Morgan’s House
The John D. Rockefeller House was a brownstone built between 1864 and 1865 at 4 West 54th Street in New York City.
The former winter home of John D. Rockefeller in Ormond Beach, Florida
John D. Rockefeller’s Homestead at Forest Hill in Cleveland, OHIO
James J. Hill’s Home in Minnesota
James J. Hill’s Home in Minnesota – Dinning Room
James J. Hill’s Home in Minnesota - Front Entrance
And “How the Other Half Lived”…
Tenements in NYC – Photo taken by Jacob Riis
A Tenement in NYC – Photo taken by Jacob Riis
The only playground equipment the children in this neighborhood had was a cellar door they used as a slide.
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