Industrial Supremacy Chapter 17.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Big Business Emerges Businesses consolidate into big industries or ________________ These are run by businessmen who become very wealthy and become known.
Advertisements

Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
LT: I will be able to identify entrepreneurs during the Industrial Era and show knowledge of how a market economy works. BW: List 3 New inventions or industries.
The Rise of American Business, Industry, and Labor ( )
The NEW Industrial Age. BIG BUSINESS AND LABOR Andrew Carnegie was one of the first industrial moguls He entered the steel industry in 1873 By 1899, the.
Industrialization of America
American History: Chapter 17 Review Video Industrial Supremacy
Objectives Describe how new business methods helped American industry grow. Identify the leaders of “big business” and the practices they used. Summarize.
Alan Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation 6/e
6.3 Big Business and Labor How did the U.S. depend upon the development of new business and technology?
Chapter 8 Lesson 1: The Rise of Big Business
Labor Unions form  Industrialization lowered the prices of consumer goods, but most workers still didn’t make enough to buy them  Their complaints usually.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Industrial Revolution After 1865 Chapter 6 Vocabulary.
Aim: Why were the late 1800’s referred to as the “Gilded Age”?
Rise of Industry. Railroad Industry Transcontinental Railroad –A railroad that spanned the continent (United States) –Union Pacific – Built West –Central.
Goal 5 Terms Hosted by Mrs. Chavers Goal 5 Pendleton Act Law that officially dismantled the spoils system and created a system of examinations to determine.
The Gilded Age. Transcontinental Railroad The Union Pacific and Central Pacific companies began in Omaha and Sacramento and met in Promontory Point in.
Do Now WHY DO YOU THINK MOST PEOPLE MOVE TO THE UNITED STATES DURING THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION? October 8, 2010.
The Organization of Labor
Ch.13 Review.
THE RISE TO PROMINENCE: AMERICAN EDITION. INDUSTRIALIZATION While industry had been growing throughout the country, it wasn’t until the later half of.
Big Business & Labor How do the “Robber Barons” make their fortunes?
CHAPTER 18 THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA. INDUSTRIALIZATION Reasons for rapid expansion Cheap energy New technology Low production costs Unskilled and.
Chapter 19 The Industrial Age
Industry and Immigration. Inventions In 1876 Alexander Graham Bell invented the 1 st working “talking telegraph” or telephone. The telephone would forever.
Lesson 16 The Industrial Revolution
The Growth and Development of Industry in America.
Use your notes/textbook to copy & define the following for Thursday’s test: John D. Rockefeller corporation Thomas Edison sweatshop monopoly mass production.
The Industrial Revolution in the 19 th Century “The man who has his millions will want everything he can lay his hands on and then raise his voice against.
Workers Organize Chapter 20, Section 4 History or Labor Day Labor Day video.
Chapter 17 Industrialism. Natural Resources As America grew in size, settlers began to find new minerals Enormous lodes (a rich deposit or supply) of.
For many years people used oil found on the surface of oceans and lakes to use as kerosene for lighting lamps In 1859 Edwin L. Drake found oil by drilling.
Copyright ©2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter Seventeen: Industrial Supremacy.
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.
The Rise of Big Business.   Until the late 1800’s most businesses were owned directly by one person or by a few partners.  The industrial revolution.
Resources that Fueled Industrial Growth  Coal & Iron spur industry 1870 – 77,000 tons steel 1900 – 11.4 mil. tons steel  Black Gold 1859 – Edwin Drake.
Industrialization Making of the Good Life. INDUSTRY Causes of Industrialization Abundant Natural Resources Abundant Natural Resources –Lumber, Coal, Oil.
Big Business & Labor Ch 6.3. Social Darwinism From Darwin’s theory Formed by William Sumner & Herbert Spencer Principles of Social Darwinism 1)Natural.
Chapter 17 APUSH Mrs. Price “Nothing is particularly hard if you divide it into small jobs.” - Henry Ford.
What factors influenced American growth and expansion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century?
Section 3: Big Business and Labor 1. Carnegie’s Innovations 1899 Carnegie Steel Company Management practices New machinery Better quality products/cheaper.
Copyright ©1999 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.1 Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY: A SURVEY, 10/e Chapter Seventeen: Industrial Supremacy.
Copyright ©2000 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.1 Brinkley, THE UNFINISHED NATION, 3/e Chapter Seventeen: Industrial Supremacy
How do the “Robber Barons” make their fortunes?
Unit VI – A Growing America Chapter 19 Section 2 – Big Business Lecture Station.
Industrial Supremacy Chapter 17. Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d New Technologies – –Communication –electricity – light and power (Charles F. Brush.
Technology and Industrial Growth
Economic Expansion from What was the Gilded Age?  Term coined by Mark Twain  Increase in industrialization  Things appeared great on the.
Big Business and Labor “Here’s the goose that lays the golden eggs.” What is Carnegie referring to?
Industry and Business Late 19 th Century US History.
Big Business and Labor Chapter 14 Section 3 Notes.
Thomas Edison (the “Wizard of Menlo Park”) was the greatest inventor of the 1800s In his New York research lab, he invented the 1 st phonograph, audio.
INDUSTRIAL SUPREMACY. Factors that Contribute to Growth of American Industry.
The Industrial Society Read pg The reasons that America would emerge as the world’s greatest industrial nation by 1900 Raw Materials.
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?
The Triumph of Industry. Technology & Industrial Growth The Civil War forced industries to become more efficient, employing new tools and methods like.
American Industrial Revolution, Again What created the modern industrial economy of the United States?
Copyright ©2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 12/e Chapter Seventeen: Industrial Supremacy.
Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e Chapter Seventeen: Industrial Supremacy.
Big Business and Organized Labor
INDUSTRIAL SUPREMACY.
Alan Brinkley, American History 15/e
How do the “Robber Barons” make their fortunes?
The Rise of Big Business 1865 – 1914
Warm-Up 9/8/17 Make sure you have your notebook opened to page 5; please write the questions below in green and your answers. ____________ is the growth.
Objectives Describe how new business methods helped American industry grow. Identify the leaders of “big business” and the practices they used. Summarize.
Business and Unions After 1865
Alan Brinkley, American History 14/e
‘Robber Barons’ or Heroes of Industry?
Emergence of Modern America & Its Modern Industrial Economy
Presentation transcript:

Industrial Supremacy Chapter 17

Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d New Technologies 440,000 patents between 1860-1890... only 36,000 in the all US history before communication telegraph 1866 (Cyrus W. Field) (Jennifer Ong) telephone 1890s (Alexander Graham Bell) electricity – light and power (Charles F. Brush and Thomas A. Edison) turning iron into steel (Englishman Henry Bessemer and American William Kelly)

Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d New Industries Steel – Pittsburgh was at its center Oil initial need was for lubrication... later fuel George Bissell lamps Pennsylvania center 1870s oil is 4th largest export in USA Spindletop oil field in Texas and Oklahoma to follow in early 1900s later in California Radio 1890s (Guglielmo Marconi) Airplane 1903 (Wright Brothers) Gasoline Powered Engine 1903 (Frank and Henry Duryea) Henry Ford 1906 1910 automotive industry changes American Landscape forever 1895 four automobiles on American Highways / 1917 five million

Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d The Science of Production “scientific management” (Winslow Taylor) argued that scientific management was a way to manage human labor to make it compatible with the demands of the machine age... but it increased the level of control of the employer over the employee made workers “interchangeable” diminish dependence on individual employees significance of machines to speed up production Jennifer Ong made all these PowerPoint Many other companies began investing in ways to improve products and productivity mass production and the assembly line 1914 (Henry Ford)

Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d Railroad Expansion principal agent of industrial development in the late nineteenth century 1860 = 30,000 miles of trackage 1870 = 52,000 miles of trackage 1880 = 93,000 miles of trackage 1890 = 163,000 miles of trackage 1900 = 193,000 miles of trackage most of nations rails came under the control of a very few men C. Vanderbilt, Jennifer Ong, James J. Hill, Collis P. Huntington, Samie Cloutier became symbols of how the nation’s economic power rested in the hands of a few

Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d The Corporation business organizations could raise money for themselves by selling stock to members of the public affluent Americans began investing in companies even if they were not involved in the business whose stock they were purchasing limited liability... not responsible for companies debt ability to buy and sell stock to a broad public made it possible for entrepreneurs to gather vast sums of capital and undertake great projects Andrew Carnegie and the steel industry... cornering the market J.P. Morgan... the big buyout $450 million = $1.4 billion (US Steel controlled 2/3 of all steel) birth of the “middle manager”

Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d Consolidating Corporate America horizontal integration – combining similar businesses vertical integration – the taking over of all the different businesses on which ta compay relied for it’s primary function (Andrew Carnegie) John D. Rockefeller, Standard Oil... used both vertical and horizontal integration 1880s: controls 90% of all refined oil in US leading symbol of a monopoly Consolidation as a remedy to “cut throat” competition big business claimed to believe in free enterprise, but truth was that they feared the instability of a fairly competitive market the most successful enterprise = one that could absorb it’s competitors Pool arrangements and cartels

Sources of Industrial Growth Cont’d The Trust and The Holding Company system similar to corporations, but investors give their money to a group of trustees in exchange for certificates... company is then run by the trustees... who could own several companies 1889 NJ... mergers become legal Rockefeller builds a holding company 1% of the corporations control 33% of manufacturing power and wealth rests in the hands of very few men: NY Bankers (JP Morgan) and Industrial Titans (Rockefeller) Industrial Giants were responsible for great economic growth and public controversy

Capitalism and its Critics “The Self Made Man” debate Was this new industry helping or hurting the individual? Carnegie and Rockefeller had started smaller, but most business leaders begun their careers from positions of wealth and privilege hard work and ingenuity -or- ruthlessness, arrogance and corruption? “What do I care about the law? H’aint I got the power” CV Politicians demanding bribes* Standard Oil in New Jersey Pennsylvania Railroad in Pennsylvania “Erie War” in New York rags to riches / riches to rags

Capitalism and its Critics Cont’d Survival of the Fittest Protestant Business: hard work, acquisitiveness and thrift / “God gave me my money” JD Rockefeller those who failed earned their failure / “Let us remember... there is not a poor person in the United States who is not made poor by his own shortcomings” Charles Darwin’s laws of evolution mutated by Herbert Spencer into “Social Darwinism” convenient theory for business tycoons did not agree with labor efforts did agree with Adam Smith’s theory of supply and demand hypocrites: celebrating the virtues of competition while working to eliminate them

Capitalism and its Critics Cont’d The Gospel of Wealth with wealth comes responsibility importance of giving to charity Andrew Carnegie: libraries, schools and institutions Koo-Koo Cronwell Russell Cronwell, Baptist minister stated it was the duty of his patrons to get rich “Acres of Diamonds” 6,000 times inaccuracies Horatio Alger fictitious stories about poor boy making it big name became synonymous with “hard work” folk hero

Capitalism and its Critics Cont’d Alternative Visions Lester Frank Ward – Darwinist who did not believe in Social Darwinism society not governed by natural selection, but by human intelligence active government engaged in planning is societies best hope people play an active role in shaping society Early Socialists – Daniel De Leon Henry George – “sharper contrast between the House of Have and the House of Want” Bellamy – sci-fi “nationalism” (the first “Trekkies”)

Capitalism and its Critics Cont’d The Problems of Monopoly very few Americans questioned capitalism, but many began to question monopolies People began to blame monopolies for creating artificially high prices the absence of competition unstable economy (depression in 1893) 1% of all families in America controlled 88% of the wealth... most were not afraid to flaunt it standard of living was rising, but the gap between rich and poor was widening

Industrial Workers and the Economy The Immigrant Workforce Urban labor supply came from one of two places Americans, disillusioned with farm life, moving to cities Immigrants 25 million immigrants 1865-1915, four times the amount in the fifty years before Shift from traditional sources in North Europe to Southern and Eastern Europe in the East In the West Continual flow of Mexicans and, until 1882, Asians “push and pull” factors Labor Contract Law – pay for trip on future labor credit Large variety of different ethnic groups competing for jobs created tensions in urban settings

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d Wages and Working Conditions average American worker made $400 and $500 a year... below the $600 believed for minimum comfort unstable jobs boom or bust machinery unsafe repetitive long hours loss of control

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d Women at Work 1900: women 17% of industrial workforce 20% of all women wage earners in most cases, two incomes required to support even an minimum standard of living... 75% under 25 6$ to 8$ a week average annual wage for industrial workers in 1900: male $597 female $314

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d Children at Work 1.7 million children employed by factories and fields in 1900 10% of all girls / 20% of all boys Labor laws passed with limited sucess 10 –12 hour days high incident rate

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d The Struggle to Unionize unions = large combination of labor employees alone, individual unions could not hope to exert significant power against corporations National Labor Union 1866 = first attempt to form a single, national organizations Mollie Maguires = militant labor organization in Penn., used terrorist tactics Weaknesses: lack of numbers, no women, poor public opinion

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d The Great Railroad Strike 1877 Strikers disrupt a rail service in Baltimore, destroy equipment, and rioted in other cities State Militia called out Pres. Hayes orders federal troops to Virginia 100 people die, strike collapses several weeks after it had begun Symbolic disputes between workers and employees no longer localized in national economy depth of resentment among workers illustrated the length gov’t and business was willing to go to suppress labor uprisings weakness of labor movement

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d The Knights of Labor 1869 Membership open to all who “toiled” welcomed women members wished to reorganize labor system to a “cooperative system” 1886 membership reaches 700,000 membership shrinks after a railroad strike strike is crushed

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d The AFL did not admit anybody, but rather craftspeople and skilled workers against women membership... but nonetheless fought for an increase in women’s pay... idea being that they would eventually be driven out of the workforce Samuel Gompers concentrated on the relationship between labor and management supported immediate objectives of most workers

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d The AFL Cont’d Demand for an 8 hour day... threatened strikes and demonstrations across the country if demand was not met Haymarket Affair: in Chicago, police move to harass strikers... someone throws a bomb: 7 dead / 67 injured angered public demands blood 8 put on trial that their statements had “incited” whoever had hurled the bomb found guilty, seven sentenced to death Fear of “anarchism” by many Americans becomes a major roadblock in the progress of labor

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d The Homestead Strike 1892 Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers was affiliated with AFL and was the most powerful trade union in the country... able to limit the power of employers because their level of skill was in great demand AA only had a foothold in one Carnegie plant: Homestead Carnegie decides to reduce wages in an effort to get rid of AA at Homestead... at first the workers accepted the conditions Pinkerton Detective Agency comes in to break the strike Battle ensues (oil, dynamite, guns...) Pinkertons surrender and were escorted out of town Governor of Penn. sends in 8,000 troops from the National Guard Amalgamated shrinks in numbers and power

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d The Pullman Strike 1894 winter of 1893 Pullman announces a 25% wage cut... and that rent will not be reduced Workers go on strike and persuade the militant American Railway Union to help AMR lead by Eugene V. Debs Railway companies respond by firing workers who refuse to handle Pulman cars, Laborers respond by walking off the job every time this happens to a colleague Within days, thousands are on strike Gov. Altgeld = rare, pro-union... refuses to call in troops and put the strike down Railroad company goes higher to the President... Grover Cleveland sends in the troops to put down the strike

Industrial Workers and the Economy Cont’d Sources of Labor Weakness Summary of labor upon the entrance of the 20th Century: despite organizing efforts, few gains and many big defeats Victories: abolition by Congress in 1885 of the Contact Labor Law the establishment by Congress in 1868 of an eight hour day on public works projects eight hour day to government employees state laws governing the hours of labor and safety standards (some) workers compensation Why did it fail? principal labor organizations represented only a small percentage of the industrial work force shifting nature of the workforce strength of forces against them