Working Conditions Rise of Big Business – Part 3.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Industrial Workers. The New Workplace “In some of these camps the miners are forced to pay as much as $9 a barrel for flour, … 18 cents a pound for fat.
Advertisements

Chapter 19, Section 3 Industrial Workers. Decline of Working Conditions Machines run by unskilled workers were eliminating the jobs of many skilled craftspeople.
The Labor Movement The Rise of Unions CHAPTER 20 SECTION 4.
The Growth of an Industrial Society Industrial Workers.
Genius is one per cent inspiration, ninety-nine per cent perspiration. --Thomas Edison ( )
WORKING CONDITIONS IN AMERICA (1880S -1910S) US History: Spiconardi.
Objectives Describe how new business methods helped American industry grow. Identify the leaders of “big business” and the practices they used. Summarize.
THE RISE OF UNIONS.  Rise of big business leads to individual workers losing all bargaining with employers  Because most workers were unskilled, they.
Working Class Work Life Child labor Labor Unions Strikes Labor organizations Haymarket Affair Homestead Strike Pullman strike.
Labor Unions.
Big Business and Labor Ch 6-3. Andrew Carnegie Carnegie Steel Company-Attempted to control as much of the steel industry as he could by vertical and horizontal.
The Organization of Labor
THE EMERGENCE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA & LABOR’S RESPONSE (CONTINUED)
WORKING IN THE GILDED AGE SSUSH12 The student will analyze important consequences of American industrial growth. b. Identify the American Federation of.
GUIDED READING ACTIVITY. Sole Proprietorships have a number of advantages – owners have complete control over the company, and they get to keep all the.
3-3 The Rise of Labor Unions. Warm-Up What is a strike? Why would workers go on strike? What professions are Union?
The Factory System The conditions of factory workers and the fight for a better life.
Strikes and Unions Solving the issues of low pay, bad working conditions and unfair treatment of workers.
Reforming the Workplace Mr. Williams 10 th Grade U.S. History.
Ch INDUSTRIAL WORKERS.  hour days, 6 days/week  Fired at any time, for any reason  Many lost their jobs during business downturns  Or.
Growing Pains Work in Factories Pg Work in Factories After the Civil War, many people moved to cities to find work. This was also true in Tennessee.
Unions Chapter 14 Section 4.
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.
CONDITIONS, CONFLICT & REFORM
Labor Strives to Organize Bell Ringer: What do you think that conditions were like for people working in factories in the late 1800’s?
Labor Unions Form Knights of Labor AFL- American Federation of Labor Better Pay Better Working Conditions Terrence V. Powderly Shorter Hours ·men ·women.
#3 - Do now: What messages does this cartoon want to convey?
Workers Unite. Exploitation Long hours: 12+ hrs per day…6 days per week Steel mills - 7 days per week Low pay: $498 ($1.59), $269 ($.86c),.27c per day.
SOL Review Materials for Unit Two: Getting Down to Business: The Growth of Big Business in America.
Labor Unions “We do want more, and when it becomes more, we shall still want more. And we shall never cease to demand more until we have received the results.
THE CONDITIONS OF LABOR AND THE RISE OF LABOR UNIONS.
Labor Unions “We do want more, and when it becomes more, we shall still want more. And we shall never cease to demand more until we have received the results.
19-4 Industrial Workers Mrs. Manley. Industrial Workers Why are workers organizing into unions? - to demand better pay and working conditions Mass production-
Video: The Unfinished Nation: A New Corporate Order Describe the labor and working conditions during the rise of industrialization. –Wages too low, threats.
COPY THE WORDS IN RED Organizing Workers A Hard Life for Workers Sweatshops = places where workers worked long hours under poor conditions for low wages.
Industrial Revolution. Reform efforts in industrialized nations Unions were formed as an effort for workers to unite to a) get better wages b) get safer.
Labor Unions. Working conditions Monotonous 12 – 16 hour shifts, 6 days a week Dangerous When workers were injured or too sick to work, they were fired.
Labor Unions and Strikes Why join a union? Strength in numbers What were unions fighting against? 1) Exploitation a. Low Pay b. Long hours 2) Unsafe.
Chapter 5 Industrial Age. Railroads Lead the Way Railroad expansion allowed a few powerful individuals to build a great fortune. Powerful people who controlled.
Why labor unions were needed: Low pay Long hours Unsafe working conditions.
Chapter 13 Section 3 The Work Force. 1) Industries grew – had a big _________________ of workers. 2) Most workers faced ___________________ conditions.
Free Write Do you have a job? What are your responsibilities? Is it hard? What are your hours? Do you like working/your job? If you do not have a job,
LEARNING TARGET: I CAN EVALUATE THE DEVELOPMENT OF ORGANIZED LABOR IN THE UNITED STATES AND EXPLAIN WHY UNIONS FORMED. LABOR MOVEMENT.
The Second Industrial Revolution America Mechanizes
Rise of Organized Labor Assembly lines create more ___________ Assembly lines get work done faster… NOW there’s a “mad dash” to see which companies will.
Warm-Up During the early twentieth century (1900’s), many children as young as 5 or 6 years old were working all day every day, some working on very dangerous.
Aim: Why did labor unions develop? Do Now: What is a union? What are some benefits of being part of a union? November 19, 2012 Ms. Bragman/Mrs. Herth.
Labor Unions Labor unions are worker organizations whose goal is to improve working conditions, increase pay and gain benefits such as retirement plans.
The Work Force and Labor Unions. Growth of labor A big supply of labor helped industries to grow quickly Most workers faced dangerous conditions Five.
Impact of Industrialization  By 1900, the United States had surpassed Great Britain, France, and Germany as the leading industrial power in the world.
Strikes and Unions Solving the issues of low pay, bad working conditions and unfair treatment of workers.
Labor. The workers, or employees, of a company Management.
The Growth of Industry
Industrial Workers.
Unit 2 Getting Down to Business
Unit 2: Getting Down to Business
7th Grade Monday = Tuesday = Wednesday = Thursday = Friday =
LABOR UNIONS AND POLITICAL MACHINES
Review Materials for Unit Two:
Steel Workers in Homestead, PA
Organizing Workers Copy the words in RED.
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
Objectives Describe how new business methods helped American industry grow. Identify the leaders of “big business” and the practices they used. Summarize.
Sec. 4 “Industrial Workers”
Chapter 19, Section 3 Industrial Workers
Business and Unions After 1865
!!!Notes # 1 Workers Rights!!!.
Bell Ringer What do you think of Plainview? Do you like him? Why or why not? Do you think workers have a right to strike? Should striking workers be protected.
Chapter 9: Industrialization.
Monopolies & Unions.
Presentation transcript:

Working Conditions Rise of Big Business – Part 3

Growth of Big Business Lower production costs – Things were cheaper Mass production – More stuff was made Trusts are formed Advertising Transportation creates a national market – No longer HAVE to sell to JUST the local community

Child Labor and Heavy Industries

Working Conditions During Industrialization Assembly Line – made production faster! Child labor Low wages; long hours Unsafe Sweat Shops - factory with bad work conditions

Garment Industry of New York City

Women in the Tobacco Industry North Carolina

Children Working in the Coal Mines

Emphysema and Black Lung

Dangers in Textile Mills Women faced issues with their lungs from working in textile mills as well, breathing in cotton and fiber filaments all day. Many women and children lost fingers and toes in the high velocity machines as well.

Steel Mills were extremely dangerous work environments. Due to the open cauldrons of molten steel, and the heavy mechanized tools which could crush limbs, steel mills were notoriously dangerous. And most companies offered no compensation to workers injured on the job.

The Meatpacking Industry Due to the de-assembly line methods used in meat packing plants – requiring hasty knife work, many workers were injured on the job – losing fingers, or worse!

When Andrew Carnegie attempted to slash his workers wages, they walked out on strike. When he hired strikebreakers, or “scabs” to replace them, they fought violently to prevent the mills from re-opening. Eventually, the Pennsylvania State Militia forced and end to the conflict using violent force of their own. The Homestead Strike of 1892

In one of the saddest and most well publicized disasters of the early 20 th Century, a group of approximately 150 immigrant laborers were trapped – literally locked in by their employers – in a burning building in New York City. Changes to fire codes and improvements to the working conditions were soon passed to protect employees and factory workers. The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire of 1911

Improved Working Conditions Formation of unions Formation of unions – American Federation of Labor: 1.Only skilled workers 2.NO women! 3.Higher pay, less hours, better conditions 4.Used collective bargaining – Knights of Labor: 1.ANYONE could join This even meant women and African-Americans 2. End child labor 3. Shorter workday 4. Did not prefer strikes

Strikes When workers refuse to work in order to gain something – usually better pay or working conditions