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Essential Question Industrialization increased the standard of living and the opportunities of most Americans, but at what cost?

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Presentation on theme: "Essential Question Industrialization increased the standard of living and the opportunities of most Americans, but at what cost?"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Essential Question Industrialization increased the standard of living and the opportunities of most Americans, but at what cost?

3 Causes of Rapid Industrialization 1.Steam Revolution of the 1830s-1850s. 2.The Railroad fueled the growing US economy: * First big business in the US. * A magnet for financial investment. * The key to opening the West. * Aided the development of other industries. 1.Steam Revolution of the 1830s-1850s. 2.The Railroad fueled the growing US economy: * First big business in the US. * A magnet for financial investment. * The key to opening the West. * Aided the development of other industries.

4 Causes of Rapid Industrialization 3.Technological innovations. * Bessemer and open hearth process * Refrigerated cars * Edison  “Wizard of Menlo Park”  light bulb, phonograph, motion pictures. 3.Technological innovations. * Bessemer and open hearth process * Refrigerated cars * Edison  “Wizard of Menlo Park”  light bulb, phonograph, motion pictures.

5 Thomas Alva Edison “Wizard of Menlo Park”

6 The Light Bulb

7 The Phonograph (1877)

8 The Ediphone or Dictaphone

9 The Motion Picture Camera

10 Alexander Graham Bell Telephone (1876)

11 Alternate Current George Westinghouse

12 Alternate Current Westinghouse Lamp ad

13 The Refrigerated Railroad Car Gustavus Swift

14 The Ice Machine Thaddeus Lowe

15 The Airplane Wilbur Wright Orville Wright Kitty Hawk, NC – December 7, 1903

16 Model T Automobile Henry Ford I want to pay my workers so that they can afford my product! Henry Ford I want to pay my workers so that they can afford my product!

17 “Model T” Prices & Sales

18 U. S. Patents Granted 1790s  276 patents issued. 1990s  1,119,220 patents issued.

19 4.Unskilled & semi-skilled labor in abundance. 5.Abundant capital. 6.New, talented group of businessmen [entrepreneurs] and advisors. 7.Market growing as US population increased. 8.Government willing to help at all levels to stimulate economic growth. 9.Abundant natural resources. 4.Unskilled & semi-skilled labor in abundance. 5.Abundant capital. 6.New, talented group of businessmen [entrepreneurs] and advisors. 7.Market growing as US population increased. 8.Government willing to help at all levels to stimulate economic growth. 9.Abundant natural resources. Causes of Rapid Industrialization

20 New Business Culture 1. Laissez Faire  the ideology of the Industrial Age. * Individual as a moral and economic ideal. * Individuals should compete freely in the marketplace. * The market was not man-made or invented. * No room for government in the market! * Individual as a moral and economic ideal. * Individuals should compete freely in the marketplace. * The market was not man-made or invented. * No room for government in the market!

21 Rise of Big Business Competition leads to lower prices for consumers and cuts business profits Companies organized pools to keep prices at a certain level

22 New Type of Business Entities

23 1.Pool 1887  Interstate Commerce Act  Interstate Commerce Commission created. 2.Trust  John D. Rockefeller 1.Pool 1887  Interstate Commerce Act  Interstate Commerce Commission created. 2.Trust  John D. Rockefeller * Standard Oil Co.

24 Standard Oil legal or illegal? Used “predatory pricing” to ruin his rivals Demanded rebates from railroads that wanted his business Controlled the oil refining business through horizontal integration By the 1890s controlled 90% of the oil business Monopoly?Trusts and holding companies?

25 Standard Oil Co.

26 Bob’s T- shirts T-shirts Galore Wall of Shirts Shirts R Us Dellinger’s T-Shirt Store Monopoly Horizontal Integration

27 New Type of Business Entities 2.Trust: * Horizontal Integration  John D. Rockefeller * Vertical Integration: A. Gustavus Swift  Meat-packing B. Andrew Carnegie  U. S. Steel

28 Carnegie Steel Andrew Carnegie “I have never bought or sold a share of stock speculatively in my life”

29 Cotton Field Cotton Processing Plant Cloth Making Factory Shirt making factory Retail Store that sells the shirt Vertical Integration

30 Andrew Carnegie Immigrant from Scotland in 1848 Worked as an errand boy on the Pennsylvania Railroad Formed his own railroad company then a locomotive factory Turned to steel and used the Bessemer Process Steadily took all parts of the steel-making process (from mining to marketing)

31 U. S. Corporate Mergers

32 New Financial Businessman The Broker: * J. Pierpont Morgan

33 The Transcontinental Railroad Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway Act to provide for the construction of Transcontinental Railroad Used immigrant labor (from the West used Chinese, from the East used Irish)

34 Cornelius [“Commodore”] Vanderbilt Can’t I do what I want with my money?

35 Cornelius Vanderbilt Successful at railroad consolidation Built New York’s Grand Central Terminal Purchased and merged three railroads from New York to Buffalo Within 4 years had extended control to Chicago

36 Time Zones Communities set clocks by sun’s position To make rail service safer and more reliable the American Railway association instituted Time Zones in 1883

37 Wall Street – 1867 & 1900

38 Selling the Product Advertising – illustrations replace type ads Department stores (Woolworths) Mail-order catalogs (Sears, Roebuck)

39 New Business Culture: “The American Dream?” 3.Protestant (Puritan) “Work Ethic” * Horatio Alger [100+ novels] Is the idea of the “self-made man” a MYTH??

40 The Reorganization of Work Frederick W. Taylor The Principles of Scientific Management (1911) Frederick W. Taylor The Principles of Scientific Management (1911)

41 The Reorganization of Work The Assembly Line

42 Wealth Concentration Held by Top 1% of Households

43 % of Billionaires in 1900

44 % of Billionaires in 1918

45 The “Robber Barons” of the Past

46 The “Bosses” of the Senate

47 “The Protectors of Our Industries”


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