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Published byNeil Walton Modified over 9 years ago
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Industrial Revolution
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New Major Industries Railroads 1862 - Congress approves the Transcontinental Railroad Transcontinental Railroad Transcontinental Railroad Union & Central Pacific Tracks joined in 1869 Cornelius Vanderbilt Changed commerce Sears Roebuck Co. Steel Grew due to railroads Andrew Carnegie
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New Industries and Inventions Oil Standard Oil Company John D. Rockefellar Telephone Alexander Graham Bell Electric Light Bulb Thomas Edison Automobile Henry Ford Assembly line to increase production John D. Rockefellar Henry Ford And his Model T
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Industry and Reform Huge population growth in cities Immigrants from other countries Farm kids Poor Working Conditions Long working hours Dangerous conditions in factories Labor Unions Women working in a book factory
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Anti-Trusts Monopoly - the complete control of an industry by one person or company Does not allow competition between companies Raises cost of products Sherman Anti-Trust Act was passed in 1890 Made monopolies illegal The Sherman Anti-Trust law was aimed at men like Rockefeller and Carnegie, but it also affects modern businessmen like Bill Gates.
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City Life at the Turn of the Century Many people moved to cities. Why? Factory jobs Tenements housed many workers Often run down, dirty, and overcrowded New buildings constructed Multiple stories Cities started public water and transportation systems Public services also included fire and police depts. An Italian Neighborhood in New York City
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Muckrakers Group of writers who started investigative journalism Exposed problems such as factory conditions, child labor, and business and political corruption Ida Tarbell Corruption in oil industry Upton Sinclair The Jungle exposed unsanitary conditions in meatpacking industry Ida Tarbell exposed problems in the oil industry Upton Sinclair exposed problems in the food industry
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Women’s Suffrage Fight for the vote and equal rights Movement leaders included: Susan B. Anthony 19 th Amendment Guarantees the right to vote for women Passed in 1920
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Suffragettes Marches, speeches, and rallies used to protest Women’s Rights
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Environmental Conservation John Muir America’s first conservationist Focus on California (Yosemite) National Parks Established by Teddy Roosevelt after a camping trip with Muir 1 st park: Yellowstone (WY) Teddy Roosevelt and John Muir at Yosemite
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African-American Rights Wilmington, 1898 Violence between white and African-American citizens Started after a series of newspaper articles Ended Republican rule in NC Begins segregation in NC Jim Crow laws Sets up segregation Division based on race School, public places (water fountains, transportation, etc.) Burned newspaper office following violence in Wilmington, 1898
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African-American Rights, continued Plessy vs. Ferguson US Supreme Court legalizes segregation “separate but equal” is Constitutional Citizens could be separated based on race as long as they were given equal facilities Voting limitations Poll tax Pay fee to vote Higher fee for African-Americans Literacy test Pass reading test to vote Grandfather clause If your grandfather could not vote, you could not vote
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Turn of the Century NC
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New Industry in North Carolina Textiles By 1900, NC was 2nd largest producer of cotton textiles Tobacco American Tobacco Company James B. Duke Furniture High Point Furniture Manufacturing Company
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North Carolina Reformers Thomas Day Cabinetmaker Harriet Morehead Berry “Good Roads State” suffragist Dorothea Dix Educational reform Mentally ill - hospital Dorothea Dix Harriet Morehead Berry Chapel Hill Road, circa 1900
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Farm Changes in North Carolina Many people did not own land Sharecropping- paying rent with crops New machinery
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Education Improvements in NC 4-month school term Students age 6-21 New funding Local taxes General Assembly High schools started New school districts Help not given to schools for African- Americans Schools fell behind
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