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By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer and edited by ms. moy

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1 By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer and edited by ms. moy
The Incorporation of America By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer and edited by ms. moy

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

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

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10 Patterns of Land grants given to corporations to build railroads

11 Pacific Railway Act What made it possible: Passed July 1, 1862
Created Union Pacific to build road from the East and meet the Central Pacific Provided companies 5 alternating plots of land on each side of the road for each mile along the route Allowed $16,000 for each mile of flat land, $32,000 for hills, and $48,000 for mountain terrain Revised in 1864 to allow companies more land and privileges

12 Biggest and best engineering project of its time
Made the country smaller (People could travel further distances faster than ever before) Helped spur interest in Homestead Act (Sale of land in Midwest at low cost to promote the movement of people to region) Improved communication (With train came telegraph lines and transcontinental communication) The beginning of the end for Native Americans Led to other transcontinental railroads and shorter branches

13 Effects of transcontinental railroad: 4 Standard Time Zones and emigration of Irish and Chinese workers

14 Causes of Rapid Industrialization
Technological innovations Bessemer and open hearth process that revolutionized the manufacture of steel Steel lighter and stronger than iron leading to the design and building of skyscrapers and bridges Refrigerated cars used to ship meat changing meat processing system Use of steam engine to drill oil and refine it into kerosene used in lamps

15 Research and Development
Major inventions enhanced productivity and improved the standard of living for most Americans: Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876  led to the creation of the Bell Telephone Co. (later, AT&T) that led to a way for worldwide communication network Thomas Edison pioneered the: phonograph (1877) – recordings of speeches, songs, and peoples’ voices light bulb (1879) – changed what people did – day longer System for producing & distributing electricity – power came to the people, not people living by the power source – used in urban areas (streetcars, lamp posts) and changed life for all

16 Bessemer Process Sir Henry Bessemer (British) and adapted in U.S.
Process rapidly changed molten iron (heavy and full of impurities) into steel (lighter, more pure, and stronger)

17 Titled to pour molten iron into the top and then returned to an upright position
Air forced through channels in the bottom causing fire to burn off impurities Tilted to pour out steel to then pour into molds

18 Thomas Alva Edison “Wizard of Menlo Park”

19 The Light Bulb

20 The Phonograph (1877)

21 The Motion Picture Camera

22 Alexander Graham Bell Telephone (1876)

23 Alternate Current George Westinghouse

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

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

26 “Model T” Prices & Sales

27 U. S. Patents Granted 1790s  276 patents issued

28 Causes of Rapid Industrialization
Unskilled & semi-skilled labor in abundance Abundant capital New talented group of businessmen [entrepreneurs] and advisors Market growing as U.S. population increased Government willing to help at all levels to stimulate economic growth Abundant natural resources

29 New Business Culture Individual as a moral and economic ideal
Laissez faire capitalism  the economic 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, so it cannot be controlled by people No room for government regulation in the market, only support for growth

30 2. Social Darwinism Herbert Spencer British economist
Advocate of laissez-faire capitalism Applied Darwin’s theory from the “Origin of Species” to human behavior Idea of “Survival of the Fittest” to explain why so few were wealthy and so many were poor Herbert Spencer

31 2. Social Darwinism in America
Individuals must have absolute freedom to struggle, succeed or fail Therefore, state intervention to reward society and the economy is futile So, poor are poor because they want to be, and wealthy are rich because they are more suited for wealth William Graham Sumner Folkways (1906)

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

33 New Type of Business Entities
Pool  Interstate Commerce Act  Interstate Commerce Commission created Trust  John D Rockefeller Standard Oil Co

34 Standard Oil Co.

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

36 Iron & Steel Production

37 New Type of Business Entities

38 U. S. Corporate Mergers

39 New Financial Businessman
The Broker: Invests other peoples’ money in order to make more money J. Pierpont Morgan

40 Wall Street – 1867 & 1900

41 The Reorganization of Work
Frederick W. Taylor The Principles of Scientific Management (1911) $ To maintain high productivity of workers, design an assembly line that has one task for each worker

42 The Reorganization of Work
The Assembly Line Each worker does the same small task over and over Each worker will work faster when not moving from work station to work station

43 % of Billionaires in 1900

44 % of Billionaires in 1918

45 Number of Billionaires in 2016 in the U.S. and the World
540 billionaires in U.S. alone Worth a collective $2.4 trillion 132 in finance and investing 73 in technology 52 in fashion and retail 38 in real estate NYC is billionaire capital of the U.S. - 70

46 The Protectors of Our Industries

47 The “Bosses” of the Senate

48 The “Robber Barons” of the Past

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

50 William Vanderbilt The public be damned!
What do I care about the law? H’aint I got the power?

51 The Gospel of Wealth: Religion in the Era of Industrialization as Justification of extreme wealth and poverty Wealth no longer looked upon as bad Viewed as a sign of God’s approval Christian duty to accumulate wealth Should not help the poor Why would people start to believe these new ideas about acquiring wealth? Russell H. Conwell

52 “On Wealth” Andrew Carnegie The Anglo-Saxon race is superior
“Gospel of Wealth” (1901) supported this idea Inequality is inevitable and good Wealthy should act as “trustees” for their “poorer brethren” We are providing jobs for the masses, so they should be satisfied with our wealth Andrew Carnegie

53 The Federal Government Begins to Regulate the Trusts and their unfair business practices
1877  Munn. v. IL 1886  Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railroad Company v. IL 1890  Sherman Antitrust Act in “restraint of trade” “rule of reason” loophole 1895  US v. E. C. Knight Co.

54 Relative Share of World Manufacturing


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