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Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1:Section 1:The Rise of Industry Section 2:Section 2:The Railroads Section 3:Section 3:Big Business Section 4:Section 4:Unions
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Section 1 The United States Industrializes Natural resources and a large labor force allowed the United States to industrialize rapidly.
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Section 1 By the late 1800s, the United States was the world’s leading industrial nation. –By 1914, the nation’s gross national product was eight times greater than it had been in 1865 when the Civil War came to an end.gross national product The United States Industrializes (cont.) An abundance of raw materials was one reason for the nation’s industrial success.
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Section 1 At the same time, people began using petroleum. –In 1859 Edwin Drake drilled the first oil well near Titusville, Pennsylvania. The United States Industrializes (cont.) Natural Resource Sites of the United States, c.1890
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Section 1 The human resources available to American industry were as important as natural resources in enabling the nation to industrialize rapidly.resources –Population growth stemmed from two causes—large families and a flood of immigrants. The United States Industrializes (cont.)
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Section 1 New Inventions During the late 1800s, inventions such as the telephone and the lightbulb spurred economic development.
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Section 1 In 1876 a Scottish immigrant named Alexander Graham Bell succeeded in creating the first telephone. Thomas Alva Edison invented or improved the following: New Inventions (cont.) –Phonograph –Electric generator –Lightbulb American Inventions, 1865–1895 –Motion picture –Dictaphone –Battery
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Section 1 Other inventions during the late 1800s: –Ice machine –Refrigerated railroad car –Northrop automatic loom –Power-driven sewing machine and cloth cutter New Inventions (cont.)
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Section 1 Free Enterprise Laissez-faire economics promoted industrialization, but tariffs protected American companies from competition.
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Section 1 Another important reason the United States was able to industrialize rapidly was its free enterprise system. –In many ways, the U.S. practiced laissez- faire economics in the late 1800s.laissez- faire –In other ways, the government went beyond laissez-faire and introduced policies intended to promote business. –The profit motive attracted many entrepreneurs. entrepreneurs Free Enterprise (cont.)
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Chapter Intro 3 Big Business Why did captains of industry such as John D. Rockefeller expand their businesses through new ways of organization?
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Section 3 The Rise of Big Business Corporations could produce goods more efficiently, which allowed the rise of big business.
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Section 3 By 1900, big businesses dominated the economy, operating vast complexes of factories, warehouses, and distribution facilities.distribution Big business would not have been possible without the corporation.corporation The Rise of Big Business (cont.) –The people who own the corporation are called stockholders because they own shares of ownership called stock.stock
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Section 3 –With the money raised from the sale of stock, corporations could invest in new technologies, hire large workforces, and purchase many machines. –This enabled them to achieve economies of scale.economies of scale The Rise of Big Business (cont.) Types of Business Organizations
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Section 3 Because of economies of scale, big corporations could… –produce more goods cheaply and efficiently. –continue to operate in poor economic times by cutting prices to increase sales rather than shutting down. –could also negotiate rebates from railroads, further lowering their operating costs. The Rise of Big Business (cont.)
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Section 3 Consolidating Industry Business leaders devised new and larger forms of business organizations and new ways to promote their products.
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Section 3 Many companies did not like the intense competition that had been forced on them. To stop prices from falling, many companies organized pools to keep prices at a certain level.pools Consolidating Industry (cont.) –However, companies that formed pools had no legal protection and could not enforce their agreements in court.
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Section 3 The remarkable life of Andrew Carnegie illustrates many of the factors that led to the rise of big business in the U.S. –Born poor, he eventually opened a steel company in Pittsburgh in 1875. –To make his company more efficient, he began the vertical integration of the steel industry.vertical integration Consolidating Industry (cont.) The Rise of the Steel Industry
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Section 3 Successful business leaders also pushed for horizontal integration. horizontal integration –A famous industrialist who achieved almost complete horizontal integration of his industry is John D. Rockefeller. –By 1880, the company controlled about 90% of the oil-refining industry in the U.S. Consolidating Industry (cont.) The Rise of the Steel Industry
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Section 3 –Standard Oil came close to being a monopoly, but international competition forced the company to keep its prices low. monopoly In 1882, Standard Oil formed the first trust, a new way of merging businesses that did not violate laws against monopolies.trust Consolidating Industry (cont.)
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Section 3 Beginning in 1889, the state of New Jersey further accelerated the rise of big business with a new general incorporation law. –Many companies immediately used the law to create a new organization, the holding company. holding company Consolidating Industry (cont.) Another increase in the size of corporations began in the mid-1890s, when investment bankers began to help put new holding companies together.
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VS 1 Causes of Industrialization Abundant natural resources Cheap immigrant labor force High tariffs reduce the import of foreign goods National transportation and communication networks
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VS 2 Causes of the Growth of Big Business Little or no government intervention Development of pools, trusts, holding companies, and monopolies Small businesses could not compete with economies of scale of larger businesses Practices of some big businesses sometimes limited competition
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Vocab1 gross national product the total value of goods and services produced by a country during a year
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Vocab2 laissez-faire policy that government should interfere as little as possible in the nation’s economy
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Vocab3 entrepreneur one who organizes, manages, and assumes the risks of a business or enterprise
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Vocab4 resource material used in the production process, such as money, people, land, wood, or steel
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Vocab10 corporation an organization that is authorized by law to carry on an activity but treated as though it were a single person
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Vocab11 stock money or capital invested or available for investment or trading
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Vocab12 economies of scale the reduction in the cost of a good brought about especially by increased production at a given facility
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Vocab13 pool a group sharing in some activity; for example, among railroad owners who made secret agreements and set rates among themselves
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Vocab14 vertical integration the combining of companies that supply equipment and services needed for a particular industry
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Vocab15 horizontal integration combining of many firms engaged in the same type of business into one corporation
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Vocab16 monopoly total control of a type of industry by one person or one company
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Vocab17 trust a combination of firms or corporations formed by a legal agreement, especially to reduce competition
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Vocab18 holding company a company whose primary business is owning a controlling share of stock in other companies
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Vocab19 distribution the act or process of being given out or disbursed to clients, customers, or members of a group
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