Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLogan Carpenter Modified over 9 years ago
1
18. The Industrial Society 1865 - 1900
2
Development of an Industrial Nation Interlocking industrial systems Wealth of natural resources Railroads (transportation) Telegraph (communication) Electricity / gas (energy) Finance capital (finance) New organizational ideas Growing pool of labor (immigration) Results in a powerful industrial nation
3
Railroads Nation’s first big business Mileage increased from 35,000 miles in 1865 to 193,000 in 1900 Had the greatest impact on American economic life
4
Railroads Shaped American Culture A market for consumers A growth of other industries Created four time zones Railroad time became standard time Modern stock holder corporation, financial structure and business management.
5
Industry Forms Panic of 1893 caused financial problems in industry J. P. Morgan and others bought them up and consolidated Cornelius Vanderbilt becomes leader of industry Cared very little about popular opinion Modern Colossus of (Rail)roads
6
Early Attempts at Regulation Did little good Granger laws overturned in court Interstate Commerce Act ineffective
7
Steel Bessemer process developed Industry grows in Great Lakes Regions Andrew Carnegie Pittsburg, Pa Sold his company to J.P. Morgan and others for over $400 million in 1900. First Billion Dollar corporation
8
Andrew Carnegie
9
Vertical Consolidation Company controls all of the industrial process from mining to transportation Carnegie Steel employed 20,000 workers Produced more steel than all the mills in Britain Carnegie Steel Railroad Steel Mill Tool Plant Chemical Plant Mine
10
Oil Industry First discovered in 1859 by Edwin Drake in Pennsylvania 1863, John D. Rockefeller founded Standard Oil By 1881 his company controlled 90% of the industry
11
John D. Rockefeller
12
Horizontal Integration A trust consisting of all the oil companies that Rockefeller purchased Controlled the supply and prices. Prices soared At retirement, Rockefeller was worth $900 million ABC OilSlimy OilBlack GoldBest OilNick’s OilArab Oil Standard Oil
13
Leaders are Viewed in both Positive and Negative Perspective Captains of Industry Applauded for their efforts in building this industrial nation Built strong, powerful industries Provided work for many Robber Barons Took advantage of their workers Vicious in maintaining monopolies Cut corners in dangerous ways
14
Industrialists became the most powerful force in politics and society.
15
Richest Men of All Time 5. William Gates III -- $60 billionWilliam Gates III 4. John Jacob Astor (1763-1848) -- $85 billion 3. Cornelius Vanderbilt (1794-1877) -- $100 billion 2. Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919) -- $110 billion 1. John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) -- $200 billion
16
Anti-Trust Movement Response to public demand for control Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 Limited the power of trusts Poorly worded Supreme Court said that it would only affect commerce, not manufacturing US government basically supported the growth of business with Laissez-Faire
17
Social Darwinism Idea that Darwin’s ideas of natural selection should be applied to marketplace Promoted the acceptance of extreme wealth and poverty Scientific Explanation
18
Gospel of Wealth Religious justification “God gave me my riches.” (Rockefeller) God-given responsibility to fund civic philanthropy (Carnegie)
19
Technology, Inventions, and Innovations Samuel F.B. Morse – telegraph Cyrus W. Field – Transatlantic cable Alexander Graham Bell - Telephone
20
Other inventions Typewriter Cash register Calculating machine Adding machine Kodak camera Fountain pen Gillette’s razor
21
Thomas Edison Menlo Park, New Jersey Introduced team concept of innovation Electric light bulb Phonograph Movie projector George Westinghouse created transformer.
22
Marketing Consumer Goods R.H. Macy (New York) and Marshall Field (Chicago): Large department stores Sears, Roebuck and Montgomery Ward: Mail order Kellogg and Post: Packaged foods Gustavus Swift: Canned foods
23
Impact of Industrialization Raised the standard of living for most people Created sharp economic and class divisions Environmental damage Totally reformed American society
24
The Workers
25
Worker’s World Based on the “rhythm of work”. Heavy machinery was often unsafe The most productivity for the least money Laborers often felt like parts of a machine. Felt they were less than human.
26
Workers’ Concerns Unsafe conditions Long hours Low pay Child Labor Exploitation of women
27
Labor Unions First successful union Knights of Labor Terrance Powderly Started as a secret fraternity Oldest union still in existence American Federation of Labor (AFL) Samuel Gompers Loose organization of skilled craftsmen
28
Labor Unrest Great Railroad Strike 1877 Pullman Strike, 1894 Homestead Strike 1892 Haymarket Riot, 1886
29
Effects of Strikes The railroad strikes of 1877 and 1894 demonstrated the use of injunctions to end strikes. The Haymarket Riot resulted in the perception that union members were anarchists. Homestead Strike defined the relationship between workers and industrialists.
30
Which of the following did not contribute significantly to American industrialization of the late nineteenth century? a. Abundant resources b. Rapid population growth c. Investor confidence d. Growth of railroads e. None of the above
31
Which of the following industries was NOT transformed by a nineteenth-century invention by either Alexander Graham Bell or Thomas Alva Edison? a. Communications b. Power c. Entertainment d. Automobiles e. Public safety
32
Why did trusts form in the late nineteenth century? a. To increase efficiency b. To reduce costs c. To decrease competition d. To increase the supply of capital e. To loose money
33
The Bessemer process transformed the steel industry because it a. Required less capital b. Used far less labor c. Produced more durable steel d. Used cheap ore e. Made prettier buildings
34
The Haymarket Riot weakened the labor movement because it a. Linked labor and anarchism in the minds of many people b. Demonstrated the ineffectiveness of unions c. Revealed the violent nature of unions d. Initiated the use of court injunctions against strikes. e. Demonstrated how powerful unions are
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.