Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through...

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Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews

Transcript of Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through...

Page 1: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Gilded Age

Review Created By:

Michael Crews

Page 2: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Politics• Political Machines – bought votes through providing

services and jobs in the administration– Political bosses – controlled the machine– Spoils system – process of paying for votes through money,

jobs, and services– Tammany Hall – Democratic Political Machine in New York

City (William Tweed)• Presidents– Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland, Harrison– All lacked personality

• Called the “forgotten presidents”

Page 3: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Legislation• Pendleton Act (1883) – reformed the spoils system– Created the Civil Service Commission• Hire federal employees based on exams and merit

• Sherman Silver Purchase Act- purchased more silver for currency

• McKinley Tariff – set import tax at around 50%

Page 4: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Industrialization• Second Industrial Revolution– Mechanization and marketing led to great wealth

• If you could get people to purchase your mass produced goods you became incredibly wealthy

• Transcontinental Railroad– Authorized by congress in 1862– Federally subsidized by the mile at first– Completed in 1869 @ Ogden, Utah– Built by primarily Chinese and Irish labor– Opened up the west to rapid expansion of population– Provided quick transportation of goods and raw materials to

developing industrial centers

Page 5: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Important Businessmen and Ideas• Vanderbilt – Railroad tycoon• Carnegie – Steel industry– Sold company to J.P. Morgan who developed the U.S. Steel

Corporation• J.P. Morgan – Banking/Investing• Rockefeller – Oil– Created Standard Oil Company

• Vertical Integration – combing companies that supply equipment, services and resources for a particular product

• Horizontal Integration – combining all other companies in a particular industry

Page 6: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Social Ideas and Business Regulations• Interstate Commerce Act (1887)

– Outlawed railroad rebates and kickbacks– Created Interstate Commerce Commission

• Monitored railroad companies for compliance

• Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890)– Outlawed monopolies

• Social Darwinism– The idea that people succeed based on natural selection or ‘survival

of the fittest’– The ‘Gospel of Wealth’

• God had given them riches for the genius and/or tenacity

– The opposite of this is that poor or unsuccessful people were ungodly or biologically inferior

Page 7: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Labor Movement

• National Labor Union (NLU)– Represented both skilled and unskilled labor to factory

owners• Knights of Labor– Another labor union – It allowed blacks and women to join

• NLU did not

• American Federation of Labor (AFL)– Large organization that coordinated efforts of many

smaller unions

Page 8: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Strikes• Railroad Strike of 1877

– Threatened second 10% pay cut for workers• Coeur d’Alene Strike (1892)

– Silver miners’ wages slashed• Miners blew up the mine

• Homestead Strike – Steel workers protested lowered wages– Won a victory after clashing with 300 detectives

• Pullman Strike– Pullman railcar company employees wages cut 30%– Eugene Debs organized the strike

• 150,000 union members refused to work• Delayed service as far away as California

– Grover Cleveland sent federal troops to break up strike

Page 9: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

Social Issues• Immigration– Push Factors

• Avoid forced military service• Avoid religious persecution• Poor economic situation

– Pull Factors• Better jobs• Religious freedom• Ability to improve social standing

– Negative reactions• Nativists did not feel that immigrants would never assimilate into the

‘American’ culture

– Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 banned Chinese immigration until 1943

– Rapid urbanization• Along with native peoples, immigrants settled into the industrialized cities• Lack of adequate housing led to ‘slums’

Page 10: Gilded Age Review Created By: Michael Crews. Politics Political Machines – bought votes through providing services and jobs in the administration – Political.

More Social Issues• Equal Rights– Women demand right to vote• Elizabeth Cady Stanton

– African Americans continued fight for their rights• Plessy V. Ferguson ( separate but equal) upheld• Booker T. Washington encouraged blacks to become

economically self-sufficient before challenging whites on social issues• W.E.B. Du Bois argued that blacks should fight for social and

economic equality at the same time