Industry in America 1865 - 1900. Leading industrialists – “Captain of Industry” or “Robber...

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Industry in America 1865 - 1900

Transcript of Industry in America 1865 - 1900. Leading industrialists – “Captain of Industry” or “Robber...

Page 1: Industry in America 1865 - 1900. Leading industrialists – “Captain of Industry” or “Robber Baron” Harsh working conditions and difficult life for workers.

Industry in America1865 - 1900

Page 2: Industry in America 1865 - 1900. Leading industrialists – “Captain of Industry” or “Robber Baron” Harsh working conditions and difficult life for workers.

•Leading industrialists – “Captain of Industry” or “Robber Baron”

•Harsh working conditions and difficult life for workers

Page 3: Industry in America 1865 - 1900. Leading industrialists – “Captain of Industry” or “Robber Baron” Harsh working conditions and difficult life for workers.

Andrew Carnegie

•From Scotland•Was a “bobbin boy” in a textile mill and

earned $1.20 a week; worked for the Pennsylvania Railroad; then made millions in steel industry▫Necessity for railroads and booming

construction•Philosophy: “Watch the costs and the

profits will take care of themselves.”

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Carnegie

•Vertical Integration:▫Control all portions of manufacturing

process from raw materials to distribution•Sold out in 1901 for half a billion; known

for philanthropy

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John D. Rockefeller

•Formed Standard Oil in 1870; cut costs and strictly managed use of resources

•Undercut competition by lowering prices and then raising prices after buying out rivals

•Never able to escape negative image even though he was a philanthropist

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Rockefeller

•Vertical Integration:▫Purchased own tanker cars to transport oil

to his customers•Horizontal Integration:

▫Controlled about 90% of US oil refining capacity by 1879

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Thomas Edison

•Born in OH; invented phonograph, motion picture camera; perfected the light bulb

•Established “invention factory” at Menlo Park, NJ

•Leading research facility; different teams allowed multiple inventions to be pursued

•Came to symbolize inventive impulse of Americans▫Work hard and you can be successful

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Costs of Industrialization

•US a major industrial power by 1900•Environmental degradation

▫Mining (coal, iron), pollution – air and water

•Factory life wasn’t always an improvement over life on a farm▫Dangerous, crowded, dehumanized

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Labor• Workers and management on different terms• “Old” vs. “New” Perspective

▫OLD – laborers worked in small shops, took pride in their work and worked at their own pace

▫NEW – large factories were the norm; tasks were repetitive and pace was set by the “clock and whistle”

• average work week: 55-60 hrs.• Dangerous conditions:

▫1889 (first year of reliable statistics in RR) over 2,000 railroad workers died and 20,000 injured on the job

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Wages

•Skilled worker: (Bricklayer) earned $3.00 a day

•General Laborer: $1.30/day•Southern mill worker: .84/day

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Steel Industry

•Very tough job▫Furnaces had to be kept running

•Shifts: 7 days/week; 12 hours/day•Shift change: night and days shifted once

a month so one group had an entire day off per month▫Other group had to work 24 hours straight

•Dangerous working conditions

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Women and Children

•Child Laborers▫1900: almost 2 million children worked for

wages▫Very little supervisions, lots of accidents▫Able to work in small spaces and paid

lower wages▫Employed in textile mills and glass

factories, etc.

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Women Workers

•Sought out because could be paid less than male counterparts

•1900: 17% of workforce•1890s – typewriter and telephone provide

opportunities for safer jobs for women with high school education

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Unions

•Laborers unhappy with conditions and began to organize into unions

•Knights of Labor (1869)▫Open to all laborers▫1880s over 700.000 members▫Goals: equal pay for women; end child

labor; limit Chinese immigration

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K of L

•Saw Chinese immigrants as competitors for jobs

•1880s movements against Chinese in WA•Allowed blacks and women to join•Pushed for an 8 hour work day•Graduated income tax

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K of L

•Haymarket Square Riot (May 4, 1886)▫Background: Laborers in Chicago held a

general strike and ended up fighting with police

▫Strike sympathizers held a rally near Chicago’s Haymarket Square and a bomb went off

▫Seven police killed; four demonstrators killed

▫Lost support because of association with violence

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American Federation of Labor

•Formed in 1884; headed by Samuel Gompers

•Union of skilled workers•Goals: eight hour day; employer liability

for injuries on the job•1.6 million members by 1904

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Labor Unions

•Origins of modern unions set by late 1800s

•Only included about 5% of workforce by late 1800s

•Many emplorers, like Carnegie, fought to break unions

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Advertising

•As nation industrialized we also see growth of advertising

•Encouraged people to buy their products Quaker Oats, Ivory Soap, Kodak Cameras

•Few regulations in place by govt.

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Conclusion

•US became an industrial power and was led by people like Carnegie, Rockefeller and Edison; however, it was often on the backs of individual laborers who worked under difficult conditions

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Respond in your journal:

•By 1900 the US was a major industrial world power but it came at what cost?

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US in 1900

•Daily life▫African Americans▫Farmers▫Immigrants

•Domestic Policy ▫Panic of 1893 and 1896▫Presidential Election▫Spanish American War

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African Americans

•9 million in US in 1900•90% lived in the South

•Exodusters – left deep south to Kansas to establish homesteads

•Sharecropping developed as a compromise between former slaves and landowners

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Sharecropping

•Landowners subdivided plantations into 50 acre plots

•Families responsible for raising crops on plot

•Sharecroppers handed over 50% of their crops as “rent” for the land

•In the deep South, 75% of the land was sharecropped

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Barrow Plantation

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Crop-Lien

•Merchants advanced sharecroppers supplies on credit▫Seed, tools, livestock, furniture

•Interest rates: often 50% or more because no collateral