the rise of american business, industry, and labor: 1865*1920.
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Transcript the rise of american business, industry, and labor: 1865*1920.
The US develops a prosperous new economy
based on the mass production of goods.
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Transcontinental Railroad: effort to link the railroads
across the US to increase trade and ease of movement.
Sharecropper: Former slaves who worked the
plantation land & turned over crop and profit.
Monopoly: When one business has complete control of
a field of business.
Trust: Group of corporations agreeing to act under one
board of directors. Illegal.
Andrew Carnegie: Steel Industry, Pittsburgh.
John D. Rockefeller: Standard Oil
JP Morgan: Banking, loans. US Steel.
Henry Ford: moving assembly line production of
automobiles.
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Laissez Faire: “Hands Off”. Supported by Adam Smith.
Government stays away from involvement with
business.
Robber Baron: gain wealth by ruthless means
Munn v. Illinois:
Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific v. Illinois:
Sherman Anti-Trust Act: 1890, prohibits monopolies by
declaring trusts “in restraint of commerce”
US v E.C. Knight Company:
Unions: Workers acting together to gain advances in
hours, wages, benefits.
Knights of Labor: Terrence Powderly, skilled / unskilled
workers.
17. AFL: American Federation of Labor, unions of skilled
workers.
18. International Ladies’ Garment Workers union:
Response to the Triangle Shirtwaist Tragedy, fight for
working conditions in garment industry.
19. Haymarket Riot: 1886 bombing blamed on Knights of
Labor, killed 7 police officers in Chicago.
20. Homestead Strike: Carnegie Workers protest wage
cuts, violence leads to 16 deaths.
Munn v. Illinois (1877): grain elevator rates.
State can regulate property that affects “public
interest”.
Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway v. Illinois
(1886): States cannot regulate interstate
railroads.
United States v. E.C. Knight Company (1895):
Gov. has the right to restrict monopolies.
In re Debs (1895): People, property, mail.
Congress can intervene in Monopolies.
Industrialization
accelerates after
the Civil War.
Improvements in
Railroads, steel,
mines.
Transcontinental
Railroad
completed 1869.
War ruins Southern
economy.
Ends slavery, kills
plantation system.
New South:
Railroads, textiles,
mills.
Sharecropping.
Mass migration of
blacks to the
North.
Rise of CORPORATIONS due to increased
capital, stocks, dividends, investment.
Involved risk, but possibility of tremendous
gains. CAPITALISM
RAILROAD, STEEL, COAL, OIL, ELECTRICITY
Monopoly: Complete control over a particular
field of business. (EC Knight Sugar Company)
Vertical
Control all of the aspects of
the product.
-Meat
industry controls
cattle, slaughterhouses,
packing plants, delivery
wagons.
-Purchase companies at
all levels of production…
Oil Company #1
+
Oil Company #2
+
Oil Company #3
=
GIANT OIL COMPANY WHICH CONTROLS
THE MARKET.
-Prices, Jobs, supply
Pools, Trusts, Holding Companies. All ways of
keeping owners in control and fixing
prices/competition.
Andrew Carnegie: Steel Industry, Pittsburgh.
Carnegie Steel
John D. Rockefeller: Oil Refining Business.
Standard Oil (1882) owns 90% American refining
$815,647,796.89 at death…40 million / year salary.
JP Morgan: Financier & US Steel (1901) World’s
largest Steel Company.
Henry Ford: Assembly Line, mass production
Captains of Industry???
OR…..Robber Barons?
Andrew Carnegie
JD Rockefeller
J.P. Morgan
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Laissez-Faire: “Hands
off” Government has no
right to interfere in
Business.
FREE ENTERPRISE
SYSTEM. (Adam Smith,
invisible hand theory)
SOCIAL DARWINISM
Fair? Unfair?
Prohibits Monopolies.
Response to Standard Oil
Any combination which
“is in restraint of trade or
commerce”
Circumvented by EC
Knight, and “holding
companies”
Over 100 women die in 1911 fire.
Leads to safety reforms in the private industry.
Triangle Fire
Due to power of owners, Unions are formed to
protect workers.
Knights of Labor (1869): Terrence Powderly.
Haymarket Riot leads to decline. 7 policeman
killed.
1886: Samuel Gompers,
skilled workers. By 1900,
most powerful Union in the
USA.
1900: ILGWU to protect
sweatshop workers.
Strikes, violence.
Great Railway Strike 1877.
Haymarket Riot 1886.
Homestead Strike 1892: Carnegie Steel, 16
people killed.
Pullman Strike 1894: President Cleveland
sends in Federal Troops to end strike. (In re
Debs)
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Tenements: multifamily housing, poorly maintained.
Political Machines: gain support of immigrants,
leads to political corrpution in cities.
Urbanization: Development of modern cities. Many
positives and negatives.
Immigration: People entering your country from
another.
Old Immigration: colonies-1850. (N/W Europe,
Ireland, Germany)
New Immigration: S/E Europe. Italy, Poland, Russia.
1870-1924.
Nativism: native born Americans were superior to
immigrants.
Melting Pot Theory: People from various cultures
meet in US to form a New Culture. Old cultures are
surrendered to form a “new” culture.
9. Assimilation: Immigrants give up native language,
traditions. “Americanize”
10. Cultural Pluralism: (Salad Bowl) Groups do not
lose their distinctive cultures.
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OLD:(until 1850)
Northern and
Western Europe
(Britain, Ireland,
Germany)
NEW:(1850-1924)
South/East Europe
(Italy, Poland,
Russia)
“Melting
Pot”
Assimilation: become “Americanized”
Cultural Pluralism: Salad Bowl Theory
“Know Nothing” Party: exlude immigrants
Chinese Exclusion Act: 1882
“Gentleman’s Agreement”: Ends Japanese
immigration in 1907.
National Origins Act 1924: favors N/W
immigrants.
Labor unions: NATIVISTS….WHY???
Gangs of NY
GW Plunkitt
RECONSTRUCTION (13,14,15 amendments)
Lincoln, Johnson, Republicans
Due Process, Jim Crow, Plessy v. Ferguson
THE MOVE WEST
Homestead, Natives, Indian Wars,
INDUSTRIALIZATION
Why? Where? Effects? Robber Barron/C.O.I.
Carnegie, Rockefeller, Morgan
Monopolies, Trusts, Pools, Sherman
Unions, conditions, strikes
IMMIGRATION
New/Old
Challenges, TERMS
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