A New Industrial Order
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Transcript A New Industrial Order
A New Industrial Order
"What is the chief
end of man?--to get
rich. In what way?-dishonestly if we
can; honestly if we
must."
-- Mark Twain-1871
1877-1918
Industrial Systems
Investment
And
Innovation
Land
(Natural Resources)
Corporate Organization
And
Management
Labor
Communications
Natural Resources and Sectional Division
Agricultural Division
–
–
–
South: cotton, tobacco, lumber, timber products, beef, pork
Midwest: lumber, grain, beef, pork, dairy
West: beef, grain, timber
Resource Extraction
–
–
–
South: coal
Midwest: coal, copper, iron ore, petroleum
West: copper, silver, iron ore, coal, etc.
The Problem of Labor
Why did demand for labor increase from 1865-1918?
What are the different demands on an industrial labor
force?
Where did the new labor force come from?
Rural America
Immigration
Before/After 1890
Entrepreneurs, Systematic Invention,
and Public Investment
Entrepreneurial Invention (1750-1850)
Systematic invention and Public Investment
–
–
Thomas A. Edison (1879) “Menlo Park”
J.P. Morgan and General Electri
Corporate Organization and New Management
Corporate Organization
–
–
Andrew Carnegie and “vertical integration”
John D. Rockefeller and “horizontal integration”
The predominance of corporations (1877-1918)
“Managerial Revolution”
–
–
Rationalization of labor and “white collar work”
Scientific management
Frederick Taylor “Taylorism”
Henry Ford’s management style
Communications
•The American Railroad system
•Telephone and Telegraph systems
The Role of the State
Civil War Government involvement
1861 Morrill Tariff
– 1862 Morrill Land Grant College Act
– 1862 Pacific Railroad Act
– 1862 Homestead Act
– 1866 14th Amendment to the Constitution
Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad
–
80
70
60
50
40
30
% of Americans
living on a farm
20
10
0
1850
1900
1950
2000
Price Stagnation after 1877
250
200
150
100
50
0
1820
1830
1840
1850
1860
1865
1870
Source: David Hackett Fischer
1880
1890