Transcript Industrial Revolution - Fredericksburg City Schools
Industrial Revolution
1865-1900
W
HY DID IT
H
APPEN
?
After the Civil War, industry began to grow rapidly. The growth was made possible by 2 factors: 1.
Immigration 2. laissez-faire attitude of gov’t towards big business
Before 1860, most manufacturing took place in
private homes
manufacturing
factories
, which production. increased due to: 1.
use of machines 2. cheap labor (immigration) 3. more efficiency
Assembly Line
Assembly Line:
all parts of production done in a line decreasing need for skill, making workers replaceable. Based on the idea of Frederick W. Taylor & first used by Henry Ford to mass produce cars
*By producing goods faster, it meant they could be sold
cheaper
.
R
EASONS FOR ECONOMIC TRANSFORMATION
Laissez-faire capitalism and special considerations (e.g., land grants to railroad builders) The increasing labor supply (from immigration and migration from farms) America’s possession of a wealth of natural resources and navigable rivers Some of the natural resources were large deposits of raw materials such as
lumber, iron, & coal.
Pennsylvania provided
coal & iron
which were carried by railroad to mills in Chicago and Pittsburgh.
During the period from the Civil War to World War I, the United States underwent an
economic
transformation that involved the development of an industrial economy, the expansion of big business, the growth of large-scale agriculture, and the rise of national labor unions and
industrial conflict.
E
FFECT OF
I
NDUSTRY ON
W
ORKERS
Factories in the large cities provided jobs, but workers’ families often lived in harsh conditions, crowded into tenements and slums. While these industrialists made money were getting rich, their workers were suffering through
conditions.
long hours, low wages, & poor working
As a result, they began to organize
labor unions
whose goal was to fight for: 1.
higher wages 2. better working conditions
I
NVENTIONS
& I
NVENTORS
Technological change
spurred growth of industry primarily in northern cities. Several inventions helped America to industrialize even more. Some of these new technologies were: Bessemer Process-
process to melt iron & remove impurities which produces steel, which is stronger than iron.
Electric Light bulb
Thomas Edison perfected & marketed it to Americans, creating demand for electric lights in homes & created safer working conditions in factories
Transportation
Automobiles in 1880s Airplanes in 1903 by Wright Brothers. First flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina
Telephone-
invented by Alexander Graham Bell= faster & easier communication
Two inventions in particular served both to improve the efficiency of communication AND to pull more women into the work place. They were the: Typewriter-
replaced men as secretaries
Telephone-
(1874) women (1876) women became phone operators. * these allowed women to earn more money than in factories
F
AMOUS
R
OBBER
-B
ARONS
One characteristic of the Gilded Age is that business owners made lots of money. The industrialists who became billionaires during this time were known as the
Robber Barons
. Some of the most famous were: 1.
Andrew Carnegie (steel) He owned the Carnegie Steel Corporation
2.
JP Morgan (banking & finance) He owned both GE (General Electric) & bought out Carnegie Steel
3.
Cornelius Vanderbilt (railroads & lumber) He owned the first railroad between New York & Chicago
4.
John D. Rockefeller (oil) He owned the Standard Oil Company which controlled 99% of oil refineries in the US
Part of the reason why these men became so rich is because the government did not
regulate
businesses. This kind of government policy was known as
laissez-faire
who could of business. . They could sell their goods at
not much
cheaper prices than small business owners, compete, and went out
R
ISE OF
C
ORPORATIONS
Many of these businesses were not owned by individual people, but by a
corporation .
This meant that there was no
share of a company).
single
owner, but companies were owned by lots of
shareholders (investors who own stocks or a
Advantages of Corporations: 1.
limited liability= if a corporation goes bankrupt, creditors can’t take money from its owners. Just the company’s holdings.
2.
more money to invest= take part in bigger projects than small companies.
Monopolies
Many of these corporations tried to decrease competition by joining together and forming huge
monopoly
.
Two types of monopolies are: Vertical Integration-
When a business controls all parts of production from start to finish.
Ex: Carnegie Steel Corporation
Horizontal Integration-
When a business controls a single phase of production Ex: Standard Oil controlled all oil refineries
U
RBANIZATION
As the nation’s industrial growth continued, cities such as Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and New York grew rapidly as manufacturing and transportation centers.
The rapid growth of cities caused housing shortages and the need for new public services, such as sewage and water systems and public transportation. New York City was the first city to begin construction of a subway system around the turn of the twentieth century, and many cities built trolley or streetcar lines.
The Rise of Unions
Laissez-faire Immigration Natural resources
Labor unions
Early Labor Unions
immigration Strikes Sam Gompers
Famous Strikes
1. Haymarket Square Riot (Chicago)— At McCormick Reaper Factory the Knights of Labor strike for higher wages & 8 hour work day. Unaffiliated anarchists threw a bomb into the crowd, killing police. Ended the union because people thought all Knights were anarchists.
2. Homestead Strike (Carnegie Steel, PA)— American Federation of Labor strike for higher wages & better working conditions. Company hires Pinkerton Guards who are professional strike breakers. Union loses when federal troops are sent in.
3. Pullman Strike (Chicago)– Pullman cuts wages but not rent in his company town. American Railroad Workers Union strike for higher pay & lower rent. Union loses when federal troops are sent in.