The Expansion of American Industry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

The Expansion of American Industry

Description:

Title: Unit 1 Chapters 14,15,16 & 17 Author: ddd13950 Last modified by: install Created Date: 1/6/2004 4:15:55 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:117
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: ddd13950
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Expansion of American Industry


1
  • The Expansion of American Industry
  • (1850-1900)

2
A Technological Revolution
  • Indoor electric lighting did not exist in 1865.
    Instead, the rising and setting of the sun
    dictated the rhythm of a days work.
  • After dark, people lit candles or oil lamps if
    they could afford them. If they could not they
    simply went to sleep, to rise at the first light
    of dawn.

3
A Technological Revolution
  • Imagine summers without the benefits of
    refrigeration!
  • Ice was available in 1865, but only at great
    cost.
  • People sawed blocks of ice out of frozen ponds
    during the winter, packed them in sawdust, and
    stored them in icehouses for later use.

4
A Technological Revolution
  • Communication was also very slow in those days.
  • Most mail from the East Coast took ten days to
    reach the Midwest and three weeks to get to the
    West.
  • An immigrant living on the frontier would wait
    months for news from relatives in Europe.

5
A Technological Revolution
  • By 1900, daily life had changed dramatically in
    the United States.
  • Between 1790 and 1860, the Patent and Trademark
    Office of the Federal Govt issued just 36,000
    patents (licenses to make, use, or sell an
    invention).
  • In contrast, b/w 1860 and 1890, 500,000 patents
    were issued for inventions.

6
Complete a chart for each invention what, who,
when, and importance!
  • Telegraph
  • Telephone
  • Phonograph
  • Filament Light bulb
  • Central Power Station
  • (direct current)
  • Transformer (alternating)
  • Bessemer Process
  • Brooklyn Bridge

7
Electric Power
  • Thomas A. Edison (There is always a better way
    to do something, find it!
  • He patented over 1,000 inventions!
  • Helped to make electricity widely available.
  • Improved stock ticker
  • Phonograph
  • 1882, Central power station
  • Westinghouse
  • 1885 George Westinghouse and alternating current.
  • Use of transformer made use of electricity in
    homes practical.
  • General Electric and Westinghouse Electric.

8
The Railroad gets connected!
  • In 1850, steam powered ships still provided much
    of the nations transportation.
  • Before the Civil War, most of the railroad tracks
    were in short lines that connected neighboring
    cities, mainly in the East.
  • There was no standard track width, or gauge, so
    each train could only travel on certain tracks.
  • As a result, goods and passengers often had to be
    moved to different trains, which caused costly
    delays.
  • To make matters worse, they were dangerous b/c
    trains could not communicate and brakes were
    unreliable.eeekkkk ?

9
The Transcontinental RR
  • In 1862, a huge project began in Sacramento, CA
    by the Central Pacific RR company and in Omaha,
    NB by the Union Pacific RR company to connect one
    line.
  • On May 10, 1869, the project was complete with
    the final Gold spike being driven in by Leland
    Stanford at Promontory Point, Utah.
  • Most of the workers on the railroad were
    immigrants. Irish for the Union Pacific and
    Asian, especially Chinese, for the Central
    Pacific.
  • This railroad officially connected the east to
    the west.

10
Problems with the RR
  • Rails were not standardized, this caused a lack
    of mobility.
  • Trains were often noisy, dirty, and
    uncomfortable.
  • People feared for their safety and distrusted
    most trains.
  • And scheduling for the train to be On Time was
    a nightmare, b/c of the time differences from
    town to town. Each town set its time according
    to solar time.

11
Solutions for the RR
  • Steel rails replaced iron rails and signals and
    track gauges became standardized.
  • George Westinghouse developed more effective air
    brakes and Granville Woods patented a telegraph
    system for communicating with moving trains, thus
    reducing the risk of collisions.
  • In 1883, the railroads adopted a national system
    of time zones to improve scheduling. As a
    result, clocks in broad regions of the country
    showed the same time.
  • Four time zones were used Eastern, Central,
    Mountain, and Pacific (we still use these today)

12
Changes brought forth by the RR
Govt reg. of private industry
Grow of towns and cities
Rapid Growth of Railroads
Creation of nationwide market
Consolidation of RR
Greed and Corruption
13
Section 2 The Growth of Big Business
  • The period of invention after the Civil War set
    the stage for the great industrial growth.
  • Still, it would take more than technology to
    change the U.S., it would take entrepreneurial
    people to make the difference.
  • These individuals became known as Robber Barons!

14
Robber Barons (Captains of Industry)
  • Robber Baron implies that these individuals build
    their fortunes by stealing from the public, and
    in turn drained the natural resources.
  • Captains of Industry paints a more positive image
    of hard work and success in the building of the
    business world as we know it.

Andrew Carnegie
John D. Rockefeller
Cornelius Vanderbilt
15
3 Major Players
  • Make a list of the three major players in the
    growth of big business and add all the details of
    their particular business.
  • Include a picture of the each man and a picture
    of his business.
  • Complete this for homework, it will be due on
    Monday, December 12th!

16
Big Business
17
Big Business Problems
  • Monopolies and Cartels
  • Monopoly complete control of a product or
    service.
  • Cartel a loose association of business that
    make the same product.
  • Trust managing companies as a single unit. Ex.
    Standard Oil (John D. Rockefeller)
  • Sherman Antitrust Act law that prevents any
    combination of companies that restrain
    interstate trade or commerce.
  • Social Darwinism Those who were more fit
    would survive in the business world. (Carnegie
    really believed in this idea)
  • Methods of Industrial Control
  • Horizontal consolidation (same type of business
    bought by one company, ex. Rockefeller w/oil)
  • Vertical consolidation(different type of business
    bought by one company, ex. Carnegie w/steel)

18
(No Transcript)
19
Section 3Industrialization and Workers
  • The Growing Work Force
  • Immigration
  • 1860 1900 14 million immigrants to U.S.
  • Contract Labor Act 1864 law allowed employers
    to enter into contracts with immigrants.
  • Similar to Indentured Servants.
  • 8 9 million migrants entered the cities.
  • Look at the graphs on pg. s 419 420.
  • Write a brief statement describing what you
    leaned from each graph

20
Increasing Efficiency
  • In 1881, Frederick Winslow Taylor set out to
    improve worker efficiency in the steel plant
    where he was chief engineer.
  • He began to study the workers, trying to see how
    much time it took to do various jobs.
  • Then he broke down each task into a of steps
    and determined how long each step should take.
  • He wanted more productivity from less time.
  • The workers hated Taylors ideas, they feared
    that increased efficiency would result in layoffs
    or a lower rate of pay for each piece of work.

21
Frederick Winslow Taylor
  • In 1911, he wrote, The Principles of Scientific
    Management.
  • Many people continue to use this formula in their
    business.

22
Factory Work
  • Factory workers were(are) ruled by the clock.
    When to start, stop, or break.
  • Factory work changed work from the days of
    being a craftsman.
  • A craftsman would traditionally make a product
    from start to finish, which required a variety of
    tasks.
  • Factory workers performed only one small task,
    over and over, and rarely saw the finished
    product.
  • This concept became known as Division of Labor.

23
Life in a Factory
  • Workers called Hands
  • Discipline was strict
  • Fined for being late, talking back, or refusing
    to do a task
  • Work was boring
  • Loud, dark, and ventilation was poor
  • Many fires from fatigue, faulty equip.,
    carelessness
  • Many deaths on the job
  • In 1882, average killed was 675 a WEEK, today
    it is around 120 week

24
Section 3 cont.
  • Working Families
  • Because of low wages, everyone in the family had
    to work.
  • Children left school at 12 or 13.
  • Mothers worked in the factory.
  • Some boys after 13 stayed in school, but most
    girls went to work in the factory.
  • If a parent died, 6 7 year olds had to work.
    (no work, no food)
  • Social Darwinism govt. aid did not exist.

25
Section 3 cont.
  • Women Children
  • Women
  • No chance of advancement.
  • No training.
  • Excluded from higher paying jobs.
  • Children
  • 1880s 5 of working population.
  • No child labor laws.
  • Stunted growth.
  • 1892 Jacob Riis wrote, Children of the Poor
  • By the early 1900s, child labor legislation was
    implemented.

26
Section 4The Great Strikes
  • Rich vs. Poor
  • 1890 9 of pop. held 75 of nations wealth.
  • Socialism economic and political philosophy
    that favors public (social) control of property
    and income.
  • Cooperate, not compete.
  • Karl Marx Communist Manifesto
  • Labor Unions
  • Trade Unions
  • The Federal Society of Journeymen Cordwainers
    (shoemakers)
  • 1806, Outlawed for engaging in strikes.
  • National Trades Union

27
Section 4 cont.
  • The American Federation of Labor (AFL)
  • Samuel Gompers
  • Only skilled workers.
  • Three main issues for unions
  • Higher Wages
  • Shorter Working Hours
  • Safer Working Conditions
  • Collective Bargaining group bargains
  • with employer for changes

Samuel Gompers
28
UnionsEmployersForbade union meetings.Fired
union organizers.Yellow Dog contracts
workers promised not to join or strikeRefused
collective bargaining if strikes
occurred.Refused to recognize unions as the
workers legitimate representatives.
29
Four Major Strikes 1877-1894
  1. Railroad Strike 1877
  2. Haymarket Strike 1886
  3. Homestead Strike 1892
  4. Pullman Strike - 1894

30
Railroad Strike - 1877
  • When the BO RR announced a 10 wage cut in the
    midst of a depression, workers reacted with
    violence.
  • The rioting spread rapidly from Baltimore to
    Pittsburgh, Chicago, St. Louis, and other cities.
  • President Rutherford B. Hayes (1877-1881) sent in
    federal troops to put down the strike in W. Va.
  • Soldiers fired on the rioters, killing and
    wounding many. A crowd of 20,000 set fire to the
    RR company property.
  • From the 1877 strike on, employers relied on
    federal and state troops to repress labor unrest.
  • A new and violent era in labor relations had
    begun.

31
Haymarket Strike - 1886
  • May 1, 1886, groups of workers mounted a national
    demonstration for an eight-hour workday.
  • Their slogan was, 8 hrs. work, 8 hrs. rest, 8
    hrs. for what we will!
  • This led to fight at Chicagos McCormick reaper
    factory between strikers and scabs.
  • Scabs are workers called in by an employer to
    replace striking laborers.
  • Several of the workers were killed when police
    tried to break it up.

32
Haymarket Strike - 1886
  • Union leaders called for a protest rally on the
    evening of May 4 in Chicagos Haymarket Square.
  • A group of anarchists, radicals who violently
    oppose all govt, joined the strikers.
  • That evening someone threw a bomb into a police
    formation, killing seven officers.
  • A riot followed and over a dozen were killed.
  • Investigators never found the bomber, yet eight
    anarchists were tried for conspiracy to commit
    murder.

33
Haymarket Strike - 1886
  • Four were hanged, another committed suicide.
  • Governor John P. Altgeld of Illinois decided
    later there was not enough evidence so he
    pardoned the remaining three.
  • To many unionists, the anarchists who took part
    in the Haymarket Riot forever would be heroes.
  • To employers, however, they remained vicious
    criminals determined to undermine law and order.
  • Much of the American public came to associate
    unions in general w/violence and radical ideas.

34
Homestead Strike - 1892
  • Summer of 1892, while Andrew Carnegie was in
    Europe, his partner Henry Frick tried to cut
    workers wages at Carnegie Steel.
  • The union at the Carnegie plant in Homestead, PA
    called a strike.
  • Frick intended to crush the strike and he hired a
    private police force to do the job.
  • Again, several people were killed and many
    Americans were angry with the steel company,
    until..

35
Homestead Strike - 1892
  • Anarchist Alexander Berkman tried and failed to
    assassinate Frick.
  • Berkman was not associated w/the union, but the
    public connected him anyway.
  • This led to a huge distrust of unions in many
    Americans eyes.

36
Pullman Strike - 1894
  • This strike involving the RR marked a shift in
    the Federal Governments involvement with
    labor-employer relations.
  • Sleeping-car maker, George Pullman considered
    himself a caring industrialist.
  • He donated money to build schools, banks, and
    utilities in his hometown of Chicago.
  • But, when the economy took a nose dive in 1893,
    he had to lay off workers and cut wages.
  • A small group tried to protest to him and he
    fired them on the spot, causing the local union
    to go on strike.

37
Pullman Strike - 1894
  • Pullman refused to bargain and shut down the
    plant.
  • The American Railway Union, lead by popular labor
    organizer Eugene V. Debs, called for a boycott of
    Pullman cars throughout the country.
  • By June of 94 over 120,000 RR workers joined in
    the strike.
  • The strike got out of hand and the fed. Gov. was
    brought in to help.
  • The strike broke the Sherman Antitrust Act
  • On July 4, 1894 President Grover
    Cleveland(1885-89 1893-97) sent in 2,500
    federal troops to enforce the law.

38
Pullman Strike - 1894
  • The Pullman strike and its outcome set an
    important pattern.
  • In the years ahead, factory owners appealed
    frequently for court orders vs. unions.
  • The Fed. Gov. regularly approved these appeals
    and helped to limit the growth of unions for the
    next 30 years.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com