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Chapter 18 The Rise of Smokestack America

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Title: Chapter 18 The Rise of Smokestack America


1
Chapter 18The Rise of Smokestack America
  • The American People, 6th ed.

2
The Texture of Industrial Progress
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Technological Innovations
  • Advances in technology allowed production to be
    more efficient which in turn generated new needs
    and newer innovations
  • New power sources were at the heart of Americas
    shift to mass production electricity was the key
    to a new worldview for most Americans

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Railroads
  • Railroads were the first gigantic corporations in
    America
  • The government expedited the building of the
    railroads with generous land grants and
    business-friendly regulations
  • The high cost of running a railroad necessitated
    cut-throat business practices
  • The logistical tangles of the industry prompted
    development of professional management techniques

6
Integration
  • Vertical Integration adding operations before
    or after the production process such as
    distribution desires all stages of production
  • Horizontal Integration the combination of
    multiple similar business ventures under one
    umbrella desires a monopoly of a particular
    market

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Urban Expansion in the Industrial Age
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The Cities
  • The central cause of the phenomenal growth of
    cities in this era was their ability to attract
    newcomers from rural areas and abroad
  • Work and increased pay rates was the prime
    attraction
  • Rural life was often dull

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The New Immigration, 1880-1900
  • Over the course of the century, the sources of
    immigrants for the United States changed
  • New immigrants came from southern and eastern
    Europe
  • New agricultural techniques in these European
    regions removed the need for thousands of farm
    laborers

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III. The Industrial City
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Neighborhoods
  • Working-class neighborhoods clustered near the
    citys center
  • Usually separated by particular ethnic groups
  • These areas were crowded, unsanitary, and
    dangerous
  • Community cohesion became the saving force for
    many immigrants

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The Suburbs
  • The fringes of the city contained the houses of
    the middle class and the rich
  • Public transportation allowed them to work in the
    city center and live outside
  • The upper classes often had no idea what
    conditions the working class had to endure

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Industrial Work and the Laboring Class
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Ethnic Diversity
  • Immigrants made up a large portion of the working
    class in the late nineteenth century
  • The occupational patterns of the workplace are a
    direct result of the ethnic diversity of the
    times
  • Whites occupied the top tier, next came northern
    Europeans, next came the new immigrants, and
    finally came African Americans

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The Nature of Work
  • A majority of Americans now labored in a factory
    setting or small sweatshop
  • Workdays were very long ten hours a day, six
    days a week
  • Work was uncomfortable, dangerous, and usually
    repetitively boring accident rates were high
  • Sending children into the work forces was a fact
    of survival for many Americans

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V. Capital Versus Labor
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Protests
  • Workers and employers constantly struggled for
    control of the workplace
  • Workers felt the right to control the pace of
    production in factories and developed strong-arm
    tactics to encourage solidarity within the shop
  • Protest came in the guise of absenteeism,
    drunkenness, general inefficiency, and quitting
    work altogether

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Strikes
  • The most direct methodology to adjust conditions
    in the workplace was the strike
  • Strikes in the nineteenth century usually
    happened at the workplace, replacing neighborhood
    riots
  • As collective action spread, unions began to play
    a more active role in arbitration of grievances
  • Coordination between workplaces performing the
    same work led to uniform wages and hours

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