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Industrial Revolution

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Title: Industrial Revolution


1
Industrial Revolution
2
Note-taking
  • I will post questions or headings for each
    content area that I will be discussing.
  • You will listen to the class discussion and write
    down what YOU deem as important.
  • Then I will post what I deem as important for 1-2
    MINUTES.
  • This is not the time to copy down what is on the
    board as fast as you can, but check your work and
    add toy our notes.
  • CLASS DISCUSSIONS ARE INCLUDED WITH NOTES, WHICH
    MAY NOT BE IN THE POWERPOINT PRESENTATION, BUT
    YOU CAN STILL BE TESTED ON THIS MATERIAL.

3
First lets look at two questions.What was the
Industrial Revolution?How did the Industrial
Revolution come about?
4
What was the Industrial Revolution?
  • Industrial Revolution is the change in social and
    economic organization that resulted from the
    replacement of hand tools with machines and from
    the development of large scale industrial
    production.
  • It began in the early 1800s before the Civil
    War and continued with industrial growth through
    the 1900s.

5
How did the Industrial Revolution come about?
  • The industrial boom occurred for three reasons
  • The wealth of natural resources
  • Government support for business
  • A growing urban population that provided both
    cheap labor and markets for new products.

6
What inventions/innovations came out of the
Industrial Revolution?
7
What inventions/innovations came out of the
Industrial Revolution?
  • Technology taking the innovations from the lead
    inventors and applying them to industry.
  • Patent gives the inventor the exclusive rights
    to make, use and sell their invention for a
    certain time period.
  • American ingenuity business men invested money
    in creating new businesses and expanded old ones.

8
New forms of energy
  • Pennsylvania Rock Oil Company sent Edwin L. Drake
    drilled for oil its byproducts are gasoline,
    kerosene, and petroleum jelly.
  • Significance led to other towns opening up oil
    refineries.
  • Bessemer Process Perfected by Henry Bessemer
    removing carbon from iron by injecting air into
    molten iron and it produces steel.
  • Thomas A. Edison perfected the incandescent light
    bulb, the phonograph, motion picture cameras,
    etc.
  • Henry Ford created the Model T in 1908. Ford made
    the car was affordable by perfecting the assembly
    line.

9
New forms of energy
  • Samuel E. Morse patented the telegraph and
    created the Morse Code- that was a series of
    short and long electrical impulses that represent
    letters of the alphabet.
  • Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Watson patented
    the talking telephone.
  • Significance led to world wide communication.

10
The Transcontinental Railroad
11
The Transcontinental Railroad
  • The railway extended from Omaha, Nebraska to
    Sacramento, California.
  • The railway was built by two companies, Central
    Pacific and Union Pacific Railroad companies.
    Both were funded by grants from the government.
  • Central Pacific hired Chinese immigrants and the
    Union Pacific hired Irish Immigrants and Civil
    War Veterans. They suffered attacks from Native
    Americans and many diseases.
  • It was finish on May 10, 1869 and the two
    companies met at Promontory Summit. (Utah)

12
The Transcontinental Railroad
  • Time Zones created by Professor C.F. Dowd. The
    earth was divided into 24 times zones. The United
    States had 4- Eastern, Central, Mountain, and
    Pacific.
  • Significance People were able to get to places
    on time, towns were set up by railroad tracks,
    and iron, coal, steel, lumber and glass companies
    were expanded

13
Big Business
14
Big Business
  • Charles Darwin created the theory of natural
    selection in which the strongest survives.
  • Social Darwinism states that society should do as
    little as possible to interfere with peoples
    pursuit of success or the government should not
    get involved.
  • This is also stated in Adam Smiths Wealth of
    the nations in the idea of Laissez-faire or
    government should play a limited role in
    business.
  • Robber Barons business leaders that built their
    fortunes by stealing from the public or Captains
    of Industry business leaders that served their
    nation in a positive way.

15
Big Business
  • Different terms for Big Business.
  • Monopoly a complete control of a product or
    service. This is illegal because it goes against
    capitalism. Public utilities are a monopoly, but
    today are regulated by the government.
  • Oligopoly a market structure dominated by only a
    few large, profitable firms.
  • Merger two or more companies that join together.
  • Capitalism economic system in which the means of
    production and distribution are privately owned.
  • Communism Economic system in which production is
    owned by the government.

16
Big Business
  • Robber Baron or Captain of Industry?
  • J.P. Morgan an American financer.
  • Andrew Carnegie owner of Carnegie steel in 1899
  • John D. Rockefeller company of Standard Oil in
    1870
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt built his wealth in
    shipping and railroads
  • Jay Gould a speculator who was involved in the
    railroad and newspaper companies.

17
What affects did the Industrial Revolution have
on the American society?
Click here to see the seating at The Garden
18
What affects did the Industrial Revolution have
on the American society?
  • Electricity It allowed businesses to stay open
    later and factories could be located anywhere.
  • The telephone and the typewriter led to women
    entering the workforce for the first time.
  • Urbanization movement of people from rural areas
    to cities.

19
What affects did the Industrial Revolution have
on the American society?
  • The rich and middle class lived in pleasant
    neighborhoods while the poor lived in tenements.
  • Tenements multistory buildings divided into
    crowded apartments that had no water and no
    sanitation system- which led to the spread of
    diseases.
  • Factory Life Workers usually worked 12-16 hour
    days. There was no safety devices- people would
    lose limbs, coal miners lungs were destroyed.
    Employers would have women and children because
    they were easy to control.

20
What affects did the Industrial Revolution have
on the American society?
  • Unions an organization of workers who act
    together to secure benefits and rights in the
    workplace.
  • It was formed to helped employees, but employers
    feared them.
  • To stop unions they forbid meetings, fired union
    organizers, forced employees to sign yellow dog
    contracts- workers could never strike or join a
    union, refused to bargain with unions, and
    refused to recognize unions as their workers
    legitimate representation.

21
What affects did the Industrial Revolution have
on the American society?
  • Unions would go on strike, which would turn
    violent.
  • The Great Strike of 1877, Haymarket Affair,
    Homestead Strike, the Great Railroad Strike,
    among others, would fight against hours, factory
    conditions, and pay.
  • Sherman Anti-trust act a law that disorganized
    unions, the government did not help out their
    citizens.
  • NYC Triangle Shirtwaist factory was set on fire
    on March 25, 1911. 146 women died due to poor
    fire escapes, locked doors and a lack of a
    sprinkler system.

22
Progressive Movement
  • 1900-1920

23
What was the Progressive Movement? What was its
goals? What Urban problems did reformers have to
face?
24
What was the Progressive Movement, and what was
its goals?
  • Progressive Movement was an effort to cure many
    of the problems of American society that had
    developed during the industrial growth in U.S. in
    the last quarter of the19th century.
  • Three main goals
  • 1.) to remove corruption from government by
    taming political bosses and machines.
  • 2.) to include citizens more directly in the
    political process.
  • 3.) that the government must play a role to solve
    social problems and establish fair business
    practices.
  • It was the rejection of Social Darwinism which
    most rich business men believed in.

25
What Urban Problems did reformers have to face?
  • Housing poor housing tenements, row houses, no
    running water or sewage systems.
  • Transportation Street cars (San Francisco) and
    Electric subways (Boston) to help transport the
    huge population
  • Water Poor access to clean water- led to spread
    of diseases. By 1870 water filtration was
    introduced
  • Sanitation by 1900 cities developed sewer lines
    and sanitation departments.
  • Crime grew with the population and police
    officers were created.
  • Fires were common due to wooden houses. In 1900
    fire men and sprinklers were common and houses
    were replaced with brick.

26
What are Political machines?
27
What are Political machines?
  • Political Machines offered services to voters and
    businesses in exchange for political or financial
    support.
  • Some bosses used their power to build parks,
    sewers systems, and waterworks or give money to
    schools, hospitals and orphanages.
  • William M. Tweed (Boss Tweed) head of Tammany
    Hall, NYCs powerful Democratic party. He led
    the Tweed Ring, a group of corrupt politicians.
    He charged the city 13 million for construction
    of the NYC Courthouse, when it cost 3 million.

28
What is the difference between Patronage and
Merit?
29
What is the difference between Patronage and
Merit?
  • Patronage the giving of government jobs to
    people who had helped a candidate get elected.
    Spoils System
  • President Chester B. Arthur passed the Pendleton
    Civil Service Act of 1883.
  • A bipartisan civil service commission to make
    appointments to federal jobs through a merit
    system based on candidates performance on an
    examination.

30
What are Muckrakers?
31
What are Muckrakers?
  • Muckrakers Journalist who uncovers wrongdoing in
    politics or business
  • Ida Tarbell Wrote a book called The History of
    the Standard Oil Company about John D.
    Rockefeller. The book discussed how he eliminated
    the competition and ruined the little peoples'
    lives.
  • Upton Sinclair Wrote The Jungle about the
    meat packing Industry and inspired the creation
    of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act.
  • Lincoln Steffens Wrote The Shame of the Cities
    about the corruption in the government.
  • Jacob Riis Wrote How the Other Half Lives, it
    denounced the poverty and exploitation of the
    urban poor.

32
What different laws/changes were created during
this time period?
33
What different laws/changes were created during
this time period?
  • FDA- Food and Drug Administration
  • Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906- made many changes
    to the way that food was processed.
  • All ingredients have to be listed on food
    packages.
  • Labels had to be put on medicine to state what
    the purpose of it is. There were illegal
    substances in the medicine that patients did not
    know they were taking
  • TR passed this measure based on reading The
    Jungle
  • Meat Inspection Act had to be approved for
    consumption by the federal government, all meat
    plants inspected.

34
Progressive Political Reforms Progressive Political Reforms Progressive Political Reforms
Before Reforms After
Party Leaders choose candidates for state and local offices Direct Primaries Voters select their partys candidates. Power moves to the voters.
State legislatures choose U.S. senators 17th Amendment U.S. senators are elected by popular vote. Power moves to the voters.
Only members of the state legislature can introduce bills. Initiative voters can put bills before the legislation Power moves to the voters.
Only legislators pass laws Referendum voters can vote on bills directly Power moves to the voters.
Only courts or the legislature can remove corrupt officials Recall voters can remove elected officials from office Power moves to the voters.
35
Moral Changes
  • 18th amendment (1919) Prohibited the manufacture
    and sale of liquor (Repealed in 1933).
  • Womens Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
    crusaded for prohibition led by Francis Willard
    and Carrie Nation
  • People firmly believed that alcohol was the root
    of all evil
  • 19th amendment (1920) Granted women full
    suffrage.
  • Led by Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
    Lucy Stone and Julia ward Howe. This group was
    divided by the 15th amendment.
  • Two groups were National Woman Suffrage
    Association and Women Suffrage Association
  • Led by Carrie Chapman Catt, Alice Paul and Lucy
    Burns in the 1920s.
  • Paul was forced to resigned and formed the
    Nationals Woman Party, and used strategies like
    mass marches and hunger strikes.
  • August 26, 1920- 19th Amendment was passed.

36
Social Changes
  • Social Gospel Movement preached salvation
    through service to the poor.
  • Settlement houses community centers in slum
    neighborhoods that provided assistance to people
    in the area, especially immigrants. Jane Addams
    was the founder of Hull House
  • YMCA, YWCA, and the Salvation Army tried to aid
    immigrants and country folk adjust to city life
    by helping them find housing, jobs, new clothes
    and social groups.

37
Who were the different Progressive Presidents?
38
Who were the different Progressive Presidents?
  • Theodore Roosevelt 26th President 1901-1909
  • His program is known as The Square Deal, where
    poor people would have the same opportunities as
    the rich people.
  • His past jobs were Assistant to the head of the
    Dept. of the Navy, Police Commissioner of NYC,
    Governor of NYC, and VP to President McKinley.
  • TR was a conservationist and set aside millions
    of acres to become National Parks.
  • He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1906.
  • He was known as the Trust-buster. His mission as
    a President was to end the trusts between
    companies.
  • Trust Commercial organization managed by
    appointed trustees for the benefit of one or more
    beneficiaries. 

39
Who were the different Progressive Presidents?
  • William Howard Taft 27th President
  • Taft was able to reserve more land and brought
    more anti-trust suits during his 4 years as
    President.
  • He was not a pro-active President, because he
    truly did not want to be President.
  • He was hand picked by TR to be his successor.

40
Who were the different Progressive Presidents?
  • The Election of 1912
  • TR decided to run for a 3rd term.
  • Taft won the Republican nomination.
  • Roosevelt with the Progressive created the
    Progressive Party or known as the Bull Moose
    Party.
  • Woodrow Wilson won the Democratic Nomination.
  • The vote Wilson (41) Roosevelt (29) Taft (30)

41
Who were the different Progressive Presidents?
  • Woodrow Wilson
  • Past experience New Jersey Governor and
    President of Princeton University.
  • His policy was New Freedom- he promised to
    enforce anti-trust laws with threatening economic
    competition.
  • The Underwood Tariff Act (1913) reduced average
    tariff rates from 40 to 25.
  • Passed the 16th amendment- Income tax
  • 1914 Clayton Anti-trust Act stop monopolies and
    price cutting in local markets to squeeze out
    competitors was forbidden.
  • Federal Reserve Act creates 12 reserve banks in
    different regions of the U.S
  • Elastic Currency Create and distribute more
    money. We have more people in the U.S. need more
    money to circulate.
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