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The Rise of Industrial America (1865

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Title: The Rise of Industrial America (1865


1
The Rise of Industrial America (1865 1900)
  • As we view the achievements of aggregated
    capital, we discover the existence of trusts,
    combinations and monopolies, while the citizen is
    struggling far in the rear or is trampled to
    death beneath an iron heel. Corporations which
    should be the carefully restrained creatures of
    the law and servants of the people, are fast
    becoming the masters of the people.
  • President Grover Cleveland, 1888

2
What is the American Dream?
Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled
masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched
refuse of your teaming shore, Send these, the
homeless, the tempest-tossed, to me I lift my
lamp beside the golden door. Emma Lazarus, 1883
  • James Truslow Adams, in his book The Epic of
    America, which was written in 1931, stated that
    the American Dream is "that dream of a land in
    which life should be better and richer and fuller
    for everyone, with opportunity for each according
    to ability or achievement.
  • Arnold Swarzenegger - To think that a once
    scrawny boy from Austria could grow up to become
    Governor of the State of California and stand
    here in Madison Square Garden to speak on behalf
    of the President of the United States that is an
    immigrant's dream. It is the American dream
  • Paula Dean - I am living proof that the American
    Dream still exists. It is still alive and well.
    There is only one trick, you have to be willing
    to roll up your sleeves and work very, very hard.
  • Martin Luther King - I say to you today, my
    friends, so even though we face the difficulties
    of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It
    is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I
    have a dream that one day this nation will rise
    up and live out the true meaning of its creed
    "We hold these truths to be self-evident that
    all men are created equal."

3
From Rags to Riches
  • In this model republic, this land of the free
    so our orators call it, and why should not we?
    Tis refreshing to know that without pedigree A
    man may still climb to the top of the tree.
  • Horatio Alger

The Pursuit of Happyness
Protect Your Dreams
4
Gilded Age - Mansions
Andrew Carnegie
Henry Frick
The Biltmore Estate, Asheville, N.C.
William Vanderbilt
Caroline Astor
The Breakers - Newport, Rhode Island
5
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6
The Gilded Age
  • Gilded adj. to be covered with a thin layer
    of gold to falsely make something cheap and
    inexpensive look pretty and valuable.
  • American society was covered with a thin layer of
    ultra-wealthy people who showed off their wealth
    (ostentatious), but most people struggled and
    suffered to survive in very unpleasant conditions.

7
  • Following the devastation of the Civil War and
    the turmoil of Reconstruction, Americans began to
    DREAM of happier times. In pursuit of their
    dreams, The American Dream, millions of people
    immigrated to America and migrated westward in
    search of financial success, political and
    religious freedom, and the hope of a better life.
    Though some people saw their dreams come true as
    the United States grew into a political,
    industrial, and economic giant, millions of
    Americans saw their dreams shattered as they
    suffered at the expense o f a few powerful
    people. For most, the American Dream became a
    Nightmare.

8
Industrialization
9
Explain how business and industrial leaders
accumulated wealth and wielded political and
economic power.
  1. On what inventions did the industrial growth of
    America depend?

Invention Inventor Importance
Henry Bessemer Cheap method of mass producing ________
Edwin Drake Steam engine to drill and pump oil from deep in ground
Incandescent light bulb Replace kerosene as source of light
Telephone Replaced _______ and opened worldwide communications network
Louis Sullivan Cities grew UP and OUT
Invention Inventor Importance
Bessemer Process Henry Bessemer Cheap method of mass producing steel
Oil Drake Edwin Drake Steam engine to drill and pump oil from deep in ground
Incandescent light bulb Thomas Edison Replace kerosene as source of light
Telephone Alexander Graham Bell Replaced telegraph and opened worldwide communications network
Skyscraper Louis Sullivan (p.483) Cities grew UP and OUT
Thomas Edison was the most important inventor of
the Industrial Age because he established Menlo
Park where thousands of inventions were born.
10
Objective 5.2 Explain how business and
industrial leaders accumulated wealth and wielded
political and economic power.
  • 2. Who were the most prominent Captains of
    Industry and with what industries were they
    associated?

Captain of Industry Industry
Oil Refinery
Andrew Carnegie
William Cornelius Vanderbilt
Finance / Banking
Captain of Industry Industry
John D. Rockefeller Oil Refinery
Andrew Carnegie Steel
William Cornelius Vanderbilt Railroad
J.P. Morgan Finance / Banking
11
Captains of Industry
J.P. Morgan - Banking
Andrew Carnegie - Steel
John D. Rockefeller - Oil
Cornelius Vanderbilt - Railroad
William Vanderbilt Railroad
12
  • 3. What methods did the Captains of Industry
    use to create their business empires and
    accumulate massive wealth?
  • Corporations capital intensive businesses
    require large sums of stockholders pool
    together economies of scale higher profits
    from mass production, lower costs, less
    competition
  • Combination / Consolidation / Integration the
    combination of smaller businesses into larger
    ones to reduce competition mergers and buy-outs
  • Horizontal consolidation effort to eliminate
    competition by merging companies that produce
    similar products Monopolies (John D.
    Rockefeller) Slide 27
  • Vertical consolidation effort to cut costs by
    owning mines, farms, oil wells and railroads
    control raw materials and transportation (Andrew
    Carnegie)
  • Trusts competing companies that agree not to
    compete turn stock over to Board of Trustees who
    run separate companies as one corporation
  • Holding Companies Corporation that buys up
    stock of competing companies until it owns
    majority share of all companies (J.P. Morgan and
    US Steel bought out Carnegie Steel)

13
Horizontal and Vertical Consolidation
John D. Rockefeller monopolized over 90 of oil
refinery industry
Andrew Carnegie built a company that was worth
over 350 million when he sold it in 1901.
14
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15
Horizontal and Vertical Consolidation
16
  • 4. Why did some people call big business owners
    Robber Barons?
  • Business owners took home huge profits while
    paying their workers low wages.

17
Bosses of the Senate
18
  • 5. How did big business owners justify their
    wealth?
  • Social Darwinism extension of Charles Darwins
    survival of the fittest theory of evolution if
    left alone by govt. the best businesses will
    survive (natural selection) justification for
    laissez-faire economy.
  • Gospel of Wealth Wealth was a sign of Gods
    favor, those who had it had a Christian duty to
    share it give back to society charity.
  • Philanthropy
  • Andrew Carnegie gave away 350,000,000 to est.
    Carnegie Foundation, libraries, colleges and
    universities
  • John D. Rockefeller gave away 500,000,000 to
    est. Rockefeller Foundation, University of
    Chicago, medical institute
  • Bill Gates Gates Foundation promotes world
    health research and education
  • Why do they do it?

19
  • This, then, is held to be the duty of the man of
    Wealth First, to set an example of modest,
    unostentatious living, shunning display or
    extravagance to provide moderately for the
    legitimate wants of those dependent upon him and
    after doing so to consider all surplus revenues
    which come to him simply as trust funds, which he
    is called upon to administer, and strictly bound
    as a matter of duty to administer in the manner
    which, in his Judgment, Is best calculated to
    produce the most beneficial results for the
    communitythe man of wealth thus becoming the
    mere agent and trustee for his poorer brethren,
    bringing to their service his superior wisdom,
    experience, and ability to administer, doing for
    them better than they would or could do for
    themselves. . . .
  • Andrew Carnegie. "Wealth," North American Review,
    CXLVIII (June. 1889). 661-662.

20
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21
Slide 21
22
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23
The Bessemer Process
24
The Wizard of Menlo Park
25
The Railroad Industry drives economic growth
26
Carnegies Steel Empire
27
Rockefellers Standard Oil
28
Carnegie Sells his Empire
29
Oil Drake
back
30
Home Insurance Building 1885 Chicago Louis
Sullivan
back
31
Biggest Mergers in US History
back
GTE Bell Atlantic
JP Morgan Chase Bank One
Proctor Gamble and Gillette
AOL Time Warner
Bank of America NationsBank
ATT Broadband / Comcast
32
  • What is the chief end (goal) of man? to get
    rich! In what way? dishonestly if we can
    honestly if we must.
  • Mark Twain, 1871
  • my country, is of thee, Once land of liberty,
    Of thee I sing. Land of the millionaire Farmers
    with pockets bare Caused by the cursed snare
    The Money Ring.
  • Alliance Songster, 1890
  • There are many humorous things in the world,
    among them the white mans notion that he is less
    savage than the other savages.
  • Mark Twain
  • Its all a matter of perspective!!!

33
  • 5. How did big business owners justify their
    wealth?
  • Social Darwinism extension of Charles Darwins
    survival of the fittest theory of evolution if
    left alone by govt. the best businesses will
    survive (natural selection) justification for
    laissez-faire economy.
  • Gospel of Wealth Wealth was a sign of Gods
    favor, those who had it had a Christian duty to
    share it give back to society charity.
  • Philanthropy
  • Andrew Carnegie gave away 350,000,000 to est.
    Carnegie Foundation, libraries, colleges and
    universities
  • John D. Rockefeller gave away 500,000,000 to
    est. Rockefeller Foundation, University of
    Chicago, medical institute
  • Bill Gates Gates Foundation promotes world
    health research and education
  • Why do they do it?

34
  • This, then, is held to be the duty of the man of
    Wealth First, to set an example of modest,
    unostentatious living, shunning display or
    extravagance to provide moderately for the
    legitimate wants of those dependent upon him and
    after doing so to consider all surplus revenues
    which come to him simply as trust funds, which he
    is called upon to administer, and strictly bound
    as a matter of duty to administer in the manner
    which, in his Judgment, is best calculated to
    produce the most beneficial results for the
    communitythe man of wealth thus becoming the
    mere agent and trustee for his poorer brethren,
    bringing to their service his superior wisdom,
    experience, and ability to administer, doing for
    them better than they would or could do for
    themselves. . . .
  • Andrew Carnegie. "Wealth," North American Review,
    CXLVIII (June. 1889). 661-662.

35
  • According to Carnegie, what is the duty of
    wealthy people?
  • to produce the most beneficial results for the
    community
  • What is this called?
  • Who are the poorer brethren to whom Carnegie
    refers?
  • Who might disagree with Carnegies philosophy?
  • 5. What if not enough people accept Carnegies
    philosophy?

36
  • Factory workers, immigrants, farmers, African
    Americans, women, children had to
  • Stand up for themselves
  • or
  • Get help from other people
  • or
  • get help from the government!
  • PROGRESSIVES!

37
Assess the impact of labor unions on industry and
the lives of workers
  • Essential Question How can people without power
    protect themselves?

38
The Labor Movement
  • What is a labor union?
  • An organization of wage earners formed to
    represent the interests of its members against
    the interests of business owners.
  • Why did workers begin to unionize in the 1800s?
  • Skilled workers and craftsmen were replaced by
    machines and unskilled workers (mechanization and
    specialization)
  • Most common demands higher wages, shorter work
    hours, better working conditions
  • National Trades Union (1834 -1837)

39
  • 3. What strategies were incorporated by labor
    unions to get their demands met? What was the
    most effective tactic?
  • Collective bargaining legal negotiation between
    labor and management
  • Mediation Mediator recommends solution
  • Arbitration arbitrator mandates settlement
    (usually favored management)
  • Usually ended badly for workers because mediators
    and arbitrators were influenced by business
    owners
  • Strike work stoppage intended to force
    employers to meet demands (most effective tactic)

40
  • 4. What would business owners do to prevent or
    stop strikes?
  • employers often preempted strikes with Lockouts
    wouldnt let workers return until they gave in
  • Blacklists employers shared names of pro-union
    workers and refused to hire anyone on the list
  • Yellow-dog contracts workers had to agree NOT
    to join a union before they got hired
  • Private guards / Pinkertons were used to spy on
    workers and break up union activities/meetings
  • Courts almost always sided with big businesses
    issued court injunctions to end strikes order
    workers back to work

41
  • 5. Name the 5 most significant labor unions of
    the labor movement.
  • Knights of Labor 1869 open to all equal pay
    for equal work
  • American Federation of Labor (AFL) 1886 joined
    many craft unions together only for skilled
    workers successful strikes for higher wages and
    shorter workweek
  • Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) Wobblies
    1905 unskilled workers advocated socialism
    and radical tactics
  • American Railway Union (ARU) 1894 skilled AND
    unskilled workers successful strike for higher
    wages
  • International Ladies Garment Workers 1909
    Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire improved
    workers conditions
  • 6. Who were the three leading figures in the
    American labor movement of the late 19th century,
    and with what organization was each associated?
  • Terence Powderly Uriah Stephens Knights of
    Labor
  • Samuel Gompers AFL led several successful
    strikes
  • Eugene V. Debs ARU strong supporter of
    Socialism most famous labor leader ran for
    president multiple times

42
  • 7. Why did most Americans fear the Socialist
    views of Eugene V. Debs and the Wobblies?
  • Most workers and labor unions preferred MODERATE
    methods and changes to improve conditions
  • Some Socialists promoted RADICAL changes to
    capitalist economic system government control
    of businesses and equal distribution of wealth
  • Socialists and Wobblies (IWW) often advocated
    violent takeovers of businesses intentionally
    turned strikes into riots

43
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44
  • 8. What event most caused the general public to
    turn against the labor movement? Why?
  • Haymarket Square Riot Chicago May 4, 1886
  • Protest of police brutality at McCormick
    Harvester plant
  • Bomb killed 7 police shots fired chaos ensued
  • 8 convicted of inciting riot 4 hung to death

As more strikes ended in violence labor movement
lost public sympathy and were perceived as
lawless barbarians
45
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46
Bad Working Conditions
47
Triangle Shirt Waist Factory Fire
48
  • Goal 5.3 - Labor Unions
  • GROUP POSTER ACTIVITY
  •  
  • Group Tasks
  • Runner get materials for group work (listed
    below), use tape to hang up poster
  • Designer draw poster layout and write
    information on poster
  • Researcher Use textbook to find necessary
    information for poster (pp.453-455)
  • Artist Produce illustration(s) that depicts
    significant events or aspects of the strike
  •  
  • Required Materials
  • 1 piece chart paper
  • 2 or 3 Markers
  • Ruler
  • Text book
  • Labor Movement Strikes Chart (handout)
  •  
  • INSTRUCTIONS
  • Send runner to front table to get materials for
    poster.
  • Research necessary information for assigned Labor
    Strike, and write info. on chart.

49
  • Name of Strike

DATE PLACE
PARTICIPANTS
Picket Sign Slogan
Picture of Strike
ISSUES / DEMANDS
ENDING RESULTS
50
Immigration?
  • How many of you moved to Charlotte from another
    town, state, or country?
  • Why?
  • From Where?
  • 2012 Election Results

51
From Where?
52
tarantella
53
Evaluate the influence of immigration and rapid
industrialization on urban life.
  • This immigrant family has just stepped off the
    boat at Ellis Island in 1890. Where do you think
    they came from, and why do you think they came to
    the United States?
  • Italy (southern and eastern Europe)
    push poverty, political unrest,
    religious persecution pull land of
    opportunity
  • Why did they only bring a small bundle of luggage
    and the clothes on their backs?
  • Poor, strict limits on cargo in steerage
  • 3. Who can they turn to for help in New York
    City?
  • Family members, fellow countrymen, factories,
    political bosses (William Boss Tweed) Slide 6

54
Evaluate the influence of immigration and rapid
industrialization on urban life.
  • 4. What types of jobs will be available to
    them?
  • lowest paying factories, maid, shoe-shine boy,
    paperboy, thief
  • 5. Where would this family likely live in NYC?
    Slide 7
  • ethnic enclaves, slums, ghettos, Tenement
    Houses
  • 6. How would these immigrants likely be treated
    by most Americans?
  • Very badly, bad jobs, mistrusted, mistreated
  • NATIVISM Nativism
  • The American Party (1854) The
    Know-Nothing Party
  • Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) 1st
    immigration restrictions
  • Gentlemens Agreement (1907) Japan agreed to
    limit emigration of unskilled workers

55
  • 3. Who can they turn to for help in New York
    City?
  • Family
  • Fellow countrymen
  • Factory owners
  • Political Bosses
  • Slide 4

56
  • 5. Where would this family likely live in NYC?
  • Ethnic enclaves (p.469)
  • Slums
  • ghettos
  • Tenement Houses
  • Dumbbell Tenements
  • Slide 5

57
1st Class passengers The Titanic
3rd Class passengers Steerage
58
BACK
59
back
60
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61
Evaluate the influence of immigration and rapid
industrialization on urban life.
Europeans comprised more than 90 of the
immigrants to the U.S. during the 19th century,
and even as recently as early 1960s, still
accounted for more than 50. Latin America and
Asia are now the dominant sources of immigrants
to the U.S.
62
Evaluate the influence of immigration and rapid
industrialization on urban life.
63
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64
From 1890 to 1920 the New Immigrants came from
southern and eastern Europe Russia, Italy,
Austria-Hungary, Germany
back
65
Old Immigrants
New Immigrants
66
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67
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68
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69
NativismSlide 5
70
Ellis Island
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