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The Rise of Industrial America

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The Rise of Industrial America & the City: 1865-1900 Chapter 2 How are the robber baron and captain of industry perspectives different from each other? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Rise of Industrial America


1
The Rise of Industrial America the City
1865-1900 Chapter 2
2
My Questions
  • How are the robber baron and captain of industry
    perspectives different from each other?
  • How did industrialization change work in America?
  • How did technology change work on the farm?
  • How did skyscrapers and electricity affect the
    city?

3
Big Business and Millionaires
  • After the Civil War, big businesses boomed giving
    rise to more millionaires and wealth than ever
    before in American history.
  • The railroad, steel, and oil industries expanded
    the most resulting in three of the most prominent
    millionaires in American History.
  • The Railroad Industry and Jay Gould
  • The Steel Industry and Andrew Carnegie
  • Standard Oil and Nelson Rockefeller

4
Jay Gould Railroad Tycoon
5
Andrew Carnegie and Carnegie Steel
Andrew Carnegie Carnegie Steel
6
Rockefeller Standard Oil
Rockefeller Standard Oil
7
Robber Baron vs. Captain of Industry
  • Gould, Carnegie, and Rockefeller have been
    considered throughout history as either robber
    barons or captains of industry.
  • The robber baron perspective claims that these
    businessmen only looked to gain huge profits for
    themselves while ensuring their competitors and
    their workers would remain poor.
  • On the other hand, the captains of industry
    perspective claims that these businessmen moved
    America to the very top of the business world and
    without them the United States would have lagged
    behind economically.

8
The Importance of Industrialism
  • The rise of these big businesses, often referred
    to as Industrialism, resulted in more than just a
    few millionaires who profited greatly.
  • Most importantly, American Industrialism, changed
    who was doing the work and where it was being
    done.
  • Work in America would now be found in cities
    instead of rural areas.
  • Also because big businessmen preferred cheaper
    labor, most American workers were now unskilled
    and predominantly immigrants.

9
The Growth of Cities
  • The last three decades of the 19th century
    experienced an urban explosion.
  • Chicago expanded from 100,000 people in 1860 to
    over a million in 1890! L.A. went from 5,000
    residents to 100,000 in the same time span!
  • By 1900, thirty-eight American cities had over
    100,000 people, up from just eighteen cities in
    1870.
  • So why were the cities populations exploding?

10
Industrialization Creates Global Migration
  • Looking for jobs and adventure, poor, rural
    farmers from both the United States and around
    the world headed to the cities.
  • Cheap transportation by both train and steamship
    motivated rural workers to relocate to cities
    with industrial jobs.

11
Changes in Farming
  • In 1870, 80 of America lived on farms. By 1900,
    just 66 lived on a farm. Why did this occur?
  • After the Civil War, farms lost many of their
    workers.
  • Hundreds of thousands of farming men died in the
    Civil War and those who survived often moved to
    the city to find work in city factories.
  • With less help in the fields, devoted farmers
    turned to technology and specialized, commercial
    farms.

12
New Agricultural Technology
  • New steel plows and reapers made it two times
    faster to farm and required less workers.
  • Mechanical combines could reap twenty acres of
    wheat a day, which would have required the work
    of 20 men in the past.
  • As a result, farmers who used new technology not
    only could farm more land, but they did not have
    to pay as many workers.

13
Harvests Multiply
  • Harvests multiplied using new technology.
  • Farmers were able to produce
  • four times the corn
  • five times the hay
  • and seven times the wheat and oats.

14
Women Leaving The Farm
  • Because farming increasingly became mechanized,
    men found little use of female workersincluding
    their own family memberssince they did not trust
    them with new equipment.
  • So young farmwomen flocked to cities and
    typically found work in sweatshops sewing and
    making mass-produced crafts.

15
Technology for the City
  • New forms of technology also allowed cities to
    grow.
  • The creation of mechanized assembly lines and
    electrical motors made city factories more
    efficient.
  • Because these factories now had the capability to
    produce more manufactured goods they were always
    looking to hire new people.
  • With lots of jobs to offer, factories attracted
    hordes of men, women, and children to cities.

16
Technology for the City Continued
  • One of the most important innovations of this era
    for cities was the skyscraper.
  • Before skyscrapers, the tallest buildings in most
    large cities were actually churches, which only
    went up a few hundred feet.
  • But starting in the 1880s, cities like Chicago
    and New York began to build these towering
    structures made of stronger steel.
  • With businessmen competing over valuable urban
    space, the skyscraper allowed the city to grow
    upward instead of taking up space on the ground.

17
Question What invention needed to be perfected
before people were comfortable working in
skyscrapers?
18
Electricity The City
  • One of the major reasons people decided to move
    to cities was the availability of electrical
    power in urban areas.
  • Thomas Edison, probably the most important
    inventor of all time, typically worked 20 hours a
    day at his laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey.
  • At the height of his career, he averaged one
    invention every 11 days!

19
Electricity The City Continued
  • However, probably the most important thing that
    Edison did was promote the use of electricity as
    a power source and come up with a cheaper,
    practical light bulb.
  • Edisons light bulbs lighted homes, apartments,
    factories, and office buildings.
  • Electricity was so prevalent in cities that the
    two became linked together.
  • Since less than 10 of farms had electricity, one
    of the reasons many people moved to the city was
    to enjoy the benefits of electricity.
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