Industrial Development

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2 Industrial Development Rapid growth Abundance of cheap natural resources Large pools of labor immigrants Largest free trade market in the world Capital, no government regulation New technological innovations

3 An Empire on Rails Expansion of railroads led to more jobs (integrated) Railroads most significant technical innovation Steamships made Atlantic crossings twice as fast The telegraph and telephone transformed communications

4 Emblem of Motion and Power Railroads transform American life End rural isolation Allow regional economic specialization Make mass production, consumption possible Lead to organization of modern corporation (big business) Stimulate other industries

5 Federal Land Grants to Railroads as of 1871

6 Railroad Construction,

7 Rails Across the Continent 1862: Congress authorizes the transcontinental railroad Union Pacific works westward from Nebraska using Irish laborers Central Pacific works eastward using Chinese immigrants

8 Transcontinental Railroad

9 Railroads, 1870 and 1890

10 Problems of Growth Intense competition among railroads and overexpansion After Panic of 1893, bankers gain control of railroad corporations Bankers like J.P. Morgan impose order by consolidating to eliminate competition, increase efficiency Morgan most important in finance

11 J. Pierpont Morgan Finance First Billion Dollar Co U.S. Steel

12 The Business of Invention An Age of Invention Telegraph, camera, processed foods, telephone, phonograph, incandescent lamp Electricity in growing use by Edison Telephone and electricity most important inventions

13 Causes of Rapid Industrialization Technological innovations. Bessemer and open hearth process Refrigerated cars Edison o Wizard of Menlo Park o light bulb, phonograph, motion pictures.

14 Thomas Alva Edison ows/america-the-story-ofus/videos/thomas-edison Wizard of Menlo Park

15 The Light Bulb

16 The Phonograph (1877)

17 The Ediphone or Dictaphone

18 The Motion Picture Camera

19 Nikola Tesla 1. Alternating Current 2. Light 3. X-rays 4. Radio 5. Remote Control 6. Electric Motor 7. Robotics 8. Laser 9 and 10. Wireless Communications and Limitless Free Energy

20 Alexander Graham Bell Telephone (1876)

21 U. S. Patents Granted 1790s 276 patents issued. 1990s 1,119,220 patents issued.

22 The Protectors of Our Industries

23 The Bosses of the Senate

24 William Vanderbilt $ The public be damned! $ What do I care about the law? H aint I got the power?

25 Cornelius [ Commodore ] Vanderbilt Can t I do what I want with my money?

26 An Industrial Empire Bessemer process of refining steel permits mass production (William Kelly) Use of steel changes agriculture, manufacturing, transportation, architecture

27 Iron & Steel Production

28 Andrew Carnegie Immigrant Steel

29 Carnegie and Steel Nation s industrial progress measured by its production of steel vertical integration Definition: A type of organization in which a single company owns and controls the entire process from obtaining raw materials to manufacture and sale of the finished product

30 Vertical Integration

31 Carnegie and Steel 1872: Andrew Carnegie enters and organizes steel industry By 1901, Carnegie employs 20,000 and produces more steel than Great Britain Sells out to J. P. Morgan Morgan heads incorporation of the United States Steel Company first billion-dollar company

32 Oil Standard Oil John D. Rockefeller

33 Rockefeller and Oil Petroleum profitable as kerosene for lighting 1859: First oil well drilled in Pennsylvania 1863: John D. Rockefeller organizes Standard Oil Company of Ohio

34 Rockefeller and Oil Rockefeller lowers costs, improves quality, establishes efficient marketing operation consolidation, not competition, creates stronger companies Standard Oil is first modern trust (monopoly)

35 Standard Oil Co.

36 Regulating the Trusts 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act It prohibits certain business activities that federal government regulators deem to be anticompetitive, and requires the federal government to investigate and pursue trusts.

37 The Sellers Marketing becomes a science in late 1800s Advertising becomes common New ways of selling include chain store, department store, brand name, mail-order Provides convenience and standardization to buyers Americans become a community of consumers

38 The Wage Earners The labor of millions of immigrants built the new industrial society (Ellis Island) The Gilded Age - Industry built on the backs of the poor Gilded covered thinly with gold

39 Working Men, Working Women, Working Children Chronically low wages Average wages: $ per year Salary required for decent living: $600 per year Dangerous working conditions Railroad injury rate: 1 in 26, death rate 1 in 399 Factory workers suffer chronic illness from pollutants

40 Labor Force Distribution

41 Child Labor

42 Child Labor

43 Galley Labor

44 Working Men, Working Women, Working Children Composition of the labor force by 1900: 20% women 10% of girls employed, 20% of boys Working children Child labor means under 14 All children poorly paid

45 Working Men, Working Women, Working Children Working women s characteristics: Most young and single 25% of married African American women work in 1900 Working women s jobs Many move into clerical positions or other traditional female jobs

46 Working Men, Working Women, Working Children Discriminatory wage structure Adults > children Men 2x > women Whites > blacks or Asians Protestants > Catholics or Jews Black workers earn less at every level and skill Iron Law of Wages supply and demand

47 Working Men, Working Women, Working Children Chinese suffer periodic discrimination 1879: California constitution forbids corporations to hire Chinese 1882: Federal Chinese Exclusion Act prohibits Chinese immigration for 10 years

48

49 Labor Unions legally recognized as representatives of workers in many industries Activity: collective bargaining over wages, benefits, and working conditions for their membership

50 Goals of the Knights of Labor Eight-hour workday. Workers cooperatives. Worker-owned factories. Abolition of child and prison labor. Increased circulation of greenbacks. Equal pay for men and women. Safety codes in the workplace. Prohibition of contract foreign labor. Abolition of the National Bank.

51 Labor Unions Knights of Labor fails poor leadership 1886: Samuel Gompers founds American Federation of Labor Higher wages, better working conditions Focus on skilled workers Ignores women, African Americans

52 Labor Strikes,

53 An era of strikes Labor Unrest 1877: Rail strikes nearly shut down system, over 100 workers killed in suppressing it : 23,000 strikes 1886: Chicago Haymarket incident prompts fears of anarchist uprising Incident weakens national labor movement

54 The Great Railroad Strike of 1877

55 Labor Unrest 1892: Homestead steel strike emphasized the cost of industrialization Pinkerton detectives as strike-breaking army Pinkertons in gun battle with strikers State militia called in to restore order Attempted assassination of Carnegie partner Henry Clay Frick

56 Industrialization s Benefits and Costs Benefits of rapid industrialization Rise in national power and wealth Improving standard of living Negative human cost of industrialization Exploitation Social unrest Growing disparity between rich and poor Increasing power of giant corporations

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