America at the turn of the Century

Similar documents
Gilded Age Level 2

U. S. History Topic 9 Reading Guides Industry and Immigration

Progressive Era Lesson 1 Part I

What s That (Gilded Age) Pic?

Chapter 9 Section 1 & 2. Origins of Progressivism

The Gilded Age

US History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16

Warm-up. The period of rebuilding the nation after the civil war. Why were the Southern States concerned with the election of Lincoln?

S apt ect er ion 25 1 Section 1 hnology nd Industrial Growth

The Industrial Revolution Last Third of 19 th Century

Industry Comes of Age Chapter 24

Gilded Age Day 1: Birth of an Industrial Culture: Era of Big Business and Capitalism. Final Due Date: October 17 (B) October 18 (A)

Chapter 13: The Expansion of American Industry ( )

The Cities. Unit 1: The Gilded Age ( )

netw rks Reading Essentials and Study Guide Mass Society and Democracy Lesson 1 The Growth of Industrial Prosperity

APUSH REVIEWED! INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION: INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

APUSH REVIEWED! INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION:

Industrial Development

Chapter 13: The Expansion of American Industry ( )

Chapter 14. A New Industrial Age

U.S. INDUSTRIALISM. Chap 9

Calvin Coolidge The last 3 decades of the 1800s was more productive than all of America s history before it By 1900 America was the unquestioned

US History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16

Industrialization. Module 3

Industrialization! &! the Gilded Age. *** Go to Mrs. Lang s teacher page for the recorded lecture!!!

Age of Change. Chapters 12-15

Phrase penned by Mark Twain as satire for the way America had become. It revealed the best and worst of America.

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

SSUSH11A thru E and 12B & D Industrialization

Industrialization continued at a rapid pace in the years following the Civil War. The Bessemer Process for making a better quality steel, allowed for

3. Evaluate the impact of industrialization on the transformation of American society, economy, and politics.

STANDARD VUS.8a. Essential Questions What factors influenced American growth and expansion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century?

The Americans: Reconstruction to the 21 st Century

Industrialization Module 3. CRASH COURSE: Industrial Age

Industrialization. All about business and money!!!

Captains of Industry or Robber Barons

Warm Up. Complete the Captains of Industry vs. Robber Barons DBQ

America: Pathways to the Present. Chapter 6. The Expansion of American Industry ( )

US History Unit 3 Exam Industrialization, Immigration & Progressive Era 76 Pts

The Progressive Era

Name: Period: Date: Industrial Revolution Exam. Directions: Chose the best possible answer for the questions below.

The Industrialization of the United States s 1910 s

UNITED STATES HISTORY Unit 2. Industrialization, Immigration, Urbanization, and The Gilded Age: America in the latter part of the 19 th Century

The Gilded Age & Progressive Reform

Gilded Age & Society. Ms. Ramos Alta Loma High School * PPT adapted from PPT Palooza

The Progressive Era. The Drive For Reform

Chapter 18 Lecture Outline

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

Vocabulary: protective tariff laissez faire capitalism mass production corporation monopoly trust social darwinism Insterate Commerce Act

Section 1 Introduction to Period 6, page 318

Disparity of wealth Workers rights Working conditions

CHAPTER 24 The Industrial Age,

The Industrial Revolution began in Britain in the 1700s. It soon spread to America.

Chapter 5 - Industrialization

Industrialization continued at a rapid pace in the years following the Civil War. The Bessemer Process for making steel, allowed for a boom in

I. Rise of Industrialization

Guided Reading & Analysis: The Rise of Industrial America, Chapter 16- The Second Industrial Revolution pp

UN#2: Immigration, Urbanization, & Unionization Key Terms (Answer Key) Chapter 6, Sections 1 & 2 and Chapter 5, Section 4

Summative Assessment 2 Selected Response

The Gilded Age

As settlement continued in the West, the nation

Big Business. Native Americans. Rise of the City. Organized Labor. Political Corruption. Cultural Developments

5-3: Industry and Unions

Guided Reading & Analysis: The Rise of Industrial America, Chapter 16- The Second Industrial Revolution pp

Modern America Assessment Settling the West and Industrialization

The United States entered the Progressive Era from 1890 to 1920 when a variety of reformers tried to clean up problems created during the Gilded Age

Ch. 4 Industrialization, 5.4 Populism, 6.1 Politics of the Gilded Age Quiz 2011

B. Jethro Tull s seed drill made planting seeds V. Crop A. Years of planting only had B. By planting each year farmers were able to maintain

The Start of the Industrial Revolution

INDUSTRY COMES OF AGE CHAPTER 24

Ch 24 Insights ID-Federal Land Grants to Railroads (P 531) Summary 1- What do the purple areas/lines on the map represent? land grants (land given to

Name: Date: Period: VUS. 8 a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization. Filled In. Notes VUS. 8a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization 1

#1 How did the US industrialize?

Due Friday, 12/ , a k: a. Gilded Age: the time period after the Civil War, between the 1870s and 1890s. Gilded is to coat with a thin layer

Unit 7: The Gilded Age ( ) SSUSH 11-12

KEY TERMS, PEOPLE, AND PLACES

The Building of Modern America, Part 2. The Big Business Era and Organized Labor Movement

LOREM IPSUM. Book Title DOLOR SET AMET

BIG BUSINESS AND LABOR A NEW INDUSTRIAL AGE

In the early Antebellum era ( ), the U.S. economy grew rapidly The South, North, and West each developed specialized regional economies that

Essential TEKS Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills Correlation to APUSH Unit 5 (Period 6 of APUSH Framework)

1. How did the Dawes Act aid in destroying the way of life of Native American s?

20, 2007 HARDSHIPS OF EARLY INDUSTRIAL LIFE

USII.4bd, 6a Immigration & Big Business

8 TH GRADE UNITS OF INSTRUCTION

#1 How did the US industrialize?

I. PROGRESSIVISM. = reform movement to solve problems of the late 1800 s

Political, Economic, and Social Change

The Second Industrial Revolution 13.1

American Anthem. Modern American History. Chapter 5. An Industrial Nation Columbus statute in Rhode Island

Industrial Revolution Mechanical Change in the World

Chapter 14, Section 1 I. The United States Industrializes (pages ) A. With the end of the Civil War, American industry expanded and millions

10/4/2016 (59) America moves to the city The Gilded Age The Gilded Age ( ) US history Khan Academy

Industry Comes of Age. Chapter 24

Cities: Social Progress. Cleaner Safer Less Disease More Education Assistance to Poor Child Services

A BLOCK REVIEW QUESTIONS

Problems Brought About By

Unit Module 2: Transportation, Market, and Industrial Revolution

Late 19 th Century Industrialization in the US Brainstorm - 2

Chapter 9 and part of Chapter 8: Transforming the Economy,

Transcription:

America at the turn of the Century

Gilding is the process of covering something in a thin layer of Gold, making it seem more valuable than it is. This time period was one of rapid Industrialization and Growth of the American Economy However, it also caused rampant poverty, overcrowding, and corruption within the country

Industrialization The movement away from an agricultural economy towards an economy based on the manufacturing of goods and services. Allows for the Mass Production of goods which used to be made individually by hand Businesses grow rapidly as a result Encouraged inventors to create new machines and methods of accomplishing tasks

Inventors/Inventions The government issues Patents which protect inventors rights to their Intellectual Property Eli Whitney Cotton Gin(1793) Interchangeable parts (1798) Thomas Edison Perfected the light bulb in 1880, and motion pictures Organized power plants Established first research lab Alexander Graham Bell Telephone (1876) Wright Brothers on 1903 Flight Henry Ford Assembly Line George Eastman Camera (1885) Samuel Morse Telegraph (1837) Wright Brothers Airplane (1903) Marconi and Tesla Radio Henry Bessemer Bessemer Steel Process Inexpensive, high quality steel Tesla 19 th Century Camera Marconi Alexander Graham Bell

Importance of Steel Stronger than most other metals of the period Pliable, meaning it could bend without breaking Lighter than iron Resists rust and corrosion Lower production cost after the advent of the Bessemer process Engineers use steel to create skyscrapers and long bridges (Brooklyn Bridge) Steel is used in farm equip., canned goods, and railroads

Impact of Railroads on America during the Benefits Stimulated growth of other industries (steel, iron, coal, lumber, livestock) Lead to the growth of cities Helped increase westward expansion of America Standard time zones were created to get everyone on correct time It connected country in a way it had never been before Corruption Charged much higher rates to small western farmers Gave discounts to large Agri-business Bribed members of Congress and received massive land grants Gilded Age

Railroad Legislation Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 Set Government oversight of the railroad industry to prevent unfair shipping prices Led to more financial problems (some railroads were forced out of business, which led to the Panic of 1893) This allowed the larger companies to start buying up the railways, which paved the way for Big Businesses

Rise of Big Business Running smaller companies out of business and/or purchasing the competition became the norm This consolidation of influence in the nations industries into the hands of a few wealthy business owners led to the rise of Big Business Big Business used many strategies to try and gain a larger Market Share or control of industries

Horizontal Consolidation Is the idea that one company assumes control of all the competing companies, creating a Monopoly. Monopoly- When one company or supplier controls all or most of a certain industry or commodity.

Horizontal Consolidation purchased by Rockefellar Independent Oil refineries Standard Oil Company

Vertical Integration The idea of controlling every aspect of producing, selling and shipping a product Coal fields Iron ore deposits Steel mills purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie This can also result in a monopoly, commonly referred to as a Vertical Monopoly. Ships purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie Railroads purchased by Carnegie

Vertical and Horizontal Integration

Robber Barons or Captains of Industry? Are these big business men good guys or bad guys?

Robber Barons Robber Barons or Captains of Industry? Drove out competing businesses with mean, though not yet illegal, practices. Business leaders who treated workers poorly or with little consideration Bribed political officials to get what they wanted

Robber Barons or Captains of Captains of Industry Industry? Business leaders who served the nation in a positive way, Usually through philanthropy Philanthropy is the act of doing something for the good of others such as: Creating jobs Building up the nation s wealth, and power Financing parks, schools, hospitals, libraries, etc Donating to, or organizing, Charity Organizations

Political Corruption Many politicians in the country at this time turned a blind eye to the problems of corruption and unfair business practices This style of government which leaves business to do as it will is called Laissez Faire government. Laissez Faire is a French term which means leave it alone

Abuses of Big Business Big Businesses would do anything to make more money Employees were generally paid very little for long hours of work (usually 12 hours a day 6 days a week) Working conditions were poor and often dangerous. IE. Sweatshops Women, Children, and Immigrants were utilized by the thousands as cheap labor Many people lived in Company Towns where they paid most of their wage back to the company in exchange for rent and the things they need to survive

Issues of the Gilded Age New Immigration Hundreds of thousands of new immigrants came to America to make a living in the newly expanding Industrial Economy Most of these New Immigrants came from areas in Southern and Eastern Europe Most were poor with little or no way of supporting themselves in America They were also more likely to settle in the cities near factory jobs than were the Old immigrants who mainly moved west and farmed.

New Immigration Issues of the Gilded Age Another group that was immigrating to the U.S. in large numbers at this time was the Chinese Nativists- or people who thought immigration was ruining the country were unhappy with the Chinese, Jews, and Catholics moving into the country This led to legislation limiting who could enter the country The Chinese Exclusion Act outlawed Chinese laborers from immigrating to the country in 1882.

Issues of the Gilded Age New Immigration The movement of people towards cities is called Urbanization U.S. industrial cities became massively over crowded during the Gilded age Immigrants rented Tenements which are apartments that are very small and/or run down

Progressive Reform Progressives were reformers who attempted to solve problems caused by industry, growth of cities and laissez faire Government.

MUCKRAKERS journalists and photographers who exposed the abuses of wealth and power. They felt it was their job to write and expose corruption in industry, cities, and government. These Progressives exposed corruption but offered no solutions.

Muckrakers Upton Sinclair- Exposed the filthy business practices in America Slaughter Houses in his book the Jungle Jacob Riis- Showed the horrible living conditions of Immigrants in NY Slums in a photo journal entitled How the Other Half Lives John Spargo- Chronicled the poor working conditions and abuses of Child Laborers in his book The Bitter Cry of Children

Organized Labor All of these issues eventually led to the rise in popular support for Unions Unions are worker organizations who s purpose is to protect the rights and interests of it s members In order to do this with limited influence, Union s employed many different tactics

Management vs. Labor Tools of Management Tools of Labor scabs P. R. campaign Pinkertons lockout blacklisting court injunctions open shops boycotts support rallies picketing closed shops organized strikes wildcat strikes

Progressive Reforms 8 Hour Work Day and 5 day work weeks Laws limiting Child Labor Laws regulating working conditions Pure Food and Drug Act- regulating the food industry Anti-Trust Laws- Outlawing Monopolies Regulations on rental properties Expansion of Unions Worker benefits and Rights increased