Chapter 18 Lecture Outline

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Transcription:

Chapter 18 Lecture Outline Big Business and Organized Labor 2013 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

Chapter 18 Lecture Outline Big Business and Organized Labor 2013 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

Robber Barons Rockefeller Standard Oil Company Carnegie US steel Corporations Vanderbilt railroad empire

The Rise of Big Business The Second Industrial Revolution Transportation & communication networks Widespread use of electricity Scientific research to industrial process Railroads (first big business ) Building the Transcontinentals Union Pacific (ex solders, former slaves, Irish/German immigrants) vs Central Pacific (Chinese immigrants)

Transcontinental railroads Using picks, shovels, wheelbarrows, and horse-drawn carts, Chinese laborers largely helped to construct the Central Pacific track.

Transcontinental railroads First route NOT in the South, Why? Many ways of financing

The Rise of Big Business

The Rise of Big Business Financing the Railroads private companies, which raised the necessary funds by selling bonds. concerns about constitutionality of federal involvement by 1850s land grant schemes were approved Inventions Spur Manufacturing

The Rise of Big Business Inventions Spur Manufacturing Barb wire (1868) Steam turbines, electrical devices, typewriters (1867) Vacuum cleaners (1869) Alexander Graham Bell telephone 1876 Bell Telephone Company -> American Telephone and Telegraph Company Thomas Edison of Menlo Park, NJ Phonograph in 1877 & 1 st light bulb in 1879 Lights meant factories could work at night Electric motors allowed for geographical preferences Tesla TED: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-wkukp1l3c

Entrepreneurs Rockefeller and the Oil Trust began refining oil from the nearby fields in Pennsylvania, creating the Standard Oil Company. bought out his competitors and controlled more than 90 percent of the nation s oil supply.

Entrepreneurs

Entrepreneurs Carnegie and the Steel Industry Steel industry. Using Bessemer process that made steel stronger inexpensively, Carnegie flooded the market with his product and became wealthy Bessemer Process: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qouuc4v1mne

Andrew Carnegie s The Gospel of Wealth (1889) Not evil, but good, has come to the race from the accumulation of wealth but those who have the ability and energy that produces it. He applied Darwin s concept of evolution to society, law of human competition is best for the trade, because it insures the survival of the fittest in every department. He called himself a distributor of wealth not philanthropist.

J. P. Morgan, Financier an investment banker, bought large amounts of stock in corporations, and then in turn sold them for a profit He also bought rival firms that were in trouble, fixed them, and resold them Entrepreneurs

Social Trends The Working Class working conditions were often dangerous The average workweek was fifty-nine hours average wage equivalent to today s currency was $3.50 an hour Wealth Distribution 1900 Wealth Distribution 1900 Richest 2% Everyone else Top 10% Everyone else

Child Labor The Working Class 1880, one-sixth of the population of children worked a full-time Boys worked deep in coalmines, and girls worked in textile mills 1881, only 7 states had anti child labor laws requiring children to be at least twelve

Disorganized Protest The Working Class many of the workers in these conditions were recent immigrants or farmers not familiar with the idea of civilized protests. Most civic leaders respected property rights more than rights of labor Often lead to violence: Great Railroad Strike of 1877 Sand-Lot Incident

The Working Class The Railroad Strike of 1877 first interstate strike in American history resulted from the financial panic of 1873 order was restored when federal troops intervened

The Sand-Lot Incident Meeting in San Francisco became attack on Chinese immigrants Anti-Chinese Agitation from Workingmen's party of CA demanded US stop Chinese immigration Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 prohibited all immigration of Chinese laborers The Working Class

The Working Class Toward Permanent Unions 1866, the National Labor Union was founded Before ending in 1873, the NLU had the Contract Labor Act of 1864 repealed & 8 hour workday for fed l employees

The Knights of Labor The Working Class secret organization designed to protect its members from retaliation from employers lien laws, elimination of convict-labor, 8 hour workday, paper currency, equal pay for men/women Rapid decline in 1886

Members of the Knights of Labor This national union was more egalitarian than most of its contemporaries.

The Working Class Anarchism Anarchists believe that any form of government is abusive, controlled by the rich to exploit the poor The Haymarket Affair - May 3 rd, 1886 Rally in Chicago, bomb thrown into crowd of police officers, police open fire several killed 8 anarchists arrest and found guilty

Gompers and the AFL The Working Class 1886, twenty-five skilled workers organizations joined to create the American Federation of Labor (AFL). Led by Samuel Gompers, the AFL allowed only skilled workers as their members (a collection of national organizations)

The Homestead Strike The Working Class 1892, the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers went on strike at Carnegie s Homestead Works near Pittsburgh Pinkerton Detective Agency were brought in to confront the strikers. state militias were sent in to protect workers not involved in the strike http://www.history.com/topics/haymarket-riot/videos/homesteadstrike?m=528e394da93ae&s=undefined&f=1&free=false

The Working Class The Pullman Strike American Railway Union (ARU), founded by Eugen V. Debs, working at the Pullman Palace Car Company went on strike No member of the ARU would handle Pullman railcars By mid July, Midwest railway lines were stuck with cars on tracks that no one would touch Strikebreakers clash with strikers President Cleveland sends in federal troops bc mail wasn t delivered http://www.history.com/topics/haymar ket-riot/videos/history-of-laborday?m=528e394da93ae&s=undefine d&f=1&free=false

The Working Class Socialism and the Unions movement to abolish the government and to turn the method of production over to the people, first came to the United States in the 1820s. It began to gain a strong following in the 1870s, when Karl Marx moved his union headquarters to New York. Eventually, the Socialist Party of America was created, with its leader, Eugene Debs, running for president

Eugene V. Debs Founder of the American Railway Union and later candidate for president as head of the Socialist Party of America.

The Working Class The Stresses of Success The Gilded Age industrial complex created a system in which owners were vastly separated from their workers in both wealth and working conditions. This set the stage for government entities to intervene to find an equilibrium.