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The Rise of Smokestack America

16. The Rise of Smokestack America. The Rise of Smokestack America. The Texture of Industrial Progress Industrial Work and the Laboring Class Capital Versus Labor Strive and Succeed The Politics of the Gilded Age Conclusion: The Complexity of Industrial Capitalism.

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The Rise of Smokestack America

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  1. 16 The Rise of Smokestack America

  2. The Rise of Smokestack America • The Texture of Industrial Progress • Industrial Work and the Laboring Class • Capital Versus Labor • Strive and Succeed • The Politics of the Gilded Age • Conclusion: The Complexity of Industrial Capitalism

  3. Gap Between Rich and Poor

  4. The Texture of Industrial Progress

  5. Technological Innovations • Bessemer process: iron to steel • Exploited by Andrew Carnegie • Price of steel drops • New power sources • Electricity

  6. The Homestead Steel Works

  7. Railroads • Supported by state and federal governments • First transcontinental line, 1869 • Innovation in management • Division of responsibilities • Flow of information

  8. Railroads (cont'd) • High costs, indebtedness, competition • Worker’s wages cut to increase competitiveness • Low rates, secret rebates

  9. Other Industries • Vertical integration, such as Carnegie steel • “Backward” and “forward” integration • Including earlier and later stages • Horizontal integration, such as Rockefeller • Standard Oil refines 84% of oil

  10. The Texture of Industrial Progress:Other Industries (cont'd) • Incorporation brings advantage • Raising capital easier • Identity makes a corporation durable • Limited liability decreases risk

  11. American Industry and the World • Second phase of Industrial Revolution • Changes in organization • Mass production • German and American industry dominate • Increasing global connections • Worldwide depressions • 1873-1879 and 1893-1897 • Competition > Overproduction > Falling prices

  12. American Industry and the World (cont'd) • 1893 collapse • Panic, bank failures • Coxey’s Army

  13. Industrial Work and the Laboring Class

  14. The New Immigration • New immigrants, 1880-1900 • Southern, eastern Europe • Many Italian Catholics and Jews • Mexicans • Chinese • Most came to work, but with few skills • Blamed for various problems

  15. Migration to the United States, 1860–1910

  16. Ethnic Diversity • Most immigrants begin at the bottom • Little experience • Day laborers • Blacks suffer from discrimination • Work experience • Workers often segregated by ethnicity • Long working day, 10 hours, six-day weeks • High rate of accidents

  17. The Family Economy • Ideal versus reality • Men not always the sole breadwinner • Children often important • Women and work • Almost 20% of women paid workers by 1900 • Limited opportunities • Domestic service • Prostitution

  18. The Family Economy (cont'd) • Black women more likely to be paid workers

  19. Domestic Servants

  20. Capital Versus Labor

  21. Protests • On-the-job protests • Some skilled workers had a measure of control • Could control rate of production • Quitting • Strikes • 1877, railroad strike • Many more follow • Owners use state militias and federal forces

  22. Protests (cont'd) • Homestead strike, 1892, versus Carnegie • Pinkertons • Federal troops

  23. Labor Organization, 1865-1900 • National Labor Union, 1866 – short-lived • Knights of Labor • Originally secret • Open to all • Haymarket Riot, 1886, brings in 600,000

  24. Labor Organization, 1865-1900 (cont'd) • American Federation of Labor, 1886 • Led by Samuel Gompers • Skilled trades • Almost 1 million by 1900

  25. Strive and Succeed

  26. Middle-Class Women • Property rights in marriage in some states • Clothing freer – Gibson girls • Many organizations to join • Education • Smaller families • Higher divorce rates

  27. Male Mobility & the Success Ethic • Enlarged educational system • Land-grant colleges • Idea of “career” emerges • Professionalism, specialization

  28. The Gospel of Wealth • Idea from article by Andrew Carnegie, 1889 • Reflecting Social Darwinism • Charles Darwin, Origin of Species, 1859 • Herbert Spencer applies these ideas to society • Businesses as competing beings

  29. The Politics of the Gilded Age

  30. The Politics of the Gilded Age • Parties not distinguished by ideology • Neither risks a difficult stand on national issues • Parties balanced • Gilded Age presidents not strong • Civil service reform • Garfield assassinated before taking office • Pendleton Act, 1883

  31. National Issues • Currency – “hard” versus “soft” money • Farmers support silver • Tariffs • Bills to ensure blacks civil rights traded away

  32. Political Advertisements of the 1880s

  33. Political Advertisements of the 1880s, cont

  34. The Election of 1896 • Populists strong • William Jennings Bryan • Push for silver • Democrats choose a silver candidate • 95% turnout • Bryan gets 47% of the votes • McKinley elected

  35. The Presidential Election of 1896

  36. The New Shape of Politics • Stalemate ended with election of 1896 • Lower voter turnout • Gold/silver debate disappears • Discovery of gold in the North • Industrial capacity at maximum

  37. Conclusion:The Complexity of Industrial Capitalism

  38. Conclusion: The Complexity of Industrial Capitalism • Transformations • Government-business alliance • Labor unions emerge as a force • New political parties • Cities become centers of change and conflict

  39. Timeline

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