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The Expansion of American Industry

The Expansion of American Industry. HUSH Unit 6. Life in 1865. Life in 1900. The Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution was a dramatic change in the nature of production in which machines replaced tools, steam and other energy sources replaced human or animal power

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The Expansion of American Industry

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  1. The Expansion of American Industry HUSH Unit 6

  2. Life in 1865

  3. Life in 1900

  4. The Industrial Revolution • The Industrial Revolution was a dramatic change in the nature of production in which • machines replaced tools, steam and other energy sources replaced human or animal power • skilled workers were replaced with mostly unskilled workers

  5. Progression of Industrial Revolution • Agricultural Revolution • New innovations and inventions for growing more and better food • Textile Revolution • Use of water/steam power for clothing and cloth • Mechanical Revolution • New machines that run on steam and later coal

  6. Jethro Tull's Seed Drill1701

  7. The First Industry: Textile Mills • The first widespread industry involved textiles • Formerly such things as spinning yarn was done in the home by family members. • The Industrial Revolution changed this and resulted in large powerful machines in factories, such as the early textile mill.

  8. The Flying Shuttle 1733 Allowed a weaver to work twice as fast

  9. Richard Arkwright1769 The water frame used water from a near-by stream to operate the spinning wheels

  10. The Spinning Jenny In 1764 James Hargeaves invented a new spinning wheel. He called it the Spinning "Jenny" in honor of his wife. This simple machine allowed a worker to spin 6 or 8 threads at a time. Later models could spin as many as 80 threads.

  11. Samuel Crompton1779 The Spinning Mule combined features of the spinning jenny and the water-frame.

  12. Early Steam Engines In 1698, Thomas Savery invented a steam-driven pump to remove water from a coal mine. But these engines often exploded because of intense pressure.

  13. Early Steam Engines In 1705, Thomas Newcomen figured out a way to make a steam driven pump that was safer and more efficient. His steam engine was better, but still not powerful enough.

  14. Early Steam Engines James Watt was a repair man for Thomas Newcomen. Watt figured out a way to make a steam engine which got four times as much power from the same amount of coal. That was a big improvement, and a more powerful engine could do more work.

  15. The Power Loom In 1785, Edmund Cartwright, invented the Power Loom which boosted weaving. In 1833, over 100,000 machines were in use.

  16. Cotton Gin In 1793, educator Eli Whitney made a machine to remove the seeds from the cotton. This allowed the workers to pick and clean ten times as much cotton as they had before

  17. British Textile Mill, circa 1830

  18. Bobbin girl circa 1830

  19. Interchangeable Parts Eli Whitney made one more important innovation. He invented interchangeable parts. This was a way of standardizing parts of a machine so that they could easily be replaced.

  20. Improvements in Steel Production At the beginning of the 18th Century - about 1700, Abraham Darby discovered that coal could be partially burned to create coke, which would create the steady, hot flame required to work with iron and steel. In the 1740s, Henry Cort discovered "puddling" as a way of making stronger pig iron. He also was able to produce sheets of iron. Henry Bessemer figured out a way to mix cold air to remove the impurities that weakened steel. His Bessemer converter was able to produce stronger steel that could be used in a wider variety of ways

  21. Steam-Powered Transportation In 1807, Robert Fulton, added a steam engine to the ship "Clermont."

  22. A Steam-Powered Machine on Tracks:The Locomotive In 1829, George Stephenson, a mining engineer, developed a locomotive called the "Rocket." It ran on iron rails at an amazing 36 miles per hour!

  23. Steam Engine-Run Locomotive

  24. Transcontinental Railroad • Began in 1862 • Central Pacific Railroad- from Sacramento, CA • Union Pacific Railroad- from Omaha, Nebraska • Met 1869 at Promontory Point, UT • Developed time zones-four in U.S.; Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific

  25. Communications • Telegraph – Morse code • Western Union had 900,000 miles of wire by 1900 • Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone • Set up American Telephone and Telegraph Company • By 1900, 1.5 million phones

  26. Electric Power • Thomas A. Edison: built his “invention factory” • Phonograph, 1877 • Electric glass bulb: 1880, made of bamboo fiber • Power plant in New York City

  27. Alternating Current • George Westinghouse developed alternating current • Used transformer to boost power levels • Created Westinghouse Electric

  28. Bessemer Process • Henry Bessemer in England and William Kelley in U.S. developed steel process • Easier to remove the impurities from production • Mass production now possible • Led to a new age of building

  29. Brooklyn Bridge-1883 • Engineer John A. Roebling designed suspension bridge with thick steel cables suspended from high towers • His son Washington took ever • After many set-backs, the bridge opened May 24, 1883.

  30. Robber Barons? Drained the country of its natural resources Persuaded officials to interpret laws in their favor Drove competitors to ruin Paid their workers meager wages Workers forced to work in dangerous and unhealthy conditions Captains of Industry? Increased the supply of goods by building factories Created jobs that allowed Americans to buy their goods Founded and funded museums, libraries, and universities Business Leaders of the Late 1800s

  31. Monopoly Complete control of a product or service A business bought its competitors or drove them out of business Could then charge high prices Cartel A loose association of businesses that make the same product Members agreed to limit the supply of their product and keep prices high Monopolies and Cartels

  32. Create a giant company by bringing together many firms that were in the same business Example: Standard Oil Trust Horizontal Consolidation

  33. The Standard Oil Trust • John D. Rockefeller set up a refinery in Ohio in 1863. • He undersold his competitors and bought them out. • In 1882 the owners of Standard Oil and other companies combined their operations, appointing nine trustees. Rockefeller controlled the trust • Forty companies joined the trust and controlled the nations oil, limiting competition • 1890 Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act, outlawing any combination of companies that restrained commerce; proved ineffective for 15 years.

  34. Vertical Consolidation • Gaining control of the many different businesses that make up all phases of a product’s development • Example: Carnegie Steel • Could charge less because of economies of scale; as production increases, the cost goes down

  35. Andrew Carnegie • Emigrated to the U.S. in 1848; used money earned as superintendent of PA railroad to invest in steel mills • Established Carnegie Steel Company, drove competitors out of business, and soon controlled the entire steel industry • Bought the iron ore mines, mills, shipping and rail lines to transport his steel products to market • Philanthropist: gave away $350 million • “Gospel of wealth”: free to make money and should give it away

  36. Business Cycle • “Boom and bust” • Rapid industrial growth placed strains on the economy • Businesses overproduced then cut wages and laid off workers • Often caused a panic, resulting in bank and business failures • Panic of 1893

  37. The Growing Work Force • 14 million immigrants between 1860 and 1900 • Contract Labor Act, 1864 • 8 to 9 million moved to the cities • Every family member worked; little relief for the poor

  38. Factory Work • Laborers worked 12 hours, 6 days a week • Piecework: fixed amount for each finished piece produced • Frederick Winslow Taylor increased efficiency, The Principles of Scientific Management • Division of Labor: workers performed one small task, over and over • Work boring and dangerous

  39. Working Women and Children • Women operated simple machines and had no chance to advance • Children made up more than 5 % of the labor force • Children stunted in body and mind • Jacob Riis attacked child labor in Children of the Poor

  40. Mine children circa 1820

  41. Trap boy, circa 1820

  42. Children hauling coal, circa 1820

  43. Girls carrying coal circa 1820

  44. Gulf Between Rich and Poor • Socialism: economic and political philosophy that favors public or social control of property and income, not private control • Communism: Complete government ownership of land and property; Karl Marx, along with Friedrich Engels, wrote a pamphlet called the Communist Manifesto that denounced capitalism and predicted that workers would overturn it

  45. Social Darwinism • After Charles Darwin’s voyage on the Beagle in the 1830’s and his publication of the “Origins of the Species” in the 1850’s he theorized that some organisms are better suited to their environment gained some survival advantage and passed their genetically transmitted advantages to their offspring's. • This became known as the Theory of Evolution • The publication of this theory started a sensational controversy. Many writers applied Darwin's theory to sociology. They developed a controversial theory called Social Darwinism. • The theory was that social existence was a competitive struggle among individuals possessing different natural capacities and traits. • Overall, those with better traits succeeded, becoming wealthy and powerful, while those lacking in inner discipline or intelligence sank into poverty. • Many people, from Karl Marx to Captain Mahan to Adolf Hitler, employed Social Darwinism in their arguments.

  46. Rise of Labor Unions • National Trades Union, 1834; ended with Panic of 1837 • National Labor Union, 1866; failed during a depression • Knights of Labor, 1869; men, women, skilled and unskilled; Terence Powderly wanted equal pay, 8 hour day, end to child labor; disappeared by 1890s • American Federation of Labor, 1886; Samuel Gompers wanted skilled workers only; supported collective bargaining, negotiation between labor and employers • The Wobblies (Industrial Workers of the World), many Socialists, radical union of unskilled workers such as miners, lumbermen, migrant farm workers, textile workers

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