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Chapter Six A New Industrial Age

Chapter Six A New Industrial Age. Chapter Six A New Industrial Age. Life in the 1860s. No electric lights No refrigeration

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Chapter Six A New Industrial Age

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  1. Chapter Six A New Industrial Age Chapter SixA New Industrial Age

  2. Life in the 1860s • No electric lights • No refrigeration • In 1860, most mail from the East Coast took ten days to reach the Midwest and three weeks to get to the West Coast. A letter from Europe to a person on the frontier could take several months to reach its destination.

  3. Life in the 1900s • Between 1860 and 1890 the government issued almost 500,000 patents–licenses that gave an inventor the exclusive right to make, use, or sell an invention. Patents were issued for inventions such as the typewriter and the telephone. These inventions increased productivity–the amount of goods and services created in a given period of time.

  4. Power stations across the country provided electricity for lamps, fans, printing presses, and many other appliances. • By 1900, there were 1.5 million telephones in use all over the country, and Western Union Telegraph was sending roughly 63 million messages.

  5. Edwin L. Drake Struck oil in Pennsylvania in 1859. New uses for oil grew rapidly. Oil refineries sprang up around the country as oil became a big business. Thomas A. Edison An inventor from New Jersey who experimented with electric light. Developed a workable filament for the light bulb and the idea of a central power station to make electric power widely available. Lewis Latimer Worked in Edison’s lab and patented an improved method for producing the filament in light bulbs George Westinghouse Experimented with a form of electricity called alternating current, which was less expensive and more practical than direct current, which Edison had used. By using a transformer, he improved the capabilities of power stations to make home use of electricity more practical. People Develop New Forms of Energy

  6. Thomas Alva Edison “Wizard of Menlo Park”

  7. TheLight Bulb

  8. The Phonograph (1877)

  9. The Ediphone or Dictaphone

  10. The Motion Picture Camera

  11. Alternate Current George Westinghouse

  12. Communication Advances 1. Samuel Morse perfects the telegraph and invents system of electrical impulses to use as the alphabet. 2. Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876.

  13. Railroads a National Network On May 10, 1869, the transcontinental railroad, extending from coast to coast, was finished with the hammering of a golden spike at Promontory Point, Utah. The growth of railroads led to the development of many towns throughout the western part of the United States. In 1883, the railroads adopted a national system of time zones to improve scheduling. As a result, the clocks in broad regions of the country showed the same time, a system we still use today.

  14. Railroads played a key role in revolutionizing business and industry in the United States in several key ways. • They provided a faster, more practical means of transporting goods. • They lowered the costs of production. • They created national markets. • They provided a model for big business. • They encouraged innovation in other industries.

  15. Steel makes progress faster and cheaper 1. The Bessemer Process was a way burn the impurities out of iron and a lighter, stronger more flexible product….steel. 2. Results-rail lines, sky scrapers, the Brooklyn Bridge G. Activity Draw the Brooklyn Bridge. (pp.234-5)

  16. John A. Roebling:The Brooklyn Bridge, 1883

  17. John A. Roebling:The Brooklyn Bridge, 1913

  18. Robber Barons or Captains of Industry A. John D. Rockefeller Creates Standard Oil.- In 1863 Standard Oil began as Rockefeller bought his first refinery. Over the next few decades Rockefeller bought out all the competition refineries until he eventually owned 90% of the refineries in the entire US. This Horizontal control is a type of monopoly or trust.

  19. Standard Oil Co.

  20. B. Andrew Carnegie built the first Bessemer steel factories in Pittsburg PA. As his business grew he bought up all the steps of production from the Coal mines to the factories to the ships and rail roads. Like Rockefeller this Vertical Consolidation allowed Carnegie to keep his prices down and defeat the competition.

  21. Coke fields Coke fields Coke fields Coke fields Coke fields purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie Iron ore deposits Iron ore deposits Iron ore deposits Iron ore deposits purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie Steel mills Steel mills Steel mills purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie Ships Ships purchased by Carnegie purchased by Carnegie Railroads purchased by Carnegie Horizontal and Vertical Consolidation Chapter 13, Section 2

  22. Carnegie’s “Gospel of Wealth” said people can make as much money as possible but then they should give it away.

  23. C. Social Darwinism was the philosophy of survival of the fittest applied to business. As a result government did not interfere with business. It neither taxed profits nor regulated workers/ owner relations.

  24. Many factors combined to make a new kind of business in the United States. Larger pools of capital — Entrepreneurs had to invest massive amounts of capital or borrow from investors. Wider geographic span — Railroads and the telegraph aided in the geographic expansion of businesses. Broader range of operations — Big businesses often combined multiple operations and were responsible for all stages of production. Revisedrole of ownership — Owners had less connection to all aspects of their businesses because the businesses were too large. “Professional managers” were hired to run their business. New methods of management — Innovations were also necessary for controlling resources. Big businesses developed new systems of formal, written rules and created specialized departments.

  25. E. The Government’s feeble attempt to regulate business came in the form of the Sherman Antitrust act. For 15 years it was too weak to regulate any monopolies

  26. III. Workers A. Industrialization meant an increased demand for labor. This demand was met two ways- farm workers moved to town for factory jobs and immigrants came from poorer parts of the world. B. Factory work was hard and dangerous with low pay and no benefits.

  27. C. Owners wanted to get as much production from their workers as possible so efficiency studies found the best way to get many cheap products was to use division of labor and have one work do a single job over and over again.

  28. Working Families • In the 1880s, children made up more than 5 % of the industrial labor force. • Children often left school at the age of 12 or 13 to work. • Girls sometimes took factory jobs so that their brothers could stay in school. • If an adult became too ill to work, children as young as 6 or 7 had to work. • Rarely did the government provide public assistance, and unemployment insurance didn’t exist. • The theory of Social Darwinism held that poverty resulted from personal weakness. Many thought that offering relief to the unemployed would encourage idleness.

  29. A Struggling Immigrant Family

  30. Struggling Immigrant Family

  31. IV. The Great Strikes • A. By 1890 9% of Americans owned 75% of the nation’s wealth. Many of these lived extravagant lifestyles. While the nation’s suffered. • B. The Marxist philosophy of Socialism was gaining a following in Europe and it lured some workers to the ideas of collective ownership of wealth and means of production. • C. Most workers chose to improve their lives within the capitalist system by forming labor unions.

  32. Early Labor Unions Became strong after the Civil War Provided assistance to members in bad times Later expressed workers’ demands to employer The Knights of Labor A national union Recruited skilled and unskilled workers, women, and African Americans Emphasized education and social reform The American Federation of Labor (AFL) Led by Samuel Gompers Was a craft union of skilled workers A bread and butter union Used collective bargaining as a strategy Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) Known as “The Wobblies” Organized unskilled workers Had radical socialist leaders Many violent strikes

  33. Knights of Labor Terence V. Powderly An injury to one is the concern of all!

  34. 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.

  35. How the AF of L Would Help the Workers • Catered to the skilled worker. • Represented workers in matters of national legislation. • Maintained a national strike fund. • Evangelized the cause of unionism. • Prevented disputes among the many craft unions. • Mediated disputes between management and labor. • Pushed for closed shops.

  36. The American Federation of Labor: 1886 Samuel Gompers

  37. A Striker Confronts a SCAB!

  38. The Great Railroad Strike of 1877

  39. Reaction of Employers Many employers disliked and feared unions. Some took steps to stop unions, such as: • forbidding union meetings • firing union organizers • forcing new employees to sign “yellow dog” contracts, making them promise never to join a union or participate in a strike • refusing to bargain collectively when strikes did occur • refusing to recognize unions as their workers’ legitimate representatives

  40. E. Activity (pp.251-253) Search for the details for these three famous strikes

  41. The Haymarket Riot Chapter 13, Section 4 Haymarket, 1886 • On May 1, groups of workers mounted a national demonstration for an eight-hour workday. • On May 3, police broke up a fight between strikers and scabs. (A scab is a negative term for a worker called in by an employer to replace striking laborers.) • Union leaders called a protest rally on the evening of May 4 in Chicago’s Haymarket Square. • A group of anarchists, radicals who oppose all government, joined the strikers. • At the event, someone threw a bomb that killed a police officer. • The riot that followed killed dozens on both sides. • Investigators never found the bomb thrower, yet eight anarchists were tried for conspiracy to commit murder. Four were hanged.

  42. Haymarket Riot (1886) McCormick Harvesting Machine Co.

  43. Haymarket Martyrs

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