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Industry on the Move

Industry on the Move. Rapid Advances. 1870-1900 a BOOM in industrial growth Coal, oil, electricity, steel and railroads Inventions happening like wildfire Bessemer process key Process of making steel, quicker and more efficient Started in England, had to have it in US.

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Industry on the Move

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  1. Industry on the Move

  2. Rapid Advances • 1870-1900 a BOOM in industrial growth • Coal, oil, electricity, steel and railroads • Inventions happening like wildfire • Bessemer process key • Process of making steel, quicker and more efficient • Started in England, had to have it in US

  3. Research and Development • Explosion of inventive activity • Goal to harness this and control it • Invention factories established • Thomas Edison key in this movement • Organize system • Control R&D • Produce ideas in a efficient and profitable way

  4. Communication and Transportation • Concept was key to success • Scrambling to better communicate and transport goods • Telegraph: 1844, by 1861 lines covered 76,000 miles • Soon outdone • Telephone: 1876 Alexander Graham Bell • Proved to be a great invention

  5. Changes to Business Practices • The Corporation • Advantages of the corporation: raise large sums of money, outlive its owners, limited liability, separated owners from day-to-day management • By the turn of the century, corporations were making two-thirds of all manufactured products in the U.S. • An International Pool of Labor • Global labor network • Migration chains • Domestic sources

  6. Cont….. • Hiccups in Railroad industry • Railroads saddled with enormous fixed costs: equipment, payroll, high debts • Pooling: informal agreements among competing companies to act together • The Challenge of Finance • New ways of raising money; stocks • Investment bankers advised companies about their business affairs

  7. Strategies • Horizontal combination • Eliminate competition by buying others out • Vertical combination • Controlling all stages of production • Trusts • Way to get around state regulations, did not actually “own” business

  8. Cost of Growth • Early on evidence of environmental concerns • Labor concerns arising • Unions on the rise • Big business in the hands of a few • People fearing the worst • Regulation limited

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