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Chapter 13

Chapter 13. The Triumph of Industry. Introduction. What impact does a war have on industry and technology? What specific impact did industry have on the Civil War?. http://www.history.com/videos/the-industrial-revolition. 1. Technology and Industry. Post Civil War Rapid industrial growth

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Chapter 13

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  1. Chapter 13 The Triumph of Industry

  2. Introduction • What impact does a war have on industry and technology? • What specific impact did industry have on the Civil War?

  3. http://www.history.com/videos/the-industrial-revolition

  4. 1. Technology and Industry • Post Civil War • Rapid industrial growth • Railroads expanded • Natural resources helped • Coal – steam power • Lumber • Rivers for shipping • Edwin Drake – first oil well (whales previously) • Workforce grows • New surge in immigration from Europe and Asia • Large and willing work force to fuel industry

  5. Technology & Industry cont. • Growth of capitalism • Laissez faire – govt. stays out of business • Horatio Alger - “rags to riches” idea; the American dream • Entrepreneurship – invest money to make a profit; creates jobs • Protective tariffs

  6. Innovation • Electricity transforms life • Thomas Edison – light bulb • 1,000 patents (grant giving exclusive rights to develop and sell for a limited time) • Communication • Samuel F.B. Morse – telegraph • Alexander Graham Bell – telephone • Steel • Henry Bessemer – Bessemer Process • Purified iron ore to create lightweight, strong steel • Suspension bridges held by steel cables (Brooklyn Bridge) • Westinghouse – air brakes; electricity over long distances • Swift – refrigeration cars (meat)

  7. Innovation cont. • The nation is linked by railroads • Adopted 24 time zones for scheduling • Streetcars, subways, commuter rails appear • Mass production • Growing link in world markets • Everything becomes mechanized • Impacts the environment

  8. http://www.history.com/shows/modern-marvels/videos/the-telegraph-and-telephonehttp://www.history.com/shows/modern-marvels/videos/the-telegraph-and-telephone

  9. http://www.history.com/shows/modern-marvels/videos/light-bulb-turns-night-into-dayhttp://www.history.com/shows/modern-marvels/videos/light-bulb-turns-night-into-day

  10. 2. Rise of Big Business • Most businesses privately owned – limited capital • Desire for profits, expansion, access to transportation leads to corporations • Many people share ownership • Huge amounts of capital for research, technology, reinvestment • Board of directors, some shareholders receive dividends (payments)

  11. Big Business cont. • J.P Morgan – banking • Cornelius Vanderbilt – steamboats then railroads • John D. Rockefeller – oil • Andrew Carnegie – steel • Some became monopolies where they bought out competition or drove them out of business • Cartel – people in same business agree on production to keep prices high • Trust – put business in other names or smaller companies

  12. http://www.history.com/videos/john-d-rockefeller-oil-money-and-powerhttp://www.history.com/videos/john-d-rockefeller-oil-money-and-power

  13. Corporate Giants – How? • Horizontal Integration • Consolidate (buy) many smaller companies in the same business • Rockefeller - bought small oil companies • Vertical Integration • Control all parts of the production process • Rockefeller did this also – controlled oil wells, pipelines, retail outlets, etc. • Standard Oil

  14. Debating the Giants • Captains of Industry or Robber Barons? • Robber barons • Unfairly kept high prices, paid workers little, stifled competition, swindled the poor • Captains of industry • Increased labor force, stimulated the economy, technology benefited all, shaped the U.S. into strong industrial power • Most men were philanthropists and donated millions

  15. Giants cont. • Social Darwinism develops out of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution and natural selection: “survival of the fittest” • Applied this theory to capitalism • The rich were the best because they earned it • The most rigorous and productive rise to the top • Reluctant to help poor – they were unfit • Government should stay out of it

  16. Regulations • ICC – Interstate Commerce Commission – first federal body set up to monitor business • Regulated railroads • Long history of price fixing, unfair rates, etc. • Sherman Antitrust Act – Outlawed any trust that operated “in restraint of trade or commerce among the states.” • Both seldom enforced but at least an attempt

  17. Factories • Immigrants made up large % of work force • Long hours – 12-16 hours, 6 days/week • Sweatshops – small, hot, dirty workplaces • Many women & children employed – 1 in 5 children worked rather than attend school – stunted physical and emotional growth – lost childhood • Strict regulation of employees • Dangerous – hearing loss from noise, accidents from faulty equipment, poor ventilation • Child labor • http://www.history.com/videos/the-fight-to-end-child-labor

  18. 3. Organized Labor • Pros of industrial expansion: • Economy grew drastically, great wealth for industrialists, higher standards of living, availability of goods, access to public institutions (schools, museums) • Cons of industrial expansion: • People who worked in factories struggled to survive, immigrant workers faced discrimination

  19. Labor Unions Form • Early attempts – collective bargaining – group negotiates for better wages, conditions • Socialism spreads in Europe 1830’s • Favors public (not private) control of property and industry • 1848 – Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels Communist Manifesto – denounced capitalism and predicted workers would overthrow owners • Labor activists borrowed from these ideas

  20. Labor Unions cont. • Knights of Labor – created for all workers of any trade, skilled or unskilled • Terrence Powderly took over, encouraged boycotts • Unsuccessful strikes led to its demise • AFL – American Federation of Labor founded by Samuel Gompers • Craft union of skilled workers • Required dues • Sought wages, working conditions, better hours • Opposed women – feared they would drive wages low

  21. Strikes • Railroad strikes – caused destruction of property, militias called in to protect temporary workers, federal troops sent to stop strikers • Haymarket Square – wanted 8 hour workday, violence began, bomb killed policemen, several others killed • Knights of Labor died as people shied away from radicalism; employers associated unions now with violence

  22. Strikes cont. • Homestead Strike - Carnegie cuts wages at steel plant; partner (Frick) hired Pinkerton agency, killed several • Workers ended strike but led to epidemic of other strikes • Pullman Strike – railway car workers required to live in company towns, wages cut; Eugene V. Debs organizes strike – shut down railroads, mail delivery • President Cleveland says strike interferes with free trade, sends troops; Debs arrested • *Used Sherman Anti Trust Act against WORKERS!

  23. http://www.history.com/videos/andrew-carnegie-and-the-homestead-strikehttp://www.history.com/videos/andrew-carnegie-and-the-homestead-strike

  24. http://www.history.com/videos/jp-morgan-battles-coal-miners-in-1902http://www.history.com/videos/jp-morgan-battles-coal-miners-in-1902

  25. Impact of Labor Unions • Frequent use of troops citing “interference with trade” • Trend of contract negotiations & strikes • Splits within the union – radical, moderate • Mistrust and fear of labor; conflicts

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