Big Business

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Big Business

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Title: Big Business


1
Big Business Industrial Cities
  • Chapter 5

Sherry Woods, Caywood Elementary School
Lexington, TN
2
Introduction
  • Machines started to replace hand tools.
  • Inventors developed new technologies.
  • Important time for FREE ENTERPRISE
  • An economic system in which businesses have the
    freedom to offer for sale many kinds of goods and
    services.

3
Railroads
  • Transcontinental railroad from the Atlantic to
    the Pacific
  • Lincolns election promise
  • 1862 Union Pacific Railroad
  • Central Pacific Railroad
  • Met at Promontory, Utah
  • Others also built tracks

4
Growth of Railroads
  • George Westinghouse
  • Air brake.made train travel safer
  • Granville T. Woodsimproved the air brake and
    developed telegraph system to help trains and
    stations communicate.

5
Growth Problems
  • Needed more locomotives, cars, and tracks
  • Had to pay workers to lay tracks
  • Needed capital resourcesmoney
  • Got some money from the government
  • Some from investors invest to buy shares in the
    hope of making money. Shares are called stocks.
  • Corporations businesses that sell shares
  • Railroad was the 1st business to become
    corporations!

6
Telegraph
  • Samuel Morse developed the Morse Code
  • Dots and dashes
  • Used electricity along iron wires

7
Railroads
  • Improved transportation
  • Expanded businesses across the entire country.

8
The Steel Industry
  • Locomotives became too heavy for iron
  • Used steel, but was more expensive
  • Inventors found a new way to make steel more
    cheaply
  • Henry Bessemer
  • Melted iron ore and other metals together
  • Blast furnace made steel stronger

9
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10
Andrew Carnegie
  • Entrepreneur (set up new business and takes risks
    with money)
  • Built a steel mill in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania
  • Very successful
  • Built many more
  • Bought coal and iron mines, ships, so he could
    lower cost of his steel

11
Carnegie Steel Company
  • Biggest steel business in United States
  • He became one of the richest people in the world

12
The Oil Industry
  • John D. Rockerfeller
  • 24 years old
  • Built an oil refinery in Ohio
  • Refinery is a factory that makes crude oil into
    grease, kerosene, gasoline and other USABLE
    products.
  • Bought other refineries
  • Monopoly almost complete control

13
New Industrial Cities
  • Inland cities
  • Close to resources needed by mills and refineries
  • Pittsburgh, Chicago, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan
  • Railroad hubscities where trains make stops on
    their way to other places.

14
Time Zones
  • 24 time zones worldwide
  • 6 time zones in the United States

15
Growing Pains
  • Chapter 5 Lesson 2

16
Building Railroads
  • Needed 1000s of workers
  • Most immigrants were from Ireland and China
  • Civil War Veterans
  • African Americans
  • Mexican Americans

17
Dangerous Work
  • 400 rails per mile
  • Pickaxes, shovels, and dynamite
  • Built bridges across canyons
  • Blasted through rock for tunnels
  • Chinese usually did the explosives
  • Lowered by basket
  • Drilled hole
  • Lit dynamite
  • Pulled upin timeUSUALLY!!!!
  • Worked year round in all kinds of weather
  • Avalanches, snowdrifts, and attacks

18
Work in Factories
  • So many workers.low wages
  • Didnt make enough to support family
  • Kids had to work, too
  • 1910 made up 1/5 of all workers
  • 60 cents for 8 hrs. work
  • Walked 22 miles a day carrying glass
  • Unsafe machines so many accidents happened

19
Owners against Workers
  • Workers spoke out about problems
  • Some went on strike
  • Usually just got FIRED!
  • Formed labor union group of workers who join
    together

20
Samuel Gompers
  • Early labor union leader
  • 13 years old worked as a cigar maker
  • Federation made up of many member groups
  • AFL American Federation of Labor
  • Wanted 8 hr. days
  • Better working conditions
  • End to child labor
  • Accident insurance

21
Labor Unions and Strikes
  • Going on strike was the most important way unions
    had to get the owners attention
  • Sometimes became violent
  • Harvesting Machine Company strike
  • Bomb killed seven police

22
Homestead Strike
  • Carnegie steel mill
  • Announced a pay cut
  • Workers went on strike to protest
  • Detectives hired to protect the mill
  • Angry union workers and detectives got in a fight
    killing people from both sides

23
Government and Business
  • Wanted government to help improve working
    conditions
  • Factory owners did not want the government to get
    involved.
  • Government did not want to get involved.
  • Thought businesses would grow best if they left
    them alone to make decisions.

24
New Immigrants
  • Chapter 5. Lesson 3

25
Asian Immigrants
  • Chinese immigrants came to United States after
    the California gold rush in 1849.
  • Faced prejudice from some Americans.
  • Had to pay a special tax.
  • Some were beaten and even killed.
  • When gold mines dried up, looked for other work.
  • Worked for low wages on the railroad so they
    could stay in the United States.

26
Stopping the Chinese
  • Many Americans wanted to stop other Chinese from
    coming to America.
  • Wanted the others to go back to China.
  • Americans were worried the immigrants would take
    away their jobs.

27
Unfair Laws
  • Chinese had to pay higher taxes.
  • Could not work for the states.
  • Not allow to sue in state courts.
  • Congress passed a law stopping all immigration by
    Chinese people.

28
Japanese and other Asians
  • Still allowed to move to the U.S.
  • Found jobs in agriculture (farming)
  • Some bought small farms in California and the
    southwest.
  • Later, they too, were mistreated.
  • U.S. convinced Japan to stop Japanese from
    leaving Japan

29
Mexican Immigrants
  • Lived mostly in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and
    southern California
  • Few spoke English
  • Barrios, or neighborhoods of Mexicans helped
    Mexican immigrants feel at home.
  • They helped each other find jobs picking lettuce,
    tomatoes, and grapes.

30
Mexicans Mistreated
  • Like other immigrants, they were treated
    unfairly.
  • Some were beaten and killed.

31
European Immigrants
  • LARGEST GROUP of immigrants.
  • Nearly 16 million came between 1890 and 1920
  • Britain, Ireland, Germany, Norway, and Sweden
  • Italy, Greece, Poland, Austria, Hungary, Armenia,
    and Russia

32
A Better Life in America
  • Poor and unhappy in their homelands.
  • Wanted a better life.
  • Came on ships
  • Ellis Island in New York
  • Most had to live with relatives or lived in
    crowded apartment houses called tenements.
  • Very low wages everyone had to work.

33
Same Prejudice
  • Like other immigrants, Europeans were sometimes
    treated badly.
  • Sometimes even other immigrants who were already
    here were unkind to them because they didnt want
    them to get their jobs.

34
Becoming a Citizen
  • No matter how bad it might be, most immigrants
    wanted to become a U.S. citizen.
  • They could then take part and vote and serve on
    juries in court.

35
Naturalization
  • Process for becoming a citizen
  • Had to live in U.S. for five years
  • Had to pass a test about the government and
    history of the United States.
  • Had to answer in English.
  • Had to take an oath of allegiance, or loyalty to
    U.S.

36
Migration by African Americans
  • Many African Americans moved west after the Civil
    War.
  • Later, however many moved to the North.
  • Settled in industrial cities to work in the
    factories.

37
The Great Migration
  • Why did they move North?
  • Farm workers in south suffering from floods, and
    an insect called the boll weevil. Cotton crops
    had been destroyed.
  • Children had to work all day in the field so they
    often got very little education.
  • Many factory jobs available in the North.

38
Life in the North
  • Better than the south for most
  • Living conditions were still poor
  • Lived in crowded neighborhoods
  • Faced prejudice just like in the south
  • GOOD PART
  • Children went to school
  • Parents could vote
  • Nearly half still live in the North and West

39
The Growth of Cities
  • Chapter 5 Lesson 4

40
City Problems
  • Overcrowded tenemants
  • Disease spread rapidly
  • Insects and rates everywhere because garbage pick
    up was awful
  • Fire Danger
  • Wood buildings
  • Few full-time fire departments.
  • Chicago fire of 1871

41
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42
City Problems (cont)
  • Crime
  • More than police could handle
  • Gangs sometimes took over neighborhoods

43
Help for the Cities Poor
  • People tried to help fix problems
  • Jane Addams
  • Hull House settlement house (Community Center)
  • Provided kindergarten for children
  • Classes on sewing, cooking, and English
  • Helped try to do away with child labor
  • Tried to improve health and safety conditions in
    mills and factories

44
Hull House
45
More Help for the Poor
  • Janie Porter Barrett
  • African American teacher
  • Settlement house in Virginia
  • Lillian Wald
  • Henry Street Settlement in New York City
  • By 1900, over 100 Settlement Houses were open in
    American cities!!!

46
The Changing City
  • The Good Stuff Cities Offered
  • Parks
  • Theaters
  • Schools
  • Zoos
  • Railroad stations
  • Tall office Buildings

47
William Jenneys Skyscraper
  • Used steel frames instead of bricks
  • Like a steel skeleton
  • Built the first skyscraper in 1885 in Chicago

48
Elevators Going Up?
  • 1st electric elevator put into a skyscraper in
    New York City in 1889

49
Transportation Needed
  • Needed a way to get to work faster
  • Had been using streetcars pulled by horses
  • Andrew S. Hallidie invented the CABLE CARsteam
    powered
  • Frank Sprague built electric cable carcalled a
    trolley

50
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