Title: Business, Labor, and Technology in the Gilded Age
1Business, Labor, and Technology in the Gilded Age
2The Gilded Age
- The term "Gilded Age" was coined by Mark Twain
and Charles Dudley in their 1873 novel The Gilded
Age A Tale of Today. - It generally refers to the decades between the
end of reconstruction and the turn of the century
(about 1870 to 1900). - It was a time of unprecedented industrial
growth, boom and bust economy, tumultuous
politics, and a wave of immigration. - It is sometimes referred to as the "Second
Industrial Revolution."
3Some Gilded Age Political Cartoons
- The word "monopoly" could characterize this era,
in which a few trusts and individuals thrived and
amassed fortunes while many Americans lived in
poverty and lost their personal autonomy to the
corporate machine. - The Gilded Age was a formative period in American
history, in which the standards for modern
business and economics were just beginning to
take shape.
4Business, Labor, and Technology in the Gilded
Age Timeline
- 1868 Congress enacts an 8-hour workday for
workers employed by the government. - 1869 The transcontinental railroad is completed.
- 1870 Rockefeller forms Standard Oil of Ohio
- 1873 The Financial Panic of 1873 begins. 5,183
business fail. - 1876 Bell patents the telephone.
- 1877 Edison invents the phonograph.
- 1879 Edison invents the light bulb
- 1894 The American Railway Unions strike and
boycott of Pullman cars end in violence. - 1886 The Haymarket riot occurs in Chicago
following a demonstration of over 300,000 workers
for 8 hour work days. - American Federation of Labor Founded.
- 1890 Sherman Anti-Trust Act is passed and
promptly ignored. - 1892 The Homestead Strike at one of Andrew
Carnegies steel works ends in violence.
5"Robber Barons" or "Captains of Industry"?
- Individual tycoons played a pivotal role in
making the US the leading industrialized nation
in the world . - The debate continues over whether these men were
greedy and corrupt "robber barons" or innovative
and enterprising "captains of industry. - Each were instrumental in the "corporate
revolution" of the time period, in which new
business practices led to the industrial
advantages of economies of scale.
6J.P. Morgan
- JP Morgan was one the most influential and
powerful figures in the financial world. - His philosophy was that only ruthless competition
would lead economic stability. - He began a series of consolidations in the
railroad and other industries, leading the
formation of colossal corporations including US
Steel and General Electric. - The cool and rational Morgan was a avid art
collector and once served as President of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Morgan preferred not to be photographed!
7Jay Gould
- Railroad entrepreneur Jay Gould considered
himself to be one the most hated men of the 19th
century. - Gould was the archetypal "robber baron,"
constantly mired in scandal and corruption. - One of his major achievements was helping Western
Union ascend to dominance in the telegraph
industry.
8J.D. Rockefeller
- Rockefeller built a massive fortune in the oil
industry using practices including swallowing up
competitors and negotiating exclusive deals with
railroad companies. - In 1911, Standard Oil's monopoly was dissolved in
a Supreme Court decision based on the 1890
Sherman Anti-Trust Act. - Rockefeller was often maligned in the press and
some perceive him as one of the most hated
figures of his day. - By the time of his death, Rockefeller, a devout
Baptist, had given away over 500 million in
philanthropic pursuits.
9Standard Oil
Next!, 1904
- Standard Oil employed vertical and horizontal
integration tactics on a grand scale to grow the
business into a monopoly that controlled
virtually all the oil production in the nation. - In 1882, the company combined its interests
across dozens of states into a trust. - John D. Rockefeller, the company's president,
became the richest man in the world for a time,
earning him both the admiration and disdain of
ordinary Americans.
10Rockefeller on Industrial Combinations (1899)
- It is too late to argue about advantages of
industrial combinations. They are a necessity.
Their chief advantages are - 1. Command of necessary capital.
- 2. Extension of limits of business.
- 3. Increase of number of persons interested in
the business. - 4. Economy in the business.
- 5. Improvements and economies which are derived
from knowledge of many interested persons of
wide experience. - 6. Power to give the public improved products
at less prices and still make a profit for the
stockholders. - 7. Permanent work and good wages for laborers.
- The dangers are that the power may be abused
this fact is no more of an argument against
combinations than the fact that steam may explode
is an argument against steam. Steam is necessary
and can be made comparatively safe. Combination
is necessary and its abuses can be minimized
most legislative attempts have been an effort not
to control but to destroy hence their futility.
11Andrew Carnegie
- Andrew Carnegie, a Scottish immigrant, is known
for being a truly self-made man. - Though brilliant in business, workers and labor
unions found him dismissive of their concerns. - At the turn of the century, he sold his steel
company to JP Morgan (who integrated it into the
mammoth US Steel) and dedicated his time and
fortune to philanthropy. - He famously wrote, "the man who dies rich, dies
disgraced."
12The Steel Industry
- Carnegie's steel mills set new standards for the
steel industry. Including strategies to increase
efficiency, cut costs, vertically integrate, and
invest in new technology. - Steel was produced at profoundly reduced prices,
which made engineering feats like bridges and
tall buildings more affordable. - His obsession with cutting costs translated to
low wages and dangerous working conditions for
laborers. - J.P. Morgan bought out Carnegie's business and
integrated it into U.S. Steel, which became the
world's first billion-dollar corporation in 1901.
The red line indicates that Carnegie produced 30
of steel in the country. Notice the spike after
1896.
13The Steel Industry
14The Steel Industry
Many companies incorporated by U.S. Steel
(vertical integration), as well as related
industries absorbed by the company (horizontal
integration).
15Andrew Carnegie and The Gospel of Wealth
- The spectacular wealth of some industrialists was
sometimes rationalized by the belief that they
were doing good for society. Carnegie, one of
the most generous philanthropists of his day,
wrote in defense of the successful man who
acquires a vast fortune - Thus is the problem of Rich and Poor to be
solved. The laws of accumulation will be left
free the laws of distribution free.
Individualism will continue, but the millionaire
will be but a trustee for the poor
administering wealth for the community far
better than it could or would have done for
itself. the man who dies leaving behind him
millions of available wealth, which was his to
administer during life, will pass away unwept,
unhonored, and unsung Of such as these the
public verdict will then be "The man who dies
thus rich dies disgraced.
16Social Darwinism
- The term "Social Darwinism" refers to a popular
pseudo-scientific justification for racism - It claims that the biological theories of
evolution and natural selection can also be
applied to human society. - It implies that variations between ethnic or
racial groups are deterministic of their social
rank and those inherently inferior to others
should be left to die out as a result of their
own incompetence. - It was a popular view amongst the intellegencia
of the day, perhaps because of its scientific
veneer.
17The Changing Status of Labor
- A hallmark of the late 19th and early 20th
centuries is the expanding output of American
industry. - Mechanization reduced the prices of manufactured
goods, but wages fell and workers did repetitive
tasks for long hours under strict supervision. - The artisanal ideal of independence eroded with
the growth of mass-production. - Compensation through "store pay" and "scrip
wages," redeemable only at the store owned by the
employer, proliferated.
18Child Labor
- Industrialization, the tumultuous economy, and
the influx of poor immigrants made cheap child
labor an institution in all kinds of industries
and occupations. - Up to 25 of children were employed in
manufacturing by 1910. - As the Progressive Era dawned, reformers began
addressing this issue.
19The Knights of Labor
- As corporations gained more power and
specialization and mechanization of labor
undermined the status of the skilled laborer,
workers sought to organize. - The Knights of Labor was founded as a secret
organization in 1869. - They garnered opposition from the more prevalent
craft unions because they included anyone from
any industry, including African Americans and
women. - They espoused a utopian vision for the future and
advocated social reforms. - Membership peaked in the 1880's. Many deserted
the Knights because they felt they could get more
done in a more narrowly focused, aggressive
organization.
20Preamble to Constitution of the Knights of Labor
- The recent alarming development and aggression
of aggregated wealth, which will invariably lead
to the pauperization and hopeless degradation of
the toiling masses, render it imperative, if we
desire to enjoy the blessings of life, that a
check should be placed upon its power and a
system adopted which will secure to the laborer
the fruits of his toil and as this much-desired
object can only be accomplished by the thorough
unification of labor, and the united efforts of
those who obey the divine injunction that "In the
sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat bread," we have
formed the Noble Order of the Knights of Labor
With a view of securing the organization and
direction, by cooperative effort, of the power of
the industrial classes calling upon all who
believe in securing "the greatest good to the
greatest number" to aid and assist us
21The Haymarket Affair
- Workers rallied around the idea of an 8 hour
workday. - On May 1, 1886, the largest spontaneous labor
demonstration in the nation's history occurred in
Chicago. - Two days later, police shot and killed 2 striking
unionists demonstrating against "scabs. - A bomb exploded at Haymarket Square as police
tried to break up a demonstration against the
shooting of the unionists. - Mass arrests of radicals followed and 8
anarchists were convicted of the bombing under
questionable circumstances. - The incidents renewed fears of radicalism and led
some employers to develop blacklists and
strengthen their resolve against strikers'
demands.
22The Haymarket Affair
23The American Federation of Labor
- The American Federation of Labor was founded in
1886 by Samuel Gompers as an alliance of craft
unions comprised of mostly skilled workers. - The AFL focused on concrete, labor-related goals
like increased wages and the right to collective
bargaining. - Unlike the Knights of Labor, the AFL did not seek
to overturn the industrial wage and hour system
in favor of a new social order. - The organization became the voice of "mainstream"
American labor. - The AFL remained the most powerful labor
organization until 1955, when it merged with the
CIO.
Gompers was President of the AFL (except one
year) from 1886 to 1924.
24Selected Gompers Quotes
- It is a fact that the employing class . . .
endeavor to get the greatest amount of labor for
the smallest wages for which they can get
employees. workers have always endeavored to
get the greatest amount of money for the smallest
amount of work. Under these conditions it is
impossible for capitalists and laborers to have
common interests. ... - There seems to me no money is more
dishonorable to us as a nation than that
insatiable greed which drags the children into
the mills and factories and grinds their young
bones into dollars. the child of the nineteenth
century should be something more than a machine.
- A strike on any scale is merely a trial of
industrial strength, an application of the law of
"supply and demand," How can a society based
on free contract and free competition object to
such a method of determining the comparative
strength and endurance of capital and labor? - Freedom of speech is the safety valve of
society if it is obstructed, there will be an
explosion somewhere. It is dangerous to tamper
with this right of ours.
25The Pullman Strike
This paycheck amounted to 12 cents after rent and
expenses were deducted.
- The 1894 Pullman Strike is the quintessence of
labor-management relations during the era
corporate tycoons that was the Gilded Age. - George Pullman, the owner of the Pullman Palace
Car Company, provided and controlled his
employee's lives. They lived in the town of
Pullman, attended Pullman schools and churches,
shopped at Pullman Stores, and used Pullman
utilities. - As one employee famously described it, ""We are
born in a Pullman house, fed from the Pullman
shops, taught in the Pullman school, catechized
in the Pullman Church, and when we die we shall
go to the Pullman Hell."
26The Pullman Strike
- When Pullman slashed wages to protect profits
without lowering prices and rent , the American
Railway Union (ARU) led by Eugene V. Debs
initiated a massive strike and a boycott of
trains using Pullman cars. - The US Attorney General obtained a court
injunction against the workers for interfering
with the delivery of the mail and President
Cleveland sent federal troops to enforce the
order and crush the strike. - Violence claimed the lives of over 30 people by
the end of the strike. - It was the first use of federal troops to break a
strike.
27The Pullman Strike
- The strikers were forced to return to work on
Pullman's terms, Debs served a prison sentence
for disobeying the injunction, and the ARU was
disbanded. - The hated George Pullman died 2 years later in
fear that his tomb would be defiled.
28"What is the chief end of man?--to get rich. In
what way?--dishonestly if we can honestly if we
must."-- Mark Twain, 1871
29- Citations
- Slide 2 http//us.history.wisc.edu/hist102/lectur
es/lecture04.html - Slide 3 http//www.library.gsu.edu/spcoll/spcolli
mages/labor/19clabor/Labor20Prints/80-39_1.jpg
Slide 4http//www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/historyon
line/gildedage_chron.cfm - Slide 5 http//www.library.gsu.edu/spcoll/spcolli
mages/labor/19clabor/Labor20Prints/79-40_21.jpg - Slide 6 http//www.sbmuseart.org/siqueiros/img/mo
rgan_photo.jpg http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/1900/p
eopleevents/pande10.html - Slide 7 http//teachpol.tcnj.edu/amer_pol_hist/ti
/000000e2.jpg - Slide 8 http//history.library.ucsf.edu/imagelib/
portrait_jdrockefeller2.jpg - Slide 9 http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageStanda
rd_oil_octopus_loc_color.jpg - Slide 10 http//www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/history
online/rockefeller_industrialcombinations.cfm - Slide 11 http//www.americaslibrary.gov/assets/aa
/carnegie/aa_carnegie_subj_e.jpg - Slide 13 http//www.voteview.com/PRR_carnegie.h
tm - Slide 14 http//www.wwnorton.com/literature/image
s/maps/american16_2.jpg - Slide 15 http//facweb.furman.edu/benson/docs/ca
rnegie.htm - Slide 16 http//cla.calpoly.edu/lcall/skull-type
s.jpg - Slide 17 http//www.library.gsu.edu/spcoll/spcoll
images/labor/19clabor/Labor20Prints/80-39_1.jpg - Slide 18 http//www.mtsu.edu/kmiddlet/history/wo
men/gif/wh-child-lg.gif - Slide 19 http//www.teachersparadise.com/ency/en/
media/a/a7/kollarge.jpeg - Slide 20 http//darkwing.uoregon.edu/dreiling/k
olconstit.htm - Slide 21 http//www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects
/ftrials/haymarket/attention.html