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Title: THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF AMERICA


1
THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF AMERICA
2
THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF AMERICA
  • With a stride that astonished statisticians, the
    conquering hosts of business enterprise swept
    over the continent.
  • 25 years after Lincolns death, America had
    become, in the quantity and value of her
    products, the first mfg nation of the world.
  • What England had accomplished in a hundred
    years, the USA had achieved in half the time so
    wrote historians Charles and Mary Beard in the
    1920s.
  • But Americas rise to industrial supremacy was
    not as sudden as some observers and historians
    have suggested.

3
THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF AMERICA
  • The nation had been building a mfg economy since
    early in the 19th century, and industry was
    established before the Civil War.
  • But the accomplishments of the 19th century
    overshadowed all that came earlier.
  • Those years witnessed nothing less than the
    transformation of the national economy.

4
THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF AMERICA
  • The remarkable growth did much to increase the
    wealth and improve the lives of many Americans.
  • But the benefits were not universal.

5
THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF AMERICA
  • While the industrial titans and a growing middle
    class were enjoying a prosperity without
    precedent in the nations history, workers,
    farmers, and others were experiencing a
    disorienting and often painful transition that
    slowly edged the USA toward a great economic and
    political crisis.

6
SOURCES OF INDUSTRIAL GROWTH
7
SOURCES OF INDUSTRIAL GROWTH
  • Many factors contributed to the growth of
    American industry
  • ABUNDANT RAW MATERIALS
  • A LARGE AND GROWING LABOR FORCE
  • A SURGE IN TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION
  • THE EMERGENCE OF THE ENTREPRENEURS
  • LASSIEZ-FAIRE ECONOMICS/HIGH TARIFFS
  • A GREAT AND EXPANDING DOMESTIC MARKET FOR
    PRODUCTS OF MFG,.

8
THE INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
  • The rapid expansion of factory production,
    mining, and railroad construction in all parts of
    the country except the South signaled a
    transformation of America a country centered on
    the small farmer and artisan workshop to a
    mature industrial society.
  • The nation marveled at the triumph of the new
    economy.
  • Philosopher John Dewey there has never been a
    revolution in history, so rapid, so extensive, so
    complete.

9
THE INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
  • 1913 The US produced 1/3 of the worlds
    industrial output more than the total of GB,
    FR, and Germany combined.
  • Small-scale craft production still flourished in
    many trades, and armies of urban workers, male
    and female, toiled in their homes or in the
    households of others as outworkers or domestics.
  • Half of all industrial workers labored in plants
    with over 250 employees.
  • On the eve of the Civil War, the first industrial
    revolution, centered on the textile industry, had
    transformed N.E., into a center of mfg.
  • But, otherwise, the US was still primarily an
    agricultural nation.

10
THE INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
  • By 1880 For the first time, the Census Bureau
    found a majority of the workforce engaged in
    non-farming jobs.
  • By 1890 2/3 of Americans worked for wages,
    rather than owning a farm, business, or craft
    shop.
  • Drawn to factories by the promise of employment,
    a new working class emerged in these years.
  • 1870-1920 Almost 11 million American moved from
    the farm to the city, and another 25 million
    immigrants arrived from overseas.

11
THE INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
  • Most mfg now took place in industrial cities
    (F.R./N.B.)
  • NYC With its new skycrapers and hundreds of
    thousands of workers in all sorts of mfg
    establishments, symbolized dynamic growth.
  • Its population exceeded 3.4 million.
  • The city financed industrialization and westward
    expansion, its banks and stock exchange funneling
    capital to railroads, mines, and factories.

12
THE INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
  • But the heartland of the second industrial
    revolution was the region around the Great Lakes,
    with its factories producing iron and steel,
    machinery, chemicals, and packages food.
  • Pittsburg Had become the worlds center of iron
    and steel mfg.
  • Chicago By 1900 the nations second-largest
    city, with 1.7 million people, was home to
    factories producing steel and farm machinery, and
    giant stockyards where cattle were processed into
    meat products for shipment in refrigerated cars.
  • Smaller industrial cities proliferated, often
    concentrating on a single industry cast-iron
    stoves in Troy, NY, silk in Paterson, NJ, and
    furniture in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

13
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • The rapid emergence of new technologies and the
    discovery of new materials and productive
    processes were prerequisites to late 19th century
    industrial growth.
  • In the entire history of the USA up to 1860, the
    govt., had granted only 36,000 patents.
  • 1860-1890 The figure was 440,000.
  • Americans also benefited from comparable
    technological advances in Europe.

14
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • Some of the most important innovations were in
    communications.
  • 1866 Cyrus W. Field laid a transatlantic
    telegraph to Europe.
  • During the next decade, Alexander Graham Bell
    developed the first commercially useful
    telephone.

15
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • By the 1890s, American Telephone and Telegraph
    Company, which handled Bells interests, had
    installed nearly half a million telephones in
    American cities.
  • There were other inventions that speeded the pace
    of business organization.

16
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • 1868 Christopher L. Sholes invented the
    typewriter.

17
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • 1879 James Ritty invented the cash register.

18
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • 1891 William S. Burroughs invented the
    calculating or adding machine.

19
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • Among the most revolutionary innovations in the
    1870s was electricity as a source of light and
    power.
  • Two pioneers of electrical lightening were
    Charles F. Brush and Thomas A. Edison.

20
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • Charles F. Brush devised the arc lamp for street
    illumination.

21
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • Thomas A. Edison invented the incandescent lamp
    (or light bulb) which could be used for both
    street and home lighting.

22
NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND NEW INDUSTRIES
  • Edison and others designed improved generators
    and built large power plants to furnish
    electricity to whole cities.
  • By the turn of the century, electric power was
    becoming commonplace in street railway systems,
    in elevators of urban skyscrapers, in factories,
    and increasingly in offices and homes.

23
THE RAILROAD AND THE NATIONAL MARKET
24
THE RAILROAD AND THE NATIONAL MARKET
  • The railroad made possible the second industrial
    revolution.
  • 1860-1880 The number of railroad track tripled
    and tripled again in 1920 creating a truly
    national market for mfg goods.
  • 1869 The first continental railroad completed at
    Promontory Point, UT.
  • 1890s 5 transcontinental lines transported the
    products of western mines, farms, ranches, and
    forests to eastern markets and carried mfg goods
    to the west.

25
THE RAILROAD AND THE NATIONAL MARKET
26
THE RAILROAD AND THE NATIONAL MARKET
  • The rail lines connected every state in the Union
    ands opened up an immense new national market.
  • Most important, railroad companies pioneered
    crucial aspects of large-scale corporate
    enterprise.

27
THE RAILROAD AND THE NATIONAL MARKET
  • These included the issuance of stock to meet
    their huge capital needs, the separation of
    ownership from management, the creation of
    national distribution and marketing systems, and
    the formation of new organizational and
    management structures.
  • Railroad entrepreneurs such as Collis Huntington
    of the Central Pacific RR, Jay Gould of the Union
    Pacific RR, and James Hill of the Northern
    Pacific RR faced enormous financial and
    organizational problems.

28
THE RAILROAD AND THE NATIONAL MARKET
  • To raise the staggering sums necessary for laying
    track, building engines, and buying out
    competitors, railroads at first appealed for
    generous land and loan subsidies from federal,
    state, and local governments.
  • Even so, larger lines had to borrow heavily by
    selling stocks and bonds to the public.
  • 1883 The railroads independently of the federal
    government corrected scheduling problems by
    dividing the country into 4 time zones still in
    use today.

29
THE AUTOMOBILE
30
THE AUTOMOBILE
  • 1903 Charles and Frank Duryea built the first
    gasoline-driven motor vehicle in America.
  • 1906 Henry Ford produced the first of the famous
    cars that would bear his name.

31
THE AUTOMOBILE
  • 1910 The industry had become a major force in
    the economy.
  • The automobile had begun to reshape the American
    landscape.
  • 1895 There had been only four automobiles on the
    American highways.
  • 1917 There were nearly 5 million.

32
THE SCIENCE OF PRODUCTION
33
THE SCIENCE OF PRODUCTION
  • Central to the growth of the automobile and other
    industries were changes in the techniques of
    production.
  • By the turn of the century, many industrialists
    were turning to the new principles of scientific
    management.
  • Those principles were often known as Taylorism
    after their leading theoretician Frederick Taylor.

34
THE SCIENCE OF PRODUCTION
  • Taylors ideas were controversial during his
    lifetime and have remained controversial.
  • Taylor argued that scientific management was a
    way to manage human labor to make it compatible
    with the demands of the machine age.
  • But scientific management was also a way to
    increase the employers control of the workplace,
    to make working people less independent.
  • He urged employers to reorganize the production
    process by subdividing tasks.

35
THE SCIENCE OF PRODUCTION
  • This would speed up production.
  • It would make workers more interchangeable and
    thus diminish a managers dependence on any
    particular employee.
  • And it would reduce the need for highly trained
    skilled workers.

36
THE SCIENCE OF PRODUCTION
  • If properly managed by trained experts, Taylor
    claimed, workers using modern machines could
    perform simple tasks at much greater speed,
    significantly increasing productive efficiency.

37
COMPETITION AND CONSOLIDATION
38
COMPETITION AND CONSOLIDATION
  • The economic growth during the post-Civil War
    years was dramatic and highly volatile.
  • The combination of a market flooded with goods
    and federal monetary policies that removed money
    from the national economy led to a relentless
    fall in prices.
  • The world economy suffered prolonged downturns in
    the 1870s and 1890s.
  • Indeed, before the 1930s, the years 1873-1897
    were known as the Great Depression.

39
COMPETITION AND CONSOLIDATION
  • Businesses engaged in ruthless competition.
  • Railroads and other companies tried various means
    of bringing order to a chaotic marketplace.
  • They formed pools that divided up markets
    between supposedly competing firms and fixed
    prices.
  • They established trusts which were legal
    devices whereby the affairs of several rival
    companies were managed by a single director.
  • They employed the use of interlocking
    directorates which were a means by which the
    CEOs of companies sat on the boards of other
    companies.
  • They also used holding companies which was a
    central corporate body that would buy up stocks
    if various member companies and establish direct,
    formal ownership of the corporations in the trust.

40
COMPETITION AND CONSOLIDATION
  • To avoid cutthroat competition, more and more
    corporations battled to control entire
    industries.
  • 1897-1904 Some 4,000 firms vanished into larger
    corporations that served national markets and
    exercised an unprecedented degree of control over
    the marketplace.
  • By the time the wave or mergers had been
    completed, giant corporations like U.S. Steel,
    Standard Oil, and International Harvester
    dominated major parts of the economy.

41
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
42
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARRONS
  • In an era of no personal or corporate taxes, some
    business leaders accumulated enormous fortunes
    and economic power.
  • Men, like Jay Gould and Collis Huntington, who
    reorganized and expanded the railroad and other
    industries in the 1870s and 1880s were often
    depicted by their contemporaries as villains and
    robber barons who manipulated stock markets and
    company policies to line their own pockets.
  • Some used brutal and ruthless means to accumulate
    their wealth and power.
  • But recent historians have pointed out that the
    great industrialists were a diverse group.
  • Although some were ironfisted pirates who engaged
    in fraudulent practices, others were upstanding
    businessmen who managed their companies with
    sophistication and innovation.
  • Some of their ideas were startling in their
    originality and inventiveness.

43
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • Andrew Carnegie
  • Industrial giant
  • Born in Scotland and immigrated to US in 1848
  • Ambitious and hard-working, he took a job at
    1.20 a week as a bobbin boy in a Pittsburgh
    textile mill
  • Although he worked a 60 hour week, he enrolled in
    a night course to learn bookkeeping.

44
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • He then became a Western Union messenger boy.
  • Because he had to decode the messages for every
    major business in Pittsburgh, Carnegie gained an
    insiders view of their operations.
  • 1852 He was hired as secretary and personal
    telegraph operator for the PA. Railroad.
  • 1858 He took over as head of the lines western
    division.
  • In his six years as division chief, Carnegie more
    than doubled the lines mileage and quadrupled
    its traffic.
  • 1868 Having invested his earnings in the
    railroads, hew was earning more than 56,000 a
    year from his investments, a substantial fortune
    in that era.

45
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • Early 1870s He decided to build his own steel
    mill.
  • His connections with the railroad industry, the
    countrys largest purchaser of steel, made this a
    logical choice.
  • Starting with his first mill, he introduced the
    Bessemer Process.
  • Combining this new technology with the
    cost-analysis learned from his railroad
    experiences, he became the first steelmaker to
    know the actual production cost of each ton of
    steel.
  • Carnegies philosophy Watch the costs, and the
    profits will take care of themselves.
  • From the start he priced his rails below the
    competition.
  • He then, through cost accounting and limiting
    wage increases to his workers, he lowered his
    production costs even further.
  • As output climbed, Carnegie discovered the
    benefits of virtual integration that is
    controlling every phase of the business from raw
    materials to transportation, mfg, and
    distribution.

46
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • 1890s He dominated the steel industry and had
    accumulated a fortune worth hundreds of millions
    of dollars.
  • His complex steel factories in PA, were the most
    technologically advanced in the world.
  • 1900 Carnegie Steel, employing 20,000 people,
    had become the worlds largest corporation.
  • He ran his companies with a dictatorial hand.
  • His factories operated nonstop with two 12 hour
    shifts every day except the 4th of July.

47
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • 1901 J.P. Morgan, who controlled Federal Steel
    and later finance capitalist, inquired what
    Carnegie wanted for his share of Carnegie Steel.
  • Carnegie said a half a billion dollars.
  • Morgan agreed to pay it.

48
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • Combining Carnegies companies with Federal
    Steel, Morgan set up the U.S. Steel Corporation,
    the first business capitalized at more than 1
    billion.
  • The corporation, made up of 200 member companies
    employing 168,000, marked a new scale in
    industrial enterprise.

49
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • JOHN ROCKEFELLER
  • If any name became a byword for enormous wealth,
    it was JD Rockefeller.
  • He got his start as a bookkeeper.
  • 1863 He opened his first oil refinery.
  • Like Carnegie, he had a passion for cost cutting
    and efficiency.

50
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • 1873 He became head of the Standard Oil Company.
    He scrutinized every aspect of its operation.
  • He drove out rival firms through cutthroat
    competition, arranging secret deals with railroad
    companies, and fixing prices and production
    quotas.
  • Rockefeller began with horizontal integration
    buying out competing oil refineries.
  • But, like Carnegie, he soon established a
    vertically integrated monopoly, which controlled
    the drilling, refining, storage, and distribution
    of oil.

51
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • 1880s His Standard Oil Company controlled 90 of
    the nations oil industry.
  • Rockefeller, like Carnegie, gave away much of his
    fortune establishing foundations to promote
    education and medical research.
  • Also, like Carnegie, he bitterly fought his
    employees efforts to organize unions.

52
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • These and other industrial leaders inspired among
    ordinary Americans a combination of awe,
    admiration, and hostility.
  • Depending on ones point of view, they were
    captains of industry whose energy and vision
    pushed the economy forward, or robber barons
    who wielded power without any accountability in
    an unregulated marketplace.
  • Most rose from modest backgrounds and seemed
    examples of how inventive genius and business
    sense enabled Americans to seize opportunities
    for success.
  • But their dictatorial attitudes, unscrupulous
    methods, repressive labor policies, and exercise
    of power without any democratic control led to
    fears that they were undermining political and
    economic freedom.

53
CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY OR ROBBER BARONS
  • 1894 Henry Demarest Lloyd, in Wealth Against
    Commonwealth, an expose of how JDRs Standard Oil
    Company made a mockery of economic competition
    and political democracy by manipulating the
    market and bribing legislators, declared
    concentrated wealth degraded the political
    process.
  • Liberty and monopoly cannot live together.

54
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
55
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
  • As the US matured into an industrial economy,
    American struggled to make sense of the new
    social order.
  • Debates over political economy engaged the
    attention of millions of Americans, reaching far
    beyond the academic world into the public sphere.
  • This broad discussion produced thousands of
    books, pamphlets, and articles on such technical
    issues as land taxation and currency reform, as
    well as widespread debate over the social and
    ethical implications of economic change.

56
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
  • Many Americans sensed that something had gone
    wrong in the nations social development.
  • Talks of better classes, respectable classes,
    and dangerous classes, dominated public
    discussions, and bitter strife seemed to have
    become the rule.

57
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATIONTHE WORKERS
  • Striking as it was, the countrys economic growth
    distributed its benefits unevenly.
  • For most workers, economic insecurity remained a
    basic fact of life.
  • During the depressions of the 1870s and 1890s,
    millions of workers lost their jobs or were
    forced to accept reductions of pay.
  • The tramp became a familiar figure on the
    social landscape as thousands of men took to the
    roads in search of work.

58
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION THE WORKERS
  • Many industrial workers labored 60 hour weeks
    with no pensions, compensation for injuries, or
    protections against unemployment.
  • Although American workers received higher wages
    than their counterparts in Europe, they also
    experienced more dangerous working conditions.
  • 1880-1890 An average of 35,000 workers perished
    each year in factory and mine accidents, the
    highest rate in industrial world.

59
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATON THE WORKERS
  • Most strikes for higher wages failed, as
    employers found it easy to call on the unemployed
    to take the strikers jobs and bring in public and
    private forces to intimidate workers.
  • Much of the working class remained desperately
    poor and to survive needed income from all family
    members.

60
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATIONTHE WORKERS
  • 1888 The Chicago Tribune published a series of
    articles by reporter Nell Cusack under the title
    City Slave Girls, exposing wretched conditions
    among the growing number of women working for
    wages in the citys homes, factories, and
    sweatshops.
  • The articles unleashed a flood of letters to the
    editor from women workers.
  • One women singled out domestic service still
    the largest employment for women as a slaves
    life, with long hours, late and early, seven
    days in the week, bossed and ordered about as
    before the war.

61
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATIONTHE WORKERS
  • 1881 The MA Bureau of Labor Statistics reported
    that virtually every worker it interviewed in
    Fall River, the nations largest center of
    textile production, complained of overwork, poor
    housing, and tyrannical employers.
  • For their part, mfgs claimed their workingmen
    were the scum of the English and Irish, whose
    complaints reflected nothing more than a
    hereditary feeling of discontent.

62
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION A CLASS SOCIETY
63
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION A CLASS SOCIETY
  • At the other end of the economic spectrum, the
    era witnessed an unprecedented accumulation of
    wealth.
  • Class divisions became more and more visible.
  • The rich increasingly resided in their own
    exclusive neighborhoods and vacationed among
    their own class at exclusive resorts like
    Newport, RI.

64
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION A CLASS SOCIETY
  • The growing urban middle class of professionals,
    office workers, and small businessmen moved to
    new urban and suburban neighborhoods linked to
    central business districts by streetcars and
    commuter railways.
  • The literature and scholarly works of the time
    portrayed the eras class divisions.

65
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION A CLASS SOCIETY
  • 1905 The House of Mirth was published by Edith
    Wharton.
  • She argued that passion for money dominated
    society.
  • Her book traced the difficulties of Lily Bart, a
    young woman of modest means pressured by her
    mother and NY high society to barter her beauty
    for marriage to a rich husband in a world where
    to be poor amounted to disgrace.

66
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZTION A CLASS SOCIETY
  • 1899 Thorstein Veblen, an economist and social
    historian, published The Theory of the Leisure
    Class.
  • It was a devastating critique of an upper-class
    culture focused on conspicuous consumption
    that is, spending money not on needed or even
    desired goods, but simply to demonstrate the
    possession of wealth.

67
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZTION A CLASS SOCIETY
  • 1886 Matthew Smiths best-seller Sunshine and
    Shadow in New York, was published.
  • It opened with an engraving that contrasted
    department store magnate Alexander T. Stewarts
    two-million dollar mansion with housing in the
    citys slums.

68
THE PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION A CLASS SOCIETY
  • 1890 Jacob Riis published How the Other Half
    Lives.
  • It offered a shocking account of living
    conditions among the urban poor, complete with
    photographs of apartments in dark, airless,
    over-crowded tenement houses.

69
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
70
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • The idea of the natural superiority of some
    groups to others, which before the Civil War had
    been invoked to justify slavery in an otherwise
    free society, now reemerged in the vocabulary of
    modern science to explain success and failure of
    individuals and social classes.
  • Most tycoons liked to claim that they had
    attained their wealth and power through hard
    work, acquisitiveness, and thrift.
  • Those who succeeded, they argued, deserved their
    success.
  • Those who failed had earned their failure
    through their own laziness, stupidity, or
    carlessness.

71
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • God gave me my money, explained JDR, expressing
    the assumption that riches were a reward for
    worthiness.
  • Let us remember, said a prominent Protestant
    minister, that there is not a poor person in the
    United States, who was not made poor by his own
    shortcomings.

72
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • Such assumptions became the basis of a popular
    social theory of the late 19th century Social
    Darwinism.
  • In effect it was the application of Charles
    Darwins laws of evolution and natural selection
    among the species.
  • Just as only the fittest survived in the process
    of evolution, so in human society only the
    fittest individuals survived and flourished in
    the marketplace.
  • In a highly oversimplified form, language
    borrowed from Darwin, such as natural
    selection, the struggle for existence, and
    survival of the fittest, entered public
    discussion of social problems during the
    industrial era.
  • According to Social Darwinism, evolution was as
    natural a process in human society as in nature,
    and govt must not interfere.
  • Especially misguided, in this view were efforts
    to uplift those at the bottom of the social
    order, such as laws regulating conditions of work
    or public assistance to the poor.

73
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • Even the depressions of the 1870s and 1890s did
    not shake the widespread view that the poor were
    essentially responsible for their own fate.
  • Charity workers and local governments spent much
    time and energy distinguishing the deserving
    poor (those, like widows and orphans, destitute
    through no fault of their own) from the
    undeserving poor, a far larger number.

74
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • Failure to advance in society was widely thought
    to indicate a lack of character, an absence of
    self-reliance and determination in the face of
    adversity.
  • 1900s Half the nations largest cities offered
    virtually no public relief, except to persons
    living in poorhouses.
  • To improve their lot, according to the philosophy
    of Social Darwinism, workers should practice
    personal economy, keep out of debt, and educate
    their children in the principles of the
    marketplace, not to look to the government for
    aid.

75
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • The English philosopher Herbert Spencer was the
    first and most important proponent of the theory.
  • Society, he argued, benefited from the
    elimination of the unfit and the survival of the
    strong and talented.
  • Spencers books were popular in America in the
    1870s and 1880s.

76
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • The leading American proponent of the theory was
    William Graham Sumner a Yale professor.
  • For Sumner, freedom meant the security given to
    each man that he can acquire, enjoy, and dispose
    of property exclusively as he chooses, without
    interference from other persons or from
    government.
  • Freedom thus defined required a frank acceptance
    of inequality.

77
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • Society, according to Sumner, faced two and only
    two alternatives liberty, inequality, survival
    of the fittest not liberty, equality, survival
    of the unfittest.
  • 1883 Sumner published What Social Classes Owe To
    Each Other.
  • His answer, essentially, was nothing.
  • In a free state, no one was entitled to claim
    help from, and cannot be charged to offer help
    to another.
  • Government, Sumner believed, existed to protect
    the property of men and honor of women, not to
    upset social arrangements decreed by nature.

78
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • Many industrialists seized on the theories of
    Spencer and Sumner to justify their own power.
  • JDR The growth of a large business is merely
    the survival of the fittest. This is not an evil
    tendency in business. It is merely the working
    out of the law of nature and the law of God.
  • Carnegie, who became the leading exponent of
    Social Darwinism among American industrialists,
    later described his reaction on first reading
    Spencer I remember that light came as in a
    flood and all was clear.

79
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • Social Darwinism appealed to businessmen because
    it seemed to legitimize their success and confirm
    their virtues.
  • It appealed to them because it placed their
    activities within the context of traditional
    American ideas of freedom and individualism.
  • Above all, it appealed to them because it
    justified their tactics.
  • Social Darwinist insisted that all attempts by
    labor to raise wages by forming unions and all
    endeavors by govt., to regulate economic
    activities would fail, because economic life was
    controlled by natural law, the law of
    competition.
  • And Social Darwinism coincided with another law
    that seemed to justify business practices and
    business dominance the law of supply and demand.

80
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • The law of supply and demand was defined by Adam
    Smith and the classical economists.
  • The economic system, they argued, was like a
    great and delicate machine functioning by natural
    and automatic rules, by the invisible hand of
    market forces.

81
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • The law of supply and demand was one of these
    rules.
  • It determined all economic values prices,
    wages, rents, interest rates at a level that
    was just to all concerned.
  • Supply and demand worked because human beings
    were essentially economic creatures who
    understood and pursued their own interests, and
    because they operated in a free market regulated
    only by competition.

82
SOCIAL DARWINISM IN AMERICA
  • But Social Darwinism and the ideas of classical
    economists did not have very much to do with the
    realities of the corporate economy.
  • At the same time that businessmen were
    celebrating the virtues of competition and the
    free market, they were actively seeking to
    protect themselves from competition and replace
    the natural workings of the marketplace with
    control by great combinations/monopolies/
  • trusts
  • JDRs Standard Oil monopoly was the clearest
    example of the effort to free an enterprise from
    competition.
  • Many businessmen made similar attempts on a
    smaller scale.
  • Vicious competitive battle something Spencer
    and Sumner celebrated and called a source of
    healthy progress was in fact the very thing
    that American businessmen most feared and tried
    to eliminate.

83
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
84
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
  • Some businessmen attempted to temper the harsh
    philosophy of Social Darwinism with a more
    gentle, if in some ways equally self-serving
    idea the gospel of wealth.
  • People of great wealth, advocates of this idea
    argued, had not only great power by great
    responsibilities.
  • It was their duty to use their reaches to advance
    social progress.

85
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
  • 1901 Carnegie elaborate on the creed in a book
    entitled The Gospel of Wealth.
  • He wrote that the wealthy should consider all
    revenues in excess of their own needs as trust
    funds to be used for the good of the community.
  • The person of wealth, he said, was the mere
    trustee and agent for his poorer brethren.

86
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
  • Carnegie was only one of many great
    industrialists who devoted large parts of their
    fortunes to philanthropic works much of it to
    libraries and schools, institutions be believed
    would help the poor to help themselves.

87
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
  • The notion of private wealth as a public blessing
    existed alongside another popular concept the
    notion of great wealth as something available to
    all.
  • Russell Conwell, a Baptist minister, became the
    most prominent spokesman for the idea by
    delivering one lecture Acres of Diamonds more
    than 6,000 times between 1880 and 1900.

88
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
  • Conwell told a series of stories, which he
    claimed were true, of individuals who had found
    opportunities for extraordinary wealth in their
    own backyards.
  • One such story involved a modest farmer who
    discovered a vast diamond mine in his own fields
    in the course of working his land.
  • I say to you, he told his rapt audiences, that
    you have acres of diamonds beneath you right
    here that the men and women sitting here have
    within their reach opportunities to get largely
    wealthy. I say that you ought to get rich, and
    that it is your duty to get rich.
  • Most of the millionaires in the country, he
    claimed inaccurately, had begun on the lowest
    rung of the economic ladder and had worked their
    way to success.
  • Every industrious individual had a chance to do
    likewise.

89
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
  • Horatio Alger was the most famous promoter of the
    success story.
  • Alger was originally a minister in a small town
    in MA., but was driven from his pulpit as a
    result of a sexual scandal.
  • He moved to NY, where he wrote his celebrated
    novels more than 100 in all, which sold more
    than 20 million copies.

90
THE GOSPEL OF WEALTH
  • The titles varied Andy Grants Pluck, Ragged
    Dick, Tom the Bootblack, Sink or Swim.
  • But the story and message were the same A poor
    boy from a small town went to the big city to
    seek his fortune. By work, perseverance, and
    luck, he became rich.

91
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
92
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • Alongside the celebrations of competition, the
    justifications for great wealth, and the
    legitimization of the existing order stood a
    group of alternative philosophies, challenging
    the corporate ethos and at times capitalism
    itself.
  • Alarmed by fear of class warfare and the growing
    power of concentrated capital, social thinkers
    offered numerous plans for change.
  • In the last quarter of the century, over 150
    utopian or cataclysmic novels appeared,
    predicting that social conflict would end either
    in a new harmonious social order or total
    catastrophe.

93
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • One such philosophies emerged in the work of the
    sociologist Lester Frank War.
  • Ward was a Darwinist but he rejected the
    application of Darwinian laws to human society.
  • 1883 He published Dynamic Sociology.

94
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • He agued that civilization was not governed by
    natural selection but by human intelligence,
    which was capable of shaping society as it
    wished.
  • He believed that an active government engaged in
    positive planning was societys best hope.
  • The people, through their government, could
    intervene in the economy and adjust it to serve
    their needs.

95
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • Another social thinker was Laurence Gronlund.
  • His book The Cooperative Commonwealth was the
    first to popularize socialist ideas for an
    American audience.
  • Socialism the belief that private control of
    economic enterprises should be replaced by govt
    ownership in order to ensure a fairer
    distribution of the benefits of the wealth
    produced became a major political force in
    Western Europe in the late 19th century.

96
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • In the USA, however, where access to private
    property was widely considered essential to
    individual freedom, socialist beliefs were
    largely confined to immigrants, whose writings,
    frequently in foreign languages, attracted little
    attention.
  • Most Americans saw socialism as a European import
    irrelevant to the New World.
  • Gronlund began the process of its Americanization.
  • He explained in easy-to-understand prose such
    socialist concepts as the labor theory of value,
    the necessity of class conflict between workers
    and employers, the benefits of making the public
    good rather than private profit the aim of
    economic activity, and the inevitability of the
    concentration of ownership (wealth) in fewer and
    fewer hands under capitalism.

97
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • But while Karl Marx had predicted that socialism
    would come into being via a working-class
    revolution, Gronlund portrayed it as an end
    result of a process of peaceful evolution, not
    violent upheaval.
  • He thus made socialism seem more acceptable to
    middle-class Americans who desired an end to
    class conflict and the restoration of social
    harmony.

98
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • 1879 Henry George published Progress and
    Poverty.
  • Although it had no direct impact on govt.,
    policy, Progress and Poverty, commanded more
    public attention than any book on economics in
    American history.
  • George was an antislavery editor in CA.
  • He had witnessed firsthand the rapid
    monopolization of land in the state.

99
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • His book began with a famous statement of the
    problem suggested in its title the growth of
    squalor and misery along with material
    progress.
  • His solution was a single tax which would
    replace other taxes with a tax on increases in
    the value of real estate.
  • The single tax would be so high that it would
    prevent speculation in both urban and rural land.
  • This, he argued, would make land readily
    available to aspiring businessmen and to urban
    working men seeking to become farmers.

100
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • No one knows how many of Georges readers
    actually believe in this way of solving the
    nations ills.
  • But millions responded to his clear explanation
    of economic relationships and his stirring
    account of how the social distress long thought
    to be confined to the Old World had made its
    appearance in the New World.
  • Freedom lay at the heart of Georges analysis.
  • The proper name for the political movement
    spawned by his book, he once wrote, was freedom
    men, who would do for the question industrial
    slavery what the Republican Party had done for
    the slavery of blacks.

101
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • George rejected the traditional equation of
    liberty with ownership of land since the single
    tax, in effect, made land the common property
    of the entire society.
  • But, in other ways, his definition of freedom was
    thoroughly in keeping with mainstream thought.
  • Despite calling for a single massive public
    intervention in the economy, George saw govt., as
    a repressive power, whose functions in the
    co-operative society of the future would be
    limited to enhancing the quality of life.
  • His vision rested on the familiar foundation of
    the sovereign individual.

102
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • Not until the early 20th century would socialism
    become a significant presence in American life.
  • 1888 Edward Bellamy published Looking Backward.
  • As Gronlund noted, the most important result of
    his book was to prepare an audience for Bellamys
    book, which promoted socialist ideas while
    ignoring that name.

103
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • But Bellamy wrote of nationalism, not socialism.
  • He lived his entire life in the small industrial
    city of Chicopee Falls, MA.
  • In Looking Backward, his main character falls
    asleep in the late 19th century only to awaken in
    the year 2000, in a world where cooperation has
    replaced class strife, excessive individualism,
    and cutthroat competition.

104
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • Inequality has been banished and with it then
    idea of liberty as a condition to be achieved
    through individual striving free of govt.,
    restraint.
  • Freedom, Bellamy insisted, was a social
    condition, resting on interdependence, not
    autonomy.
  • From todays perspective, Bellamys utopia with
    citizens obligated to labor for years in an
    Industrial Army controlled by a single Great
    Trust seems a chilling social blueprint.
  • Yet the book inspired the creation of hundreds of
    nationalists clubs devoted to bringing into
    existence the world of 2000 and left a profound
    mark on a generation of reformers and
    intellectuals.

105
ALTERNATIVE AMERICAS
  • Bellamy held out the hope of retaining the
    material abundance made possible by industrial
    capitalism while eliminating inequality.
  • In proposing that the state guarantee economic
    security to all, he proposed a far-reaching
    expansion of the idea of freedom.

106
THE SOCIAL GOSPEL
107
THE SOCIAL GOSPEL
  • By 1888, when Looking Backward appeared, Social
    Darwinism and the laissez-faire definition of
    freedom were under attack from the labor
    movement, middle-class reformers and writers as
    well as clergymen shocked by the inequities in
    the emerging industrial order.
  • Most of the eras Protestant preachers
    concentrated on attacking individual sins like
    drinking and Sabbath-breaking and saw noting
    immoral about the pursuit of riches.

108
THE SOCIAL GOSPEL
  • But the outlines of what came to be called the
    Social Gospel were taking shape in the writings
    of Walter Rauschenbusch, a Baptist minister in
    NYC, and others.
  • They insisted that freedom and spiritual
    development required an equalization of wealth
    and power and that unbridled competition mocked
    the Christian ideal of brotherhood.

109
THE SOCIAL GOSPEL
  • The Social Gospel Movement began as an effort to
    reform Protestant churches by expanding their
    appeal in poor neighborhoods and making them more
    attentive to the eras social ills.
  • The Movements adherents established missions and
    relief programs in urban areas that attempted to
    alleviate poverty, combat child labor, and
    encourage the construction of better
    working-class housing.
  • They worked with labor unions in demanding health
    and safety laws in the work place.
  • Some suggested that a more cooperative
    organization of the economy should replace
    competitive captialism.

110
THE SOCIAL GOSPEL
  • Within American Catholicism, as well, a group of
    priests and bishops emerged who attempted to
    alter the churchs traditional hostility for
    social reform and its isolation from contemporary
    currents of social thought.
  • With most of its parishioners working men and
    women, they argued, the church should lend its
    support to the emerging labor movement.
  • These developments suggested the existence of
    widespread dissatisfaction with the liberty of
    contract understanding of freedom.
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