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Title: Intro


1
Intro
2
The New Industrial Age 1876-1900
3
Overview
  • By 1900, America had surpassed Britain as the
    leading industrial power in the world.
  • land of opportunity,
  • rags to riches
  • expansion of the railroads
  • growth of industry
  • corporations

4
Objectives
  • You will be exposed to
  • The impact of new inventions on the expansion of
    American industry
  • The important role railroads played in the
    development of the US during the late nineteenth
    century
  • How and why large, complex business organizations
    developed in the US

5
Part I New Inventions
6
Electricity powers the Industrial Age
  • This New Industrial Age was powered by
    electricity, unlike the Industrial Revolution
    which was powered by steam
  • How would electricity encourage the growth of
    industry?
  • Electric engines are smaller and more portable
    than steam engines, so factories could be moved
    away from water sources
  • Factories would be built close to railroads and
    major transit routes
  • Electric trolleys became common in cities,
    encouraging cities to spread out, instead of up

7
Edison and the Incandescent Bulb
  • 1879 - Thomas Edison invents a new, more
    efficient form of electrical light.
  • Look at the pictures on the next slide. Note any
    differences or similarities between his bulb and
    a modern bulb

8
Bulbs
9
Bell and the Telephone
  • 1876 Alexander Graham Bell introduced the
    telephone By 1900, there were 1.5 million
    subscribers.
  • The telephone created a need for operators,
    mostly women. Why women?

10
Sholes and the Typewriter
  • 1867 Christopher Sholes invented the
    typewriter.
  • This led to a need for women office workers
  • 1870 women made up about 5 of office workers
  • 1900 they made up 75, or about 500,000.

11
Oil and Steel become important
  • 1858 Edwin Drake drills for oil in Penn., to
    refine it into kerosene. Gasoline was a
    by-product that was thrown away.
  • 1890 Gasoline is used in an internal combustion
    engine in an automobile
  • During the Civil War, William Kelly and Henry
    Bessemer develop a method of making steel that is
    much more efficient and much cheaper.
  • What are some important things made of steel?

12
Open hearth process
13
The Wright Brothers and the Airplane
  • Dec. 17, 1903 Kitty Hawk, NC - Orville Wilbur
    Wright sustain flight for 59 seconds traveling
    852 feet
  • There was little public interest at first, but by
    WWI (1916), airplanes were being used by
    militaries for scouting and combat
  • Diagram follows

14
Wright planes
15
Henry Ford and the Assembly Line
  • 1903 Ford introduces the Model-T
  • 1914 - Ford built the nations first true
    assembly line using the principles of scientific
    management, or Taylorism
  • Eventually, tasks were broken down into smaller
    and simpler tasks (division of labor)
  • Before line production, it took 12 hours and 28
    minutes to put a Model-T together after the
    assembly line was in place, it took 1 hour and 33
    minutes.

16
A-line at Ford Plant
17
1913 Model T Tin Lizzie 300
18
Part I Review
  • Inventors and Inventions
  • Thomas Edison
  • Light bulb
  • Alexander Bell
  • Telephone
  • Christopher Sholes
  • Typewriter
  • Kelly and Bessemer
  • Refined steel
  • Wright Brothers
  • The Airplane
  • Henry Ford
  • Assembly Line

19
Part II Railroads Expand
20
The Influence of Railroads
  • In 1870, the railroads employed 163,000 people
    by 1900, they employed over 1,000,000.
  • Railroads affected popular culture
  • Railroads influenced time.
  • 1883 Professor C. F. Dowds plan for 24 time
    zones went into effect. In 1918, Congress made
    the 4 time zones in the US official. In 1966, 4
    more time zones were added as well as Daylight
    Savings Time.

21
The Transcontinental Railroad
  • 1862 1864 Lincoln passes acts authorizing
    land grants and loans to the Union Pacific RR Co.
    the Central Pacific RR Co.
  • The Union Pacific would begin in Omaha, Nebraska
    and build westward. The Central Pacific would
    begin in Sacramento, California and build
    eastward.
  • May 10, 1869, the two lines were joined by a
    golden spike at Promontory Point, Utah.

22
Building the Railroads
  • Union Pacific
  • Many Civil War veterans were suited for the hard
    work
  • Most were Irish immigrants
  • Paid 40-60/month
  • Worked 8 hour days
  • Meals on the RR Co.
  • Central Pacific
  • Not many Civil War veterans in California
  • Chinese that had immigrated during the Gold Rush
    were hired
  • Paid 35/month
  • Worked sunup to sundown
  • Bought their own meals

23
Railroads Map
24
The Great Adventure
  • Riding the rails coast to coast was and still is
    a truly American adventure. What would a traveler
    see on this journey?
  • Like modern airplanes, these trains had different
    classes
  • Zulu class 40 gets you there on a bench
  • Day coach 75 gets you a reclining seat
  • Pullman cars 100 gets you a comfy sleeper sofa
  • See next 2 slides for Pullman cars

25
Pullman Cars,built by George Pullman.Most cost
more than 50000
26
A typical dinner table on a Pullman carIs there
any parallel in modern mass transit?
27
Railroads reek of corruption
  • Several railroads cheated the taxpayers of the US
    and made LOTS of money
  • Crédit Mobilier This was a construction company
    owned by the same people that owned the Union
    Pacific railroad.
  • The government subsidized the building of the
    railroads.
  • Heres how the scam works
  • Union Pacific hires Crédit Mobilier to build its
    railroad.
  • Union Pacific tells the govt that it will cost
    100 million to build, when it actually costs
    about 50 million
  • Since Union Pacific and Crédit Mobilier are owned
    by the same people, the extra 50 million is
    pocketed by the owners
  • These companies also gave shares of stock to
    politicians in federal govt to ensure they kept
    getting subsidies.
  • Local or state politicians were given free passes
    to keep their loyalty

28
The Grangers and Government Regulation of the
Railroads
  • 1867 Oliver Kelley organized the Grange, a
    social and educational organization of farmers
  • The Grangers argued that railroads were a public
    utility, therefore they should be regulated by
    the government.
  • They argued this because railroad companys were
    overcharging them to transport their goods.
  • 1887 the Interstate Commerce Act was passed by
    Congress, requiring railroad rates to be
    reasonable and just, and established the ICC
    (Interstate Commerce Commission).
  • This was not effective until Teddy Roosevelt
    became President in 1901.

29
Review Part II
  • Railroads expanded 10-fold by 1900
  • Railroads established modern time zones
  • The Transcontinental Railroad, made of the Union
    Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads, connected
    the east and west coasts in 1869
  • Pullman cars
  • Crédit Mobilier scandal
  • Interstate Commerce Act of 1887

30
Part III Big Business
31
Andrew Carnegie
  • Andrew Carnegie
  • Born in Scotland, immigrated to the US in 1848
  • Began working in a factory at 13, for 1.20/week
  • Worked his way up in the railroad business,
    invested in stock, and became very wealthy by the
    age of 24
  • 1873 Carnegie launched Carnegie Steel
    Corporation
  • 1901 Carnegie sold his property and devoted
    himself to philanthropy
  • Continued

32
Carnegies Business Strategies
  • Always tried to build a better product at lower
    cost
  • Invested heavily in technology
  • Installed detailed accounting systems to manage
    costs
  • Promoted competition between his assistants
  • Developed vertical integration, meaning he owned
    the mines, the trains to move the ore, and the
    mills. See next slide
  • Wrote The Gospel of Wealth, which said the
    wealthy should use their money to contribute to
    society. To die a rich man was a disgrace.

33
Integration
34
How Corporations got bigger
  • Companies could merge into one corporation
  • Stockholders in several competing companies could
    turn their stock over to a trust, which would
    issue stock in itself in return and run the
    competing companies as one large corporation
  • What would this allow them to do?
  • Trusts would have a monopoly on a market and
    could run more efficiently as one large
    corporation rather than a bunch of smaller
    companies

35
Rockefeller and Robber Barons
  • Other industrialists abused their financial power
  • John D. Rockefeller founded the Standard Oil
    Trust in 1882.
  • He would undersell his competition until all of
    it was run out of business, then he would raise
    prices to 3 or 4 times the original level
  • He ended up controlling 90 of the nations oil
    refineries
  • He and other business who worked this way were
    called Robber Barons.

36
Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890
  • More and more people were complaining the these
    robber-barons were not out to improve their own
    businesses but to destroy others.
  • An attempt by Congress to regulate trade in 1890
    with the Sherman Antitrust Act.
  • This Act made trusts illegal, but most trusts
    reorganized into single corporations and the law
    had little effect.

37
Boss Tweed and Tamany Hall Political Machine
  • Political Machine organized group who controls a
    political partys activities in a large area
  • Tweed used his power as leader to overcharge the
    govt for building municipal buildings
  • The public found out, Tweed was tried, sent to
    prison, escaped once, was caught again, and died
    in prison in 1878

38
New Definition of Success
  • People generally believed in Social Darwinism,
    the idea that anyone could succeed, but naturally
    only the fittest would survive(prosper)
  • Horatio Alger applied social Darwinism in the
    100s of books he wrote, usually rags to riches
    stories
  • This idea inspired immigrants to reach the
    American Dream

39
Review Part III
  • Carnegie, philanthropist, US Steel
  • The Gospel of Wealth
  • What did Carnegie promote?
  • Mergers, Trusts, and the Sherman Antitrust Act
  • Rockefeller, Standard Oil, Robber Baron
  • Boss Tweed, Tamany Hall scandal
  • Social Darwinism

40
ExtraBiltmore Estate
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