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Chapter 9 Industrialization

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Title: Chapter 9 Industrialization


1
Chapter 9Industrialization
  • Section 1
  • The Rise of Industry

2
11-4-2010 TAKS Warm Up
  • Write the Question and Answer
  • What was the Homestead Act of 1862 and what was
    its impact?
  • What was the Dawes Act and what was its purpose?

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The US Industrializes
  • Natural Resources
  • Lots of raw materials water, timber, coal, iron
    and copper. Many of these resources were located
    in the West. The settlement after the Civil War
    helped to accelerate Industrialization
  • A new resource petroleum was just beginning to
    be tapped. (Kerosene)
  • Edwin Drake 1859 drilled the first oil well
    near Titusville, Pennsylvania. As oil production
    increased, it fueled economic expansion.

7
Edwin Drake
8
The US Industrializes
  • A Large Workforce
  • Between 1860 and 1910 the population nearly
    tripled.
  • Increased workforce and demand for consumer
    goods.
  • Large families and massive immigration
  • Conditions in China and Eastern Europe were not
    good.
  • 1860-1910 20 million immigrants

9
Free Enterprise
  • Americans embraced the idea of laissez-faire
    which means let do a French phrase that means
    let people do as they choose Lack of
    government control.
  • Relies on supply and demand
  • Low taxes and low government debt
  • Entrepreneurs people who risk their capital in
    organizing and running a business.

10
Governments Role in Industrialism
  • For the most part the government stayed out of
    the way. This policy produced results other than
    what had been intended.
  • Sectional tensions between North and South early
    1800s
  • North high tariffs and subsides
  • South low tariffs and promote trade
  • The Civil War ended this debate
  • Republicans passed the Morrill Tariff (raised
    tariffs)
  • High tariffs stayed even though they werent part
    of Laissez-Faire. Felt they were needed.

11
New Inventions
  • Bell and the Telephone
  • Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone.
    Revolutionized communications. Created the Bell
    Telephone company and later became the American
    Telephone and Telegraph Company (ATT)
  • Edison and Electricity
  • Thomas Alva Edison worked to invent new
    products
  • Invented the Phonograph, lightbulb, electric
    generator, battery, dictaphone, mimeograph and
    the motion picture.
  • 1882 Edison Electric Illuminating Company new
    industry providing electric power to New York
    City.
  • Several of Edison companies merged into the
    Edison General Electric Company, which is known
    today as GE

12
Bell
13
New Inventions
  • Technologys Impact
  • Technology became a part of most everyones life.
  • Thaddeus Lowe invented the ice machine basis of
    the refrigerator. Gustavus Swift and the
    refrigerated railroad car fresh meat delivery.
  • Technology changed the shoe and clothing
    industries as well.

14
Warm-UPRemember from Section 1
  • Describe the concept of laissez-faire.
  • What is an entrepreneur? Give two examples of
    entrepreneurs. Who are they and what did they do?

15
The Railroads
  • Chapter 9 Section 2

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Linking the Nation
  • By 1900 the U.S. had over 200,000 miles of rail
    road.
  • The railroad boom began in 1862 when the Pacific
    Railway Act was signed.
  • What was the name of the 2 railroads that built
    the transcontinental railroad?
  • Union Pacific the Central Pacific
  • 10,000 workers
  • 10,000 animals

1 mile of track
18
  • Four merchants known as the Big Four invested
    in the Central Pacific Railroad.
  • Leland Stanford.(grocer)
  • Charley Crocker (shop owner)
  • Collins P. Huntington and Mark Hopkins (Hardware
    store owners)

19
Leland Stanford
  • Gov. of CA
  • U.S. Senator
  • 1885 Founded Stanford Univ.
  • Headed the Central Pacific railroad
  • Employed tons of Chinese

20
Transcontinental railroad
  • Spurred Industrial growth by linking
  • The Nation
  • Railroads increased the size of markets for many
    products
  • Stimulated the economy by spending lots of money
    on steel, coal, timber

21
Cornelius Vanderbilt
  • Famous Railroad Consolidator
  • Had built the largest steam boat fleet in America
  • 1869 was able to offer the 1st direct rail
    service between New York City Chicago

22
Time Zones
  • Before the 1880s, regions set their clocks by the
    suns position in the sky.
  • To make rail service more safe, in 1883 the
    American Railway Association divided the country
    into 4 time zones.
  • What are these time zones called?

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Land Grant System
  • To encourage railroad constructions the federal
    government gave land grants to many railroad
    companies. A land grant is a piece of land that
    is given to someone.
  • Railroad companies made most of their money by
    selling government land grants.

26
Robber Barons
  • Scandals created the impression that railroad
    entrepreneurs were robber barons, or people who
    looted an industry and gave nothing back.
  • Jay Gould practiced insider trading.
  • He used information he received as a railroad
    owner to manipulate stock prices to his benefit.
  • James J Hill (Was NOT a robber Baron) built
    operated the Great Northern railroad from St.
    Paul MN to WA

27
Credit Mobilier 1872
  • A construction company set up by several
    stockholders of the Union Pacific.
  • Scandal included many government officials.

28
Section 3 Big Business
  • By 1900Big Business dominates the economy
  • Would be possible w/o the Corporation, the people
    who own the Corporation are called the
    Stockholders
  • Why Because they own ownership of that company
    (AKA Stock)
  • When people invest in these companies they are
    able to sale more and produce goods more rapidly

29
  • Even though falling prices help consumers they
    hurt business so . . .they pulled t/g to form
    POOLS AKA agreements to maintain prices at a
    certain level.
  • These were generally unpopular did not last long

30
Andrew Carnegie Steel
  • Born in Scotland
  • Started as a railroad Superv.
  • 1875 opened a steel comp. in Pittsburgh, PA
  • 1st to use the Bessemer Process a new process
    of making steel easy cheaply
  • Known for Vertical Integration owns all of the
    factors of production for its business

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Vertical Integration
32
Horizontal Integration
  • John D Rockefeller is an example
  • Combining many firms in the same type of business
    (this can limit competition)
  • 1880 John D. R owned 90 of the oil refining
    industry
  • When a company receive control over the entire
    market than it becomes a Monopoly
  • Americans dont like this why? . . .

33
  • 1882 Standard Oil formed the first TRUST
  • Trust - A new way of merging businesses that did
    not violate the laws a/g owning other companies
  • Holding companies does not produce anything
    itself , it owns stock in the companies that do
    produce goods
  • Selling the Product Advertising (90 mill per
    yr) flyers, magazines, bill boards, newspapers
  • Department Stores emerged by 1877 most
    popular was Woolworths, later came Macy's,
    Marshall Fields
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