Title: Warm-Up
1Warm-Up
- 1. List 3 factors which allowed for American
Cities to grow. - 2. What impact did the cost effective mass
production of Steel have on the Cities? - 3. What was the outside of the Statue of Liberty
plated with? - 4. What country gave the US the Statue of
Liberty and why?
2The Gilded Age
3The Nation Grows Industry and Big Business
- Bessemer Process
- Innovations in Steel
- Light bulb-Thomas Edison
- Big Business-Founding of Corporations
- Wealthy business owners
- Labor Movement
- Knights of Labor
- American Federation of Labor
- Workers seek better working conditions
- Strikes, rioting
4 The Second Industrial Revolution
- Led to new sources of power and advances in
transportation communication - Steel processing -gt boom in RR
- Oil electricity improved communication
- of new inventions led to higher standard of
living
5Technological Advances
- Bessemer process
- 1850s
- Allowed steel to be produced quickly
cheaply - Kerosene
- To convert oil to fuel
- Demand for oil begins
- Telephone
- Alexander Graham Bell
- 1876
- Model T
- Henry Ford
- Moving assembly line making cars more
affordable
6Development of Electricity
- Thomas Edison
- held more than 1,000 patents
- Edison his team introduced the first practical
electric light bulb in 1879 - created a power company (GE) to distribute
electricity, but could not send it over long
distances - Menlo Park
- 1st research development facility in US
7Development of Electricity
- George Westinghouse
- power system that could send electricity many
miles across the country - Rival of Edison
8Warm-Up
- 1. List 3 technological advances during the
Gilded Age. - 2. Who patented the telephone in 1876?
- 3. What was Menlo Park?
- 4. Who formed General Electric (GE), the first
major power company?
9Big Business
- Growth of Big Business
- Late 1800s
- Led to monopolies/trusts
- Corporations dominates US economy
- People government question the methods of big
business
10The Rise of Corporations
- Corporations
- Businesses that sell portions of ownership called
stock shares - Most widely respected members of American society
- Rewarded investors founders
- Encouraged more investment because stockholders
could sell stock whenever they wanted.
11Gilded Age Concepts
- Self-Made Man
- Embellished idea that hard work determination
could allow for a person of poverty to ascend to
wealth and power - Robber Barons
- Corporate elite
- Controlled 90 of US economy
- Claimed to be self-made man, but came from
privilege wealth - Gospel of Wealth
- Book written by Carnegie
- Applied Social Darwinism survival of the
fittest - Should use excess to advance society
12Business Leaders
- Andrew Carnegie - Steel
- One of most admired businesspeople of the time
- Focused on steelmaking
- Used vertical integration
- owning businesses involved
in each step of manufacturing - to lower costs
13Vertical Mergers
http//www.queensburyschool.org/Steel20work20Jan
20web.JPG
http//www.sunnyfortuna.com/railroad/images/Eureka
_Southern.jpg
http//www.az-tsa.com/img/Construction20Update20
Page20Photos/Construction20Update20photos20opt
imized/10-30-04northeastcorner.jpg
14Business Leaders
- John D. Rockefeller - Oil
- Standard Oil Company was
- countrys largest refinery
- Horizontal Integration
- owning all businesses in a field
- Formed a trust
- grouping many companies under a single board
15Horizontal Mergers
16Business Leaders
- Cornelius Vanderbilt Railroads
- Pioneer of the railroad industry
- Purchased smaller rail lines and combined them to
his rail lines - Provided more efficient transportation
17(No Transcript)
18Warm-Up
- 1. Which business is John D. Rockefeller
associated with? - 2. Which business strategy is owning all related
businesses in one field? - 3. Who provided more efficient transportation on
the rail lines? - 4. K-Mart and Sears merger in an example of?
19Poor Working Conditions
- Small, crowded rooms
- Specialization made workers tired, bored, and
more likely to be injured. - Managers paid less attention to working
conditions - Poor Air Quality
- Unsafe workplaces
- Long hours
- Low wages
- No job security
20Working Conditions
- Machines unskilled workers replaced skilled
craftspeople - Encouraged managers to view workers as
interchangeable parts - Injuries increased, and conditions worsened
- Workers looked for ways to bring about change
21Poor Working Conditions
- Business owners
- Maximize profits and desired production
- Led to poor working conditions
- Workers organized
- demanded better working conditions pay
- Labor Strikes
- workers refuse to work until demands are met
22Early Labor Unions
- Knights of Labor
- First national labor union-1870s
- Terence V. Powderly
- ended secrecy of organization
- Included both skilled, unskilled workers women
- Pushed for
- 8 hour workday
- equal pay for equal work
- end to child labor
23Early Labor Unions
- American Federation of Labor
- Organized individual national unions
- Ex/ mine-workers steelworkers unions
- Limited membership to skilled workers
- Used collective bargaining, in which all workers
acted together to negotiate with management
24Warm-Up
- What was the first National Labor Union called?
- What are negotiations between employers
employees aimed at reaching agreements that
regulate working conditions called? - List 3 examples of poor working conditions.
- What is a labor strike?
25Labor Strikes
26Haymarket Riot
- 1886 Chicago, IL
- Rally supporting striking workers
- Violence erupted between protesters and police
- Resulted in decline of all labor unions
27Homestead Strike
- 1892
- US Steel Company-Homestead, Pennsylvania
- Workers locked out by management
- Resulting fight left workers and Pinkerton guards
dead - Permanently damaged public opinion of Carnegie
28Pullman Strike
- 1894-Pullman IL
- Company town
- Company owned all housing businesses
- Began with workers who made Pullman train cars
- Spread to workers who worked on trains pulling
sleeping cars - Federal troops stopped strike
29Labor Day
- 1894
- Labor Day established as a Federal Holiday
- Pushed for by President Cleveland and Congress
for upset workers - Celebrate all workers and their contributions
- First Monday in September
30Warm-Up
- Which labor dispute turned workers against the
Chicago police? - Which labor dispute involved the railroads and
eventually required federal troops to intervene? - Why did President Cleveland want a national
holiday for laborers to pass? - When is Labor Day?
31America Moves to the City
32The Rise of Urban America
- US Population 1900
- doubled to 80 million since the census of 1870
(105 million by 1920) - Cities Population tripled
- by 1900 40 of Americans lived in cities
- 1900 New York
- 3.5 million people 2nd largest in world (London
1st) - Chicago Philadelphia had over 1 million people
- No American city had 1 million people in 1860
33The Rise of Urban America
- Vertical Cities
- Skyscrapers
- Elisha Otis
- mechanized elevator
- Mass Transit
- Extended cities outward
- Subways, trolley cars
- Streetcar suburbs develop
34Daily Life in the Cities
- Education
- Compulsory education laws
- Required parents to send children to school
- Public schools grew from 7 million to 15 million
- Journalism
- Public education created more literate people
- Yellow Journalism
- Sensational reporting to attract readers
35Daily Life in the Cites
- Urban Parks
- Fredrick Law Olmstead designed Central Park in
NYC - Helped spur the City Beautiful Movement
- Public parks and attractive boulevards
36Leisure and Sports
- Football-developed by Walter Camp
- Basketball-developed by James Naismith
- Baseball-Abner Doubleday disputed by Historians
- Urban neighborhood teams and clubs
- Adopted at the collegiate level
37Warm-Up
- 1. What did the population of the US do between
1870-1900? - 2. New laws requiring parents to send children
to school were called? - 3. Sensational news reporting was called?
- 4. What was the city Beautification Movement?
38Daily Life in the Cities
- Theater
- Vaudeville light play
- Variety acts put together in segments into 1 show
- Ragtime
- New form of popular music-ragged, rhythmic, and
dancing - Originated in African-American communities in St.
Louis and New Orleans
39Nouveau Riche
40Class distinctions
- became most pronounced in America history by 1900
- New class of super-wealthy the Nouveau riche
- 1890 Wealthiest 1 of families owned 51 of real
and personal property - Meanwhile, 44 of families at the bottom owned
1.2 of all property. - Made an effort to publicly display their wealth
- Conspicuous consumption
41The Middle Class
42Class Distinctions
- Middle class
- Lower end salesmen, clerks and government
workers teachers - Upper end lawyers and doctors
- Usually lived in relatively large homes employed
at least one domestic servant. - Respectable
43The Working Class
44Class Distinctions
- Working-class
- Usually Catholic (esp. Irish), foreign (esp. E
S Europe), or black - Lived in tenements
- Poorly built apartment buildings
- In 1900, nearly 20 of children under 15 worked
in non-agricultural work. - About 20 of women worked, most were
youngbetween school marriage.
45Can we find examples of this class structure
today?
46Tough Life in the City
- Cities had deplorable conditions.
- Rampant crime prostitution, drug use, gambling,
violent crime. - Unsanitary conditions persisted as cities could
not keep up with growth - Perfection of "dumbell" tenement in 1879 7 or 8
stories high with little ventilation - while families were crammed into each floor (50
of New York City housing)
47Warm-Up
- 1. What sport became Americas favorite past
time during the Gilded Age? - 2. Who developed what we think of as American
Football? - 3. Who were the Nouveau Riche?
- 4. What percentage of the population owned the
most private property? - 5. Which class was respectable and list 3
occupations?
48Why Emigrate?
- Why immigration from Eastern Southern Europe?
- Overpopulation in Europe
- Rapid industrialization left many with either no
where to go or forced many to change their
customary occupations. - America seen as a land of opportunity (conditions
in Europe dismal)
49The Lure of America
- Old Immigrants
- 1800-1880
- 10 million
- Most were Protestants from NW Europe
- (England, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Finland)
- New Immigrants
- 1891-1910
- 12 Million
- Most were Catholic, Greek Orthodox or Jewish
- Southern or Eastern European
- (Czech, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Polish,
Russian, and Slovak)
50New Immigrants
51New Immigrants
- Most came through Ellis Island in New York harbor
from 1882-1954 - Statue of Liberty erected in NY harbor, a gift
from the French. - "Give us your tired, your poor/ Your huddled
masses yearning to breath free/The wretched
refuse of your teeming shore." -- Emma Lazarus - Came to live in enclaves in NY Chicago
- By 1900 60 lived in the nations 12 largest cities
52(No Transcript)
53US Culture?
54Struggle to maintain cultures in America
- Immigrants were often urged to join the American
mainstream - 1st generation Americans often rejected culture
of parents and became mainstreamed - Many Catholic parochial schools Jewish Hebrew
schools established - Foreign-language newspapers, theaters, food
stores, restaurants, parishes, social clubs.
55Nativist Reaction
- Native-born saw immigration as a threat
- Immigrants too different to fit into American
Society - Others blamed immigrants for social problems
- Crime/violence
- Poverty
- Radical political ideas (communism)
- Immigrants would work for cheaper wages
- Chinese Exclusion Act
- Denied citizenship to people born in China
- Prohibited immigration of Chinese laborers
56Political Reaction to Immigrants
- Political machines catered to new immigrants
- Bosses often traded jobs and services for votes
creating powerful immigrant voting blocks for
their own purposes. - Provided employment on citys payroll, found
housing for new arrivals, - gave gifts of food and clothing to the needy,
helped with legal counseling, and helped get
schools, parks, and hospitals built in immigrant
neighborhoods. - Tammany Hall in NYC most infamous political
machine
57Warm-Up
- 1. Where did many immigrants enter the US on the
east coast? - 2. What two cities did many immigrants settle
in? - 3. What impact did immigrants have on city
neighborhoods? - 4. Why did immigrants help politicians win
elections?
58Famous Muckrakers
- Lincoln Steffens corruption in city governments
- Ida Tarbell illegal tactics of Rockefeller
(oil) - Jacob Riis conditions of the poor, tenement
life and working conditions
59Gilded Age Politics
- Republicans-aligned with big business
- Little government
- Weak Presidents
- President Arthur persuaded Congress to pass the
Civil Service Act-1883 - Government Jobs based on competitive exams rather
than political favors
60- Critics-businesses earned their fortunes through
unfair business practices. - Used size and strength to drive smaller
competitors out of business - Powerful trusts sold goods and services below
market value - smaller competitors went out of business, then
raised prices.
61- Sherman Antitrust Act 1890 made it illegal to
create monopolies or trusts that restrained
trade. - The act did not clearly define a trust in legal
terms, so it was hard to enforce. - Corporations and trusts continued to grow in size
and power.
62Farmers Demands
- Regulate the railroad companies! (stop them from
charging such high rates) - Make cash more available (back the dollar with
silver, not gold, so dollar will be worth less) - Political demands single term for President and
Vice-President secret ballot popular election
of Senators - To get industrial workers to support them 8-hour
workday restrict immigration
63Different Groups Representing Farmers Interests
- 1867 Grange cooperative
- 1880s Farmers Alliance and Colored Farmers
National Alliance - 1892 Birth of the Populist, or Peoples Party
64Populism vs. Big Business
65Election of 1896
- Bryan vs. William McKinley
- Main issue is gold vs. silver. Problem partly
caused Panic of 1893. - Populists didnt focus on too many other issues.
- Lose election and end of populist party
- End of Populism?
66Progressive Movements
- Progressivism
- Reform movement in the late 19th early 20th
century - Focused on urban problems
- Exposed social problems in the U.S.
- Mainly native born middle and upper class
67Progressive Issues
- Labor laws
- Demand limits on the work day
- Prohibit monopolies
- Child Labor Laws
- Greater control of the govt
- 17th Amendment (gave voters the power to directly
elect senators) - if we wish to do good work for our country, we
must be unselfishTeddy Roosevelt - Muckraking
- Expose the muck or filth of society
- The Jungle- Upton Sinclair
- Moral Reform
- 18th Amendment (Prohibition-barred the sale and
consumption of alcohol) - Suffrage
- 19th Amendment (women's right to vote)
68Warm-Up
- 1. List the Progressive Presidents
- 2. How did Roosevelt resolve the 1902 coal
strike? - 3. What was the purpose of the Hepburn Act?
- 4. How old was Roosevelt when he became
President?
69Warm-Up
- 1.List two Muckrakers and what they exposed.
- 2. Which amendment changed the election of
Senators to voters? - 3. Describe a Referendum.
- 4. Which amendment banned the sale, manufacture,
and consumption of alcohol? - 5. Which political reform could remove an
elected official in a special election?
70Warm-Up
- 1. Who was the Progressive candidate in the
election of 1912? - 2. Why did Roosevelt and Taft have a falling
out? - 3. List 3 Conservation pieces established by
Roosevelt. - 4. What were two major trusts broken up by
Roosevelt?
71Progressive Presidents
- President Teddy Roosevelt- 1901-1909
- President William Howard Taft- 1909-1913
- President Woodrow Wilson- 1913-1921
72Warm-Up
- 1. Which group of Americans made up the Populist
movement and who was their candidate? - 2. List 3 issues of Progressives.
- 3. What is a muckraker?
- 4. How did the Progressives assert more control
of the government during the Gilded Age?
73Political Reforms
- Referendum voters could get a bill placed on
ballot vote on an initiative - Recall elected officials could be removed by
voters in a special election
74Political Reforms
- Direct primary special elections to determine
whom party members want to represent them - 17th amendment 1912 direct election of senators
75Teddy Roosevelt 1901-1908
76Teddy Roosevelt
- Hero in the Spanish-American War led the Rough
Riders to famous victories - V.P. under McKinley takes over after his
assassination in 1901 at 42 years old - Elected officially in 1904
77The Coal Strike
- 1902
- Coal mine owners refused to negotiate with
workers - Send army to take over the mine
- Won shorter hours and higher wages
78Interstate Commerce Commission
- Hepburn Act strengthen the ICC
- It could now fix RR rates
- Regulate pipelines, ferries, bridges
79(No Transcript)
80Trust - Bustin
- Some were regulated while others were dissolved
- Broke up Rockefellers Standard Oil Trust (30
Companies) - Broke up J.P. Morgans Northern Securities
Company-RRs
81Pure Food And Drug Act
- 1906 FDA
- Banned use of harmful additions in foods and
banned false advertising for drugs
82Meat Inspection Act
- 1906 federal investigation of industry
- set health and sanitary standards for all phases
of the meatpacking industry
83Conservation
- New lands Reclamation Act set aside from the
sale of public land to build dams and irrigation
systems in the west-helped small farms - US Forest Service-150 National Forests
established - Wanted to preserve/protect environment-National
Parks Service established
84William Howard Taft 1909-1913
85President Taft
- Filed twice as many anti-trust suits than
Roosevelt - Expanded the authority of ICC-regulated the
telephone, telegraph, and cable companies - Payne-Aldrich Tariff-highest tariff in history
passed - Allowed the undoing of some of Roosevelts
conservation initiatives - Election of 1912-Taft and Roosevelt split the
Republican vote, Democrat Wilson wins election
86Woodrow Wilson 1913 -1921
87Woodrow Wilson 1913 -1921
- The New Freedom
- Strong president
- Tame big business, open up competition
- Attack tariffs, trusts and banks
88Wilson Cont.
- 16th Amendment-Income Tax, wealthy taxed at a
higher rate than poor - Underwood Tariff-Lowered tariff by 25
- Federal Reserve Act-Regulated the banking
industry and controlled currency circulation - Clayton Antitrust Act-outlawed monopolistic
business practices - Federal Trade Commission-created to protect
competition in the market