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GILDED AGE: Discussion and Notes LABOR UNIONS Industrialization Political Machines Urbanization New Immigration Monopolies Railroads Innovation.

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Presentation on theme: "GILDED AGE: Discussion and Notes LABOR UNIONS Industrialization Political Machines Urbanization New Immigration Monopolies Railroads Innovation."— Presentation transcript:

1 GILDED AGE: Discussion and Notes LABOR UNIONS Industrialization Political Machines Urbanization New Immigration Monopolies Railroads Innovation

2 LABOR UNIONS JOURNAL What was the difference between the American Federation of Labor and the Knights of Labor? Who were their leaders? Why did the Knights of Labor fail? (Think… members and Haymarket Square) What did the Sherman Antitrust Act do to labor unions? What were they meant to do? Why were labor unions’ goals largely unsuccessful? (Think… Pinkertons, Pullman Strike…) Gompers Powderly

3 STRIKE! Pullman Strike= 250, 000 railroad workers in 27 states, members of American Railway Union (led by Eugene Debs); federal troops were sent in (citing the Sherman Antitrust Act) **Pullman made railroad cars and required his workers to live in the community he built… they had to accept pay cuts, pay rent to use the library, and the clergy paid rent to use the church

4 Regulation of the Railroads… Railroads often had rates that benefited wealthy monopolies while hurting small businesses Interstate Commerce Act: targeted the railroads, said it was the federal government’s job to regulate the RR **attempt to regulate corruption and RR monopolies Wabash: SC case that said it was unconstitutional for a state law to regulate a RR because of the Commerce Clause (Congress regulates commerce between states)

5 Populist Party Populist Party, Election of 1892, William Jennings Bryan (Populist leader and presidential candidate) -WHO/WHY: 1.) primarily farmers (Grange Movement), but also laborers, socialists (mostly from West and South) 2.) dissatisfied with small business discrimination, monopolies, and lack of working class rights -GOALS: silver coinage v. gold, more $ in circulation, government ownership of railroads/telegraphs/telephones, 8 hour working day, tariff reduction…

6 Urbanization Industrialization -> Urbanization America became an urban country as thousands moved to cities for job opportunities and “modern” living (electricity, indoor plumbing, entertainment) Consumerism was on the rise: department stores and manufactured items

7 Urbanization Rapid urban growth: skyscrapers (Louis Sullivan), and tenement housing in slums for lower classes Sanitation problems arose in cities from waste disposal- disease and pests were rampant (especially in crowded slums!) Suburbs developed (especially for upper and middle classes) because of transportation improvements like the electric trolley. Races and ethnic groups lived in segregated neighborhoods.

8 New Immigration Thousands of immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe- looking for job opportunities, religious freedom, and freedom from oppressive governments Problems: less educated than earlier immigrants, mostly Jewish and Orthodox Christians… fear of “threat” to Anglo society Lived in segregated neighborhoods with own countrymen, brought and preserved own culture Mainly worked as industrial laborers in major port cities

9 New Immigration Efforts to resist immigration: -American Protective Association -Trade unions (immig. Used as “scabs”), took “starvation wages” -Laws limiting/regulating immigration (1882, 1917) Efforts to help immigrants adjust: -Hull House and Jane Addams: education, family, and transitional help -Political machines: jobs, housing, protection

10 Education Tax supported elementary and secondary schools increased in North and South (less rapidly in South)… helped limit child labor Morill Act 1862: federal grant of land to public schools; Hatch Act Women and blacks had increasing access to higher education though were restricted by gender and race from most public institutions. Millionaire donations: Rockefeller and Univeristy of Chicago, Vanderbilt, Central Pacific and Stanford Vassar University

11 Religion Darwinism caused split in religious theory: “Modernists” and “Fundamentalists” Urban religious revivals occurred to address new issues (materialism, poverty, economic/political corruption, etc.) New groups: YMCA, Christian Science, Salvation Army Increase in diversity from immigration.

12 Blacks Booker T. Washington: equality through education and economic improvement; born in South WEB DuBois: immediate equality on all levels; born in North; helped found NAACP

13 Women “White Collar” jobs to middle class whites: typists, telephone operators, dept. stores Push for suffrage: serve society’s needs through gender (children, hospitals, education, city planning)- Carrie Chatt National American Woman Suffrage Association Resistance to roles through economic freedom: rise of “free love”, “Gibson” Girls, divorce Leading participants in Temperance Movement: Carrie Nation

14 Yellow Journalism and Sensationalism, penny press Baseball as “America’s Pastime”, football and basketball develops Literature focuses on new issues like women’s roles, urbanization, corruption, racial inequality (Mark Twain, Emily Dickinson, Henry James) Minstrel shows, Vaudeville, opera, circus (Barnum and Bailey), Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show America’s Pastimes and Press


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