Dissent, Depression, and War. Farmers’ Alliance.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Emergence of Labor Unions
Advertisements

Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
Labor In The Late 1800s Labor Force Distribution
Coxey’s Army Discussion Why do you think that the marchers have a band and are carrying an American flag? To show that they are patriotic Americans Why.
The Labor Movement The Rise of Unions CHAPTER 20 SECTION 4.
 What event discredited the Knights of Labor?  Haymarket Riot  Homestead Strike  Panic of '93  Pullman Strike.
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
Workers Organize 14.3.
Working Class Work Life Child labor Labor Unions Strikes Labor organizations Haymarket Affair Homestead Strike Pullman strike.
AMERICAN URBANIZATION Global Migration and Urban Explosion.
The Labor Movement Chapter 5 Section 4.
Populism Big Businesses Unions & Labor Key PeopleMisc. $100 $200 $300 $400 $500.
Worker Organize Mother Jones: “I decided to take an active part in the efforts of the working people to better the conditions under which they work and.
The 1890s Boy, did they stink.
4.3 The Organized Labor Movement
Labor Unions. Middle Class Emerges as industries rise Made up of individuals who work administrative jobs for companies Salaried employees Higher demand.
Please: -Be Seated and ready to start -Open Unipacs to Page 20 - Turn off all electronic devices. Thanks!!!!!!
Organized Labor After 1865 Chapter 13 Section 3
WARM-UP Think about the ethics of the industrial leaders of the late 19 th century…what was questionable about the way they ran their companies? Did they.
American History Chapter 6: The Expansion of American Industry
The Industrial Revolution in the 19 th Century “The man who has his millions will want everything he can lay his hands on and then raise his voice against.
The Rise and Fall of the Populist Party
Industrialization Unions. Learning Targets:  Know how deflation led to unions being organized in the late 1800s.  Know what a “trade union” is and give.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Chapter 13 Section 3 The Organized Labor Movement Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s. Compare.
Labor Force Distribution The Changing American Labor Force.
SECTION 5-4. Working in the United States Deflation- rise in the value of money. Added tensions between workers and employers.
The Pullman Strike Chicago, 1894
US History October 13, 2015 Warm Up: Can we ever know what happened at the Homestead Strike? What other materials would you want to look at in order to.
WORKERS & UNIONS.  While industrial growth produced wealth for the owners of factories, mines, railroads, and large farms, people who performed work.
Gilded Age Politics: The Panic of 1893 The Silver Movement The Election of 1896.
Workers routinely worked 6 or 7 days a week, had no vacations, no sick leave, and no compensation for injuries Injuries were common – In 1882, an average.
The American Promise: A History of the United States Fourth Edition CHAPTER 20 Dissent, Depression, and War 1890–1900 Copyright © 2009 by Bedford/St. Martin’s.
Chapter Twenty Commonwealth and Empire, 1870–1900 The Populist Movement.
Labor Issues during the Gilded Age. Child Labor Children provided: A cheap source of laborA cheap source of labor A labor force that could not complainA.
Labor Unions and Strikes Why join a union? Strength in numbers What were unions fighting against? 1) Exploitation a. Low Pay b. Long hours 2) Unsafe.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Organized Labor After 1865.
The Pullman Strike Chicago Pullman Palace Car Company Railway car company owned by George Pullman Over 6,000 workers Workers lived in “company.
The Changing American Labor Force Child Labor.
The Pullman Strike Chicago Pullman Palace Car Company Railway car company owned by George Pullman Over 6,000 workers Workers lived in “company.
Strikes, violence, and united demands LABOR UNIONS CHALLENGE BIG BUSINESS.
James L. Roark ● Michael P. Johnson Patricia Cline Cohen ● Sarah Stage Susan M. Hartmann CHAPTER 20 Dissent, Depression, and War, The American.
The Corporation A form of business organization that became increasingly popular during the Industrial Revolution As businesses got bigger, it took larger.
Big Business and Labor The Workplace, Strikes, and the Rise of Labor Unions Topic 1.3.
Impact of Industrialization  By 1900, the United States had surpassed Great Britain, France, and Germany as the leading industrial power in the world.
Organized Labor After 1865.
Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
TOPIC 2: Industry and Immigration ( )
The Rise of Unions Workers were against the increasing power of big business workers formed unions Unions were workers’ organizations designed to.
The workers protest for a voice during the Industrial Revolution.
Organized Labor After 1865.
Knights of Labor Terence Powderly.
Labor and the USA The Gilded Age.
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
The Pullman Strike Chicago, 1894
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
The Pullman Strike Chicago, 1894
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
Labor Union Activities
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
Organized Labor After 1865.
Labor Movement Labor unions formed.
The Pullman Strike Chicago, 1894
The Pullman Strike Chicago 1894.
Workers Unite.
Presentation transcript:

Dissent, Depression, and War

Farmers’ Alliance

Black Members excluded from some alliances

Southern Farmers’ Alliance members

Farmers’ advocate in Kansas

Populists The Populist platform called for  direct election of senators  the secret ballot, and other electoral issues  supported the eight-hour day and an end to contract labor More than just a response to hard times, Populism presented an alternative vision of American economic democracy.

Workers  American Workers agitate for better working conditions, better pay, shorter work day  Two of the most violent disputes between labor and capitalists are the Homestead lockout and strike 1892 and the Pullman strike of 1894

Homestead Steel Works, Pennsylvania

Homestead Workers

Pinkertons leaving barges after surrender

Cripple Creek mines, Colorado

Mine shaft

Fire at Cripple Creek

Pullman

George Pullman

Company town  4,300 acres nine miles south of Chicago  Planned and built by George Pullman after the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 Family could never own their home Rents were percent higher than nearby communities Wages slashed five times in 1893, but rents stayed high Stockholders continued to get 8% dividend

Pullman

Pullman strikers

American Railway Union  90 % of the workers walked off the job  Pullman shut down the factory  Workers appealed to the American Railway Union (ARU), led by Eugene V. Debs  Beginning on Jun 29, 1894, the membership refused to handle any train that carried Pullman cars  Switchmen across the country would not work with the cars  By July 2, railways from New York to California were paralyzed by work stoppage

Crushing the strike  An injunction against Eugene Debs said he could not speak in public  When he did, he was arrested and put in jail  Later, Debs formed the Socialist Party, and became a candidate for the U.S. Presidency

Nellie Bly  Journalist who defied editor and wrote about the Pullman Strike—sympathizing with strikers

Pullman Strike

Frances Willard and the WCTU

Willard’s contributions  Willard radically changed the direction of the WCTU. She moved it away from religiously oriented programs to a campaign that stressed alcoholism as a disease rather than a sin and poverty as a cause rather than a result of drink;  Willard created a broad reform coalition  Knights of Labor  People’s Party  Prohibition Party  WCTU had over 200,000 members in the 1890s  This gave women valuable experience in political action.

William Jennings Bryan

Coxey’s Army

Jacob Coxey

Marching to Washington

Democrats and Populists  The cartoon suggests that the Populists would take over the Democratic Party by nominating Bryan.  In reality, the Populists lost identity by nominating a Democrat

William McKinley