Was the Industrial Revolution “Good” for the United States? 1865-1910.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Industrial America in the Late 19 th Century. Corporate consolidation of industry Transformation of farming, mining, and ranching industries by Big Business.
Advertisements

Big Business Emerges Businesses consolidate into big industries or ________________ These are run by businessmen who become very wealthy and become known.
Technological Innovations
* The Iron Colt Becomes an Iron Horse * Describe the growth of railroads after the Civil War. * Why did the transcontinental railroad require.
The Rise of American Business, Industry, and Labor ( )
6.3 Big Business and Labor How did the U.S. depend upon the development of new business and technology?
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Industrial Revolution After 1865 Chapter 6 Vocabulary.
Industrial Revolution IB U.S. History StudentsTeachers Game Board Trust Me Lots of Work Mr. Burns’ Questions People’s Court Grab Bag
Aim: How did the Industrial Revolution transform American business
The Gilded Age
Ch.13 Review.
THE INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY
BIG BUSINESS EMERGES Bessemer Process Steel Industry Big Business.
Chapter 14 A New Industrial Age. Natural Resources Fuel Industrialization.
Industrial America Steel is critical to industrialization – new method for steel production during this time: Bessemer Process – a day’s worth of production.
THE GILDED AGE: What does gilded mean?
CHAPTER 18 THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA. INDUSTRIALIZATION Reasons for rapid expansion Cheap energy New technology Low production costs Unskilled and.
Industrial Expansion United States History Mrs. O’Shea.
Chapter 13: The Rise of Industry & Labor (1850 – 1900)
Did You Know? Number your paper from 1 – 29. You will be given a numbered slip with the “end” of a sentence. The beginning of each sentence reads, “Did.
Second Industrial Revolution. Industry and Railroads Bessemer process is created in the 1850s By 1910 the U.S. becomes the world’s top steel producer.
Big Business The American Dream or the American Nightmare.
 Private companies freely competing with each other with little or no government regulation.
Industrialization Making of the Good Life. INDUSTRY Causes of Industrialization Abundant Natural Resources Abundant Natural Resources –Lumber, Coal, Oil.
The Expansion of Industry
Warm-up/ review from last week How might expansion into the West help to define or redefine the national identity? How do interactions with native Americans.
Big Business and Labor Section 14-3 pp. 447 – 455 January 13, 2010.
Big Business -corporations develop -limited liability leads to public investment -mass market selling.
The Expansion of American Industry
The Growth of Big Business Chapter 13 Section 2. Objective: Evaluate the wealth created through the growth of Big Business against the methods and means.
Morgan, Vanderbilt, and an Engineer from Dearborn: The Gilded Age Honors U.S. History.
THE RISE OF INDUSTRY AND THE GROWTH OF UNIONS IN THE GILDED AGE Industrialization.
Railroads & Big Business
“Industrialization in the United States” Post Civil War – Early 1900s.
American Industrialization I. What Factors Caused the US to Industrialize?
Technology and Industrial Growth
THE RISE & DEVELOPMENT OF AMERICAN INDUSTRY IN THE LATE 19 TH CENTURY OBJECTIVE: WHAT FACTORS LED TO THE GROWTH OF AMERICAN INDUSTRY & HOW DID GOVERNMENT.
Recap Period 6 Chapters 16, 17, 18, and beginning of 19.
The American Industrial Revolution Why? A wealth of natural resources Growing population (labor and markets) Technological innovation Government support.
The American Promise: A History of the United States Fourth Edition CHAPTER 18 Business and Politics in the Gilded Age 1870–1895 Copyright © 2009 by Bedford/St.
Unit 7 Industrialization
Were the American Industrialists “Captains of Industry” or “Robber Barons”?
Big Business Development of Basic American Industries- Corporations.
  Industries and “Big Business” grew in response to technological innovations  Other breakthroughs in electricity, mass communication, and shipping.
14-3: Big Business emerges –What is it? –Andrew Carnegie- Tycoon or Robber Baron?
9/23/2014 The Rise of Big Business. From Small Businesses to Corporations Until the mid-nineteenth century, most businesses were local and run by one.
The Growth of Industry Vocabulary List. Industry Definition: The production and sale of commercial goods. Commercial goods were made in factories. Example.
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION SOL 8b. THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE AMERICAN ECONOMY FROM A PRIMARILY AGRARIAN TO A MODERN INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY AND IDENTIFYING MAJOR.
Captains of Industry or Robber Barons? John D. RockefellerAndrew CarnegieJP Morgan Standard Oil U.S. Steel Banking and Investment.
Big Business and Organized Labor
The Triumph of Industry
Resources/Inventions
The Triumph of Industry
Aim: Were unions successful in securing rights for workers?
Unit 7 Industrialization
How do the “Robber Barons” make their fortunes?
Industry and Immigration ( )
Regulation and Reforms
Andrew Carnegie 1899 Carnegie Steel Improved quality and cut costs.
P Big Business and Labor.
Find your new seat Get out AR Grab Writing Notebook.
THE GILDED AGE: Immigration and Urbanization VISUAL VOCABULARY
Industry and Immigration ( )
The Industrial Revolution ( )
Ch.6 Sec. 3 Big Business and Labor
Period 6: the gilded age
Big Business and Labor.
Industry and Westward Expansion
The Growth of Big Business
The Industrial Revolution
Presentation transcript:

Was the Industrial Revolution “Good” for the United States?

The IR is a Civil War Aftermath How and Why this occurred? – Natural Resources harnessed – New Industries emerged – New Markets Spark Rise of Consumerism – Railroads Transform Life – Big Business Emerges It’s EFFECT – Nation’s Wealth Increased 5 ½ times By 1920 U.S. is Leader in – Agricultural production – Industrial Production

IR Evaluation Was this beneficial for “United States”? – Business Owners – Workers – Investors – Consumers – Citizens – National Economy

IR Good for “Big Business” Owners? Consolidation: organize to stabilize economy Panic 1893 : A Four Year Depression Vertical Integration – By 1901 U.S. Steel Corp. producing 80% all steel Horizontal Consolidation – Standard Oil Company Trusts – JP Morgan Company Social Darwinism Carnegie “Rags to Riches” Story

IR Good for U.S.? YES Patents Increase Number of Industrial Workers Increased Exports Increased Steel Production Increased Oil Production Increased Railroad Tracks Laid Increased National Wealth Increased Gospel of Wealth

IR Good for U.S.? NO Monopolies Political Corruption – Social Darwinism – Influences Laissez-Faire Policy – Political Machines Tammany Hall – Plutocracy Gilded Age Income Inequality Economic Tumult

IR Consequences for Workers/Consumers Positive – Increased number of jobs – Increased living standard – Decreased cost of goods – Cultural Enhancements – Technology Innovations (Conveniences) – Growth of Middle Class

IR Consequences for Workers Negative – Environmental harm (Oil Drilling) – Dangerous Working Conditions – Exploited Child Labor – Exploited Free Workers “Wage Slaves” – Long Working Hours – Monotonous/Repetitive Work “Part of the Machine”

IR Mixed Benefit Triggered Response Government Response Worker Response Business Owner Response

Government Regulation b)Response to “Big Business” Behavior – Government Regulation Munn v. Illinois 1877 Wabash Case 1886 – Interstate Commerce Act 1887 Sherman Anti-Trust Act 1890 – Court Rulings Dilute Anti-trust Legislation U.S. Knight (1895) Maximum Freight Case (1897) – Federal government consistently denied unions recognition as legally protected organizations under 14 th Amendment

Rise of National Labor Unions b)Response to “Big Business” Behavior – Rise of National Labor Unions American Federation of Labor – National Labor Union Actions Collective Bargaining Strikes – 1877 Great RR Strike – Haymarket Square Riot 1886 and Homestead Strike 1892 – Pullman Strike 1894

Response of Big Business Owners c) Response to Labor Union Actions – Employer Responses Yellow-dog contracts Closed Shops – Public Response to Worker Strikes: Disdain – Supreme Court Classified Strikes as Illegal Trust – Federal Government Support of Big Business Combination of public disdain, federal government opposition limit union gains for 30 years!!!

Interpretations of IR Effects Big Business as – Robber Barons Big Business as – Captains of Industry