 The practice of combining separate companies in the same industry.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How did business change during the Industrial Revolution?
Advertisements

Chapter 15 THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Econ. Inventions People Labor Vocabulary.
Robber Barons or Captains of Industry?
Technological Innovations
Chapter 6 THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
 Review Quiz on Sections 1-3 Industrial Revolution.
 What is the main purpose of a corporation?  What are the advantages of a corporation?  What is pooling?  What is a trust?  What is the Sherman Antitrust.
An Age of Big Business Chapter 19 Section 3.
 Review Quiz on Sections 1-3 Industrial Revolution.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Industrial Revolution After 1865 Chapter 6 Vocabulary.
A New Spirit of Reform The Gilded Age  The American worker hidden under the powerful few  Reform, or change needed – were the industries.
Chapter 19 The Growth of Industry
Chapter 13 Notes: The Growth of Industry in America.
 1900: Big Businesses dominate economy  Large factory complexes and distribution centers  Corporations : organization owned by many, but treated as.
There is no oil left on earth. Therefore, there is no power for electricity. Describe your morning routine getting ready for school without using any electricity.
The Rise of Big Business. Henry Bessemer Created a cheap and efficient process for making steel.
Chapter 19 The Industrial Age
John D. Rockefeller & Andrew Carnegie Ch
Age of Big Business Sec Pages Define: Factors of production – land – labor – capital – corporation – stock - shareholders – dividends –
$2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 Vocabulary I Vocabulary II Inventors and Inventions Industry and Industrialists.
Chapter 19 Notes. page 556 Transcontinental railroad completed in Trains played an important role in the economic growth of the country and the.
EARLY 20 TH CENTURY AMERICA VUS.8B Inventions and Innovations.
Corporation Separate unions of skilled workers, united together Knights of Labor Child Labor Group formed by workers to improve working conditions Theory.
Bessemer Process The Bessemer process was the first inexpensive industrial process to convert iron into steel.
Capital Money for investment in industry. George M. Pullman Developed a luxury sleeping car for overnight.
After the Civil War, the North and West grew quickly. Railroads helped the West grow, while industrial cities sprang up all over the north employing many.
5:3 ● The Rise of Big Business ● Corporation: owned by many people, but treated by law as if owned by one person – Can own property – Pay taxes – Make.
Unit 2 Getting Down to Business How did the rise of big businesses help grow and shape America?
Big Business What is a corporation?
POOLS! What is it? Firms agreed to divide an area amongst themselves Share in the profits Used by Railroads Outlawed by the Interstate Commerce Act (1887)
The Rise of Big Business
The Rise in BIG Business SOL 3d 11/19/ Between the Civil War and World War I, the U. S. was transformed from an agricultural to an industrial nation.
Trusts and Cartels
 Land or Natural Resources  Labor or workers  Capital & Capital goods.
Industry and Urban Growth A New Industrial Revolution Big Business/ Organized Labor Cities Grow and Change The New Immigrants Odds and Ends $200 $400 $600.
Ch Age of Big Business Mrs. Manley. An Age of Big Business Edwin Drake- drilled the 1 st oil well in Titusville, Pennsylvania; led to creation of.
Key terms dealing with mines? Comstock Lode Boom town Ghost town problems Silver strike in the Sierra Nevadas Town that quickly grew up at a gold strike.
Industrial Revolution Recap The Big Idea The Second Industrial Revolution led to new sources of power and advances in transportation and communication.
Chapter 5 Industrial Age. Railroads Lead the Way Railroad expansion allowed a few powerful individuals to build a great fortune. Powerful people who controlled.
Big Business and Labor Chapter 6.3. Big Business and Labor 6.3 Main Idea – The expanse of Industry resulted in the growth of big business and prompted.
The Growth of Industry. Industrialization: Factors Plentiful Natural Resources Improved Transportation Growing Population/High Rates of Immigration New.
The Age of Industry and Invention Honors History Class.
A person who controls the commercial production and sale of goods and services. industrialist.
Unit 2 Getting Down to Business How did the rise of big businesses help grow and shape America?
THE EMERGENCE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA AND LABOR’S RESPONSE THE EMERGENCE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA & LABOR’S RESPONSE ( )
Big BusinessInventions & Inventors Words To Know The Work Force $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200.
Chapter 20, Lesson 3 Big Business. Production Factors of Production: land, labor, & capital Land: includes natural resources Labor: workers & our pop.
THIS IS JEOPARDY. THIS IS JEOPARDY Robber Barons Big Business Labor Unions Railroads Inventions Corporations
The Triumph of Industry
VOCABULARY – 2.8 Daily Vocab
Robber Barons or Captains of Industry?
Captains of Industry or Robber Barons?
Andrew Carnegie 1899 Carnegie Steel Improved quality and cut costs.
Topic: Assessing the impact of Corporate Consolidation of American Industry and Technology Do Now: “Industrialists like Carnegie, Vanderbilt, and Rockefeller.
Age of Big Business Chapter 14 Section 3.
Railroads: Precursor of the Industrial Revolution
Chapter 19 Section 2.
ESS THURSDAYS IN LIBRARY!
Ch. 20 Immigrants and Urban Life
The Growth of Industry Chapter 19 The Growth of Industry
You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question.
Moving West and Industrialization Vocabulary
Business owned by investors who buy shares of stock.
Industrialization US History Objectives: **Discuss the rise of the
Chapter 19 The Growth of Industry
The Rise of Industry Chapter 25 Vocabulary.
CAUSES Many natural resources Building of canals and railroad’s
Industrial Revolution
America’s Industrial Revolution
Presentation transcript:

 The practice of combining separate companies in the same industry

 special discounts from railroad companies

 Individuals who controlled the nation’s railroads

 Uniformed all tracks which allowed for faster reduced cost

 Secret agreements between railroad barons.

 Divided the nation into 4 parts, this created a unified scheduling system.

 Nickname given to Thomas Edison

 Leader of the automobile industry. He introduced the assembly line.

 Invented the telephone

 Written guarantee by the government which protected inventors & their inventions

 Company that offers shares of stock for sale to the public

 Investment that allowed people part ownership of a corporation

 Person who buys/owns stock

 Cash payment to shareholders from corporations

 A group of companies managed by the same board of directors

 Complete control within your industry.

 The combining of companies

 Leader of the Oil industry

 Leader of the steel industry

 Person who gives away money to better the community

 Attempt by government to break up trusts & monopolies

 Purchased of companies at all levels of production (Carnegie)

 Purchase of competing companies within an industry. (Rockefeller)

 Unsafe factories where workers worked long hours for low pay

 Workers brought into factories to replace striking workers

 1. Explain/compare the ways that John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie came to control their respected industries using either vertical or horizontal integration  2. Explain in detail the three factors of production as they relate to the Industrial Revolution at the end of the 19 th century:  3. Why did workers form labor unions and what affect did violent strikes have on them?