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Unit 5 – The Industrial Revolution and Gilded Age (1865-1900) After the Civil War, American scientists, inventors, and entrepreneurs, encouraged by capitalism.

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Presentation on theme: "Unit 5 – The Industrial Revolution and Gilded Age (1865-1900) After the Civil War, American scientists, inventors, and entrepreneurs, encouraged by capitalism."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 5 – The Industrial Revolution and Gilded Age (1865-1900) After the Civil War, American scientists, inventors, and entrepreneurs, encouraged by capitalism and the government, transformed the U.S. into an industrial powerhouse.

2 Natural Resources Fuel Growth  Coal Mines  Forests  Farm Land  Electricity!  1859 – 1 st Oil Well drilled in PA (Edwin Drake)  Oil replaced whale blubber  Scientific Management changed production  Immigration – Peaked at 1 M a year in 1905

3 Laissez-faire Economics  The U.S. Gov’t policy was “hands off”  Businesses had little gov’t regulation, subsidies, and protective tariffs  When gov’t did intervene, it was to aid businesses in starting up  Economy 100% governed by the Laws of Supply and Demand!

4 Railroads Lead the Way!  As the USA was united by rail (1 st Transcontinental R.R. 1869), problems resulted for trains, freight, and people  Solar time was no longer adequate  1883 the U.S. and most of world adopted International Standard Time

5 Electricity Changed Lives!  Thomas A. Edison 1. Phonograph (1877) 2. Electric Light (1880) 3. Power Plant (1882) 4. Motion Picture (1888) We have had electricity for only 130 years! Con Edison Steam Station Lower Manhattan, NYC

6 Advancing Communications  Samuel F.B. Morse used Morse Code to transmit telegraph messages in 1844  By 1900 Western Union was sending 63 M messages a year  Alexander G. Bell’s telephone (1876) led to the formation of AT&T in 1885

7 The Rise of the Steel Industry  Bessemer Process made steel production more efficient  John A. Roebling’s Brooklyn Bridge (1883)  “Race to the Skies” = Skyscrapers and RR’s improved too Roebling Bridge (1866) Brooklyn Bridge1883

8 It is the longest cable suspension bridge in the Western Hemisphere. Arthur Ravenel, Jr. Bridge Charleston, SC – July 2005

9 Many Corporations Merge  Corporation – people get a charter & sell shares of stock to raise capital (P. 108)  Monopoly – Corporations combine to control an entire industry or service  Trust – Companies ally and turn assets over to board of trustees, may offer many brands, but really ran as one company  The goal was to restrict competition and maximize profits!  Is Wal-Mart a monopoly????

10 Are Monopolies Good or Bad?  Interstate Commerce Commission (1887)- established to monitor the RR industry by investigating unfair practices.  Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) – Outlawed business practices that restricted free trade. But it was rarely enforced for 15 years – Why?

11 Andrew Carnegie and Steel  13 yr-old Scottish Immigrant earned $1.35-wk (1848)  Carnegie Steel (1889)  Used Vertical Integration (coal, RR’s, iron mines) to force competitors out

12 John D. Rockefeller and Oil  1 st oil well in Titusville, PA (1859)  Cleveland, OH Refinery built in 1863  Standard Oil Trust formed in 1870 via Horizontal Integration (P. 110)  He drove his competitors out of business as he sidestepped laws

13 Horizontal and Vertical Integration

14 Social Darwinism and the “Gospel of Wealth”  The “Gospel of Wealth” - Carnegie said “millionaires are the bees that make the most honey”  Based on Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution (1859)  Social Darwinism – a theory held that gov’t shouldn’t interfere with business and the fittest will become rich

15 Robber Barons or Captains of Industry?  Did the wealthy “rob” from the public trust (politicians), workers, and environment to build empires?  Did their contributions (jobs, goods, services, and philanthropy) outweigh the bad?

16 Industrialization and Workers  It was a family affair  Child Labor – 1/5 ages 10-16 worked!  No welfare only over-burdened charities!  12-hour days, 6- day weeks!  Unsafe conditions – 1882 avg. 675 deaths/ week – 120 today

17 The Rise of Labor Unions  1820s - Collective Bargaining – negotiating as a group for better wages or benefits  Strike - the most potent collective bargaining method – it is a work stoppage to voice demands  Socialism – favors government not private control over major industries and sharing of the wealth! Labor leaders influenced by philosophy.

18 Early Labor Unions  Knights of Labor (1869) – skilled and unskilled  American Federation of Labor (1886) – craft unions – more exclusive than the Knights  1890 Census – 9% controlled 75% of wealth

19 The Great Strikes! (Pg. 118)  1877 RR Strike – President Hayes uses federal troops to break strike: violence in many cities b/c of pay cut.  Haymarket Square (1886) – Chicago, 8 HR Day, bomb!, dozens killed! Knights of Labor’s was blamed and union membership declined.  Homestead, PA (1892) – Carnegie Steel – he cut wages then used violence to break the steel union!  Pullman Strike (1894) – 120,000 ARU and Eugene V. Debs protested 25% pay cut – 30 killed- Pres. Cleveland sent in troops – Debs to jail


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