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An Industrial Giant

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Railroads were a significant part of the economic boom in the late 1800s ... Edward Bellamy predicted a completely socialized America in Looking Backward (1888) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An Industrial Giant


1
An Industrial Giant
  • Reference
  • Chapter 18
  • The American Nation 12th edition

2
Essentials of Industrial Growth
  • American manufacturing flourished-late 1800s
  • National market grew
  • Protected by tariff
  • European immigrants provide labor
  • Advances in science and technology

3
Railroads The First Big Business
  • Railroads were a significant part of the economic
    boom in the late 1800s
  • Contributed to the growth of other industries
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt and Jay Gould
  • Times zones are standardized
  • Land grant railroads sell land cheaply, thus
    helping settle the West
  • New technology like air brakes and locomotives

4
Iron, Oil, Electricity
  • Bessemer process-mass production of steel
  • Huge supply of iron ore-steel production more
    possible
  • Mesabi range yields lots of iron ore (Minn.)
  • Pittsburgh-iron and steel center
  • Urban centers grow-need electricity, telephones
  • Alexander Graham Bell (1876)
  • Edison and the light bulb
  • Electricity replaces steam in the factories

5
Competition and Monopoly The Railroads
  • Deflation set in in the 1870s
  • Leads to falling railroad prices and increased
    competition
  • Railroads counter by giving rebates
  • Made up for it by raising prices in areas where
    there was no competition
  • Forced some railroads into receivership (limited
    bankruptcy)
  • Some railroads formed interregional systems-first
    corporate giants

6
Notables Cornelius Vanderbilt and Jay Gould

7
Competition and Monopoly Steel
  • Andrew Carnegie-Carnegie Steel Company
  • Almost corners market
  • Makers of steel products consider pooling their
    resources to start making steel
  • Carnegie threatens to make steel products
  • J.P. Morgan buys out Carnegie and makers of steel
    products
  • Forms United States Steel-first billion dollar
    corporation in America

8
Notables Andrew Carnegie and J.P. Morgan

9
Oil
  • John D. Rockefeller founds the Standard Oil
    Company in 1870
  • By 1879, he controlled 90 of the nations oil
    refining capacity
  • To maintain his monopoly, he formed a new type of
    business organization-the trust

10
Retailing and Utilities
  • Electric companies and telephone companies also
    form monopolies to prevent duplication and
    protect patents
  • General Electric and White Westinghouse
  • Life insurance business expands
  • Urban dept. stores expand
  • Wanamakers
  • Marshall Field

11
American Ambivalence to Big Business
  • Laissez-faire attitude toward government
    intervention into economic and social affairs
  • Intellectual trends encouraged this attitude
  • Charles Darwin-The Origin of the Species
  • William Graham Sumner-applies Darwinism to social
    and economic institutions

12
American Ambivalence cont
  • Attitudes begin to change
  • Growth of large corporations frighten people
  • Fear of high prices, destroy economic
    opportunity, threaten democratic institutions
  • People wanted some government intervention
    eventually

13
Reformers
  • Some reformers became alarmed at the
    misdistribution of wealth and power of the
    corporations
  • Henry George proposed a single tax in Progress
    and Poverty (1879)
  • Edward Bellamy predicted a completely socialized
    America in Looking Backward (1888)
  • Henry Demarest Lloyd criticized the Standard Oil
    Company in Wealth Against Commonwealth (1894)

14
Notables George, Bellamy, and Lloyd

15
The Marxists
  • Unequal distribution of wealth also brought about
    some advocating Marxism
  • Marxist Socialist Labor Party-1877
  • Laurence Gronlund explained Marxism to Americans
    in The Cooperative Commonwealth (1884)
  • Daniel De Leon-leader in Socialist Labor Party

16
Railroad Regulation
  • State governments react to railroads first
  • National Granges lead the way
  • Maximum rates and unjust prices
  • Munn vs. Illinois (1877)-Supreme Court ruled
    states can regulate railroads as long as these
    regulations help the public interests
  • Wabash case (1886)-Supreme Court rules states
    cannot regulate railroads that run across state
    lines
  • Interstate Commerce Act (1887) and Commission
    regulates railroads

17
The Sherman Antitrust Act
  • First antitrust legislation comes from the states
  • Feds get involved with the Sherman Antitrust Act
    of 1890
  • Declares trusts illegal as well as any
    combination that restrained trade
  • Intended to restore competition
  • Supreme Court iffy when it comes to the act

18
Labor Union Movement
  • National craft unions grew after 1865
  • National Labor Union founded in 1866
  • Knights of Labor founded in 1869
  • KOL very political, not good on labor issues
  • Strikes against railroads helped KOL grow
  • Eight hour workday
  • Workers and police clash in Chicago in 1886
  • Bomb tossed into crowd-seven police killed

19
American Federation of Labor
  • Violence in Chicago damaged labor unions
  • National craft unions and the American Federation
    of Labor replaced the KOL
  • Led by Adolph Strasser and Samuel Gompers
  • AFL advocated for higher wages and shorter work
    days
  • Avoided politics and used strikes

20
Labor Militancy Rebuffed
  • More machines and foreign workers scares some in
    the labor force
  • 1877-railroad strike shuts down 2/3 of the
    nations rail traffic
  • Violence ensues, army breaks the strike up
  • Eugene Debs and the American Railway Union
    strikes against Pullman Company
  • President Cleveland sends in federal troops to
    kill the strike
  • Eugene Debs files an injunction and is jailed
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