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The Gilded Age

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The Gilded Age The Era of Robber Barons and Labor Violence Setting the Scene In September of 1873, the nation experienced the largest economic crash in its history. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Gilded Age


1
The Gilded Age
  • The Era of Robber Barons and Labor Violence

2
Setting the Scene
  • In September of 1873, the nation experienced the
    largest economic crash in its history.
  • The crash was the consequence of over-speculation
    in the railroad industry which, in turn, brought
    down many of the nations largest banks.

3
Panic!
  • October 1873 Run on the Fourth National Bank, No.
    20 Nassau Street in New York City

4
Depression
  • A five year depression followed the crash - a
    depression that was especially devastating for
    the growing number of urban poor.

5
Making Money from the Crash
  • But as ordinary Americans suffered, the super
    rich used the crisis as an opportunity to buy up
    foundering competitors.
  • J.P. Morgan was one of these men who wanted to
    get rid of wasteful competition.

6
Robber Barons

Vanderbilt
Carnegie
Mc Cormick
Rockefeller
7
Morganizing
  • For the largest manufacturing companies in the
    U.S. those with guaranteed contracts and the
    ability to make rebate deals with the railroads
    the panic years were golden.
  • The nations wealthiest men had enough capital
    reserves to finance their own continuing growth.
  • For smaller industrial firms that relied on
    seasonal demand and outside capital, the
    situation was dire. As capital reserves dried up,
    so did their industries.
  • Led by the financial wizardry of Morgan, the
    Robber Barons attacked free market competition by
    buying out their smaller competitors at rock
    bottom prices.

8
  • By 1890, over 1800 millionaires lived in the
    United States half of them lived in New York
    City where their lives were marked by conspicuous
    consumption - thereby helping them to earn their
    label, the Robber Barons.

9
  • In 1883, after the completion of their New York
    City mansion, the Vanderbilts threw a party that
    showcased their immense wealth, as well as the
    wealth of their millionaire friends.
  • The picture is of Mrs. Vanderbilt as Electric
    Light. Her gown glitters with an unknown number
    of real diamonds.

10
  • The Lucky Rich" by Charles Dana Gibson.
  • Gibson, creator of the "Gibson Girl," fondly
    satirized the American rich, depicting elegant
    young men and women in courtship and warning of
    the perils of unhappiness in marriages based on
    monetary concerns.

11
  • As the panic deepened, ordinary Americans
    suffered terribly.
  • Between 1873 and 1877, as many smaller factories
    and workshops shuttered their doors, tens of
    thousands of workers many former Civil War
    soldiers became transients.
  • The terms tramp and bum became commonplace
    American terms.

12
As both the wealth of robber barons and the
unemployed soared, so did the resentment of the
workers and their families. Relief rolls
exploded in major cities, with 25 percent
unemployment (100,000 people)in New York City
alone.
13
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14
  • Unemployed workers demonstrated in Boston,
    Chicago, and New York in the winter of 1873-74
    demanding public work.
  • In New Yorks Tompkins Square in January 1874,
    police entered the crowd with clubs and beat up
    thousands of men and women.

15
Labor Violence
  • The most violent strikes in American history
    followed the panic, including by the secret labor
    group known as the Molly Maguires in
    Pennsylvanias coal fields in 1875, when masked
    workmen exchanged gunfire with the Coal and Iron
    Police, a private force commissioned by the
    state.

16
  • A nationwide railroad strike followed in 1877, in
    which mobs destroyed railway hubs in Pittsburgh,
    Chicago, and Cumberland, Maryland.
  • This is a photo of the burning of the Union
    Railroad Depot in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in
    August, 1877 - a result of the railroad strike.
  • .

17
  • But when the Depression was over in 1880,
    conflict between the Robber Barons who were
    richer than ever, and the urban poor, who were
    poorer than ever, increased rather than
    diminished.
  • Working conditions were horrendous during the
    Gilded Age. In 1889 alone, 22,000 railroad
    workers were killed or injured on the job
    according to the records of the Interstate
    Commerce Commission. Thousands of others died or
    were crippled in the nations mines, steel mills,
    and textile mills.

18
  • Not only were workers angry about poor working
    conditions and mistreatment at the hand of
    industrial owners, they also loathed losing their
    jobs to local or imported strikebreakers and
    detested the efforts of management to destroy
    their unions.
  • As many employers shut down their plants and
    attempted "to starve" their employees out of the
    union, violent outbreaks occurred in the North,
    South, and West, in small communities as well as
    in large metropolitan cities.

19
Haymarket Riot - Breaking the Union
  • Perhaps the worse of the riots, as well as the
    most famous of all riots occurred in Chicagos
    Haymarket Square in 1886.

20
  • This is an engraving of the seven anarchists
    sentenced to die for the death of police officer
    Degan's. An eighth defendant, not shown here, was
    sentenced to 15 years in prison.
  • Four were put to death, one committed suicide in
    prison, and two had their sentences commuted to
    life imprisonment.

21
  • While workers reacted against the denial of what
    they regarded as their rights to belong to labor
    unions and resorted to strikes if and when
    conditions were unbearable, the outcome of their
    violent behavior never changed the course of
    events - the owners won and the workers lost.
  • Thus, Americas Gilded Age witnessed deep and
    sometimes violent divisions over the definition
    of freedom in a rapidly industrializing society.
  • The battle continued into the 20th Century - a
    battle pitted the Robber Barons - proponents of
    Social Darwinism and laissez faire who saw
    freedom as the opportunity to pursue economic
    interests without outside restraints, against
    workers - those who believed freedom lay in
    collective efforts to create safe industrial
    opportunities for ordinary Americans.
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