The Gilded Age
Vocabulary
- Industrialization - period of social and economic change
- Gilded age - period of extreme prosperity and poverty
- manifest destiny - a belief that the U.S. had a god-given right to expand westward
- Transcontinental railroad - a continuous rail line that crosses a continental landmass
- Nativism - a belief that native-born citizens are superior to immigrants
- Rebate - a partial refund of the cost of an item
- Merger - a business deal where two existing, independent companies combine to form a new, singular legal entity
- Sole proprietorship - a business owned by a single person
- Corporation - a large company, or a group of companies that are controlled as a single organization
- Monopoly - a company with complete control over an industry
- Pool - a pool is like a big pot where everyone throws in their stuff—usually money or resources—and then they all use it together for something they all agree on
- Trust - a legal arrangement where one party (the trustee) holds assets on behalf of another party (the beneficiary).
- Laissez-faire - abstention by governments from interfering in the workings of the free market.
- Capitalism - economic system where properties and businesses are privately controlled with the goal of making money
- Union - organizations created to protect workers’ rights and give them negotiation power
- Collective bargaining - a negotiation between employers and employees
- Immigrate - moving to a country
- Emigrate - moving from a country
- Urbanization - rapid growth of cities
- Progressive era - a period of social and political reform
- Muckraker - a person who searches for and tries to expose real or alleged corruption, scandal, or other wrongdoing, especially in politics
- Recall - allows voters to petition to have an elected representative removed from office
- Initiative - a process that enables citizens to bypass their state legislature (if they have enough support) by placing proposed statutes on the ballot
- Direct primary - when people vote for the person they want to be the candidate in the general election
- Sectionalism - loyalty to one's own region or section of the country, rather than to the country as a whole
- Know Nothing Party - nativist political group aka “Anti-Catholic American Party”
- Temperance - a movement about abstaining from alcohol
Chronology
The Gilded Age
- Began due to industrial revolution
- 18th - 19th century; economy changed from agricultural to industrial
- Business owners profit from cheap labor
- Working class and wealthy become more divided
- Characteristics
- Abundance of resources like coal and steel
- Led to the construction of factories and railroads
- New inventions like motion picture film and the lightbulb
- Large labor supply due to influx of immigrants
- Laissez-faire government let big businesses thrive
- A lot of capital
Railroad Industry
- 1st big business in the U.S., investment magnet, key to western expansion
- Impact of railroads
Before trains it was expensive to transport goods (limited water transportation)
Economic | Social |
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- Farms could sell perishables
- Expansion of industries
- Formed jobs
| - Created suburbs
- Work moves into cities
- Reduced sectionalism
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Transcontinental Railroad
- Govt. hired Union Pacific Corp. and Central Pacific Railroad to construct the railroad
- Two acts were passed prior to construction
- Homestead Act (1862)
- Govt. distributed up to 162 acres of land to settlers to encourage westward expansion
- Pacific Railway Act (1862)
- Permitted the government to make grants of public land to private corporations
- Believed the companies would profit off them by selling land to settlers
- Lead to poor construction and corruption
- Aided in construction of railroad and telegraph
- Forced Native Americans off their land
- Labor Details
- UPC employed Irish immigrants to work in the East to West
- CPR employed Chinese immigrants to work in California
Labor Force
- Company owners became extremely wealthy
- 10% of population owns 90% of wealth
- Problems for workers
- Wages - low wages, no paid leave, no unemployment compensation, unequal pay for women
- Hours - long hours (12+ per day)
- Conditions - zero regulations led to hazardous work spaces
- Child labor
- Introduction of labor organizations
- Prior to 1860, unions were craft related, eg. Ramsey Shoemakers’ Union
- Craft - skilled workers
- Industrial - all workers
- Knights of Labor
- An industrial union formed by Terrence Powderly in 1869
- Included African Americans and women
- Pushed for social reforms (8 hour work days, end child labor, higher pay)
- Became obsolete after unsuccesful strikes
- American Federation of Labor
- Craft union formed by Samuel Gompers 1886
- Focused on wages, working hours, and conditions
- Used collective bargaining & strikes
- Successful in effort and won higher wages and shorter hours
- Strikes
- Caused major setbacks for unions
- Employers would hire strikebreakers or would blacklist employees
- Violence would break out during strikes, causing a bad reputation for unions
- Homestead Steel Strike
- Carnegie Steel Plant (PA), 1892
- Cut wages and closed plant → workers went on strike
- Frick hired Pinkerton Detective Agency to break up strike
- 16 people killed
- National guard called in to disband strike
- Union workers were fired and blacklisted
- Pullman Strike
- Pullman Palace Car Co., Pullman, IL
- Largest maker of sleeper cars
- George Pullman (owner) built a town surrounding his factory that had strict behavior standards for residents
- 2 causes of strike
- Pullman cut wages by 25% and laid of thousands
- Rent cost stayed the same even though wages were reduced
- Strike begins May 11, 1894
- Order of events
- Eugene V. Debs and the American Railway Union call for a boycott of Pullman cars
- Strike grew to a point where rail travel came to a stop
- This meant that mail and goods like food and coal weren’t being transported
- President Cleveland issued a court order to end the strike due to interference with interstate commerce
- Deployed 1000+ federal troops to Chicago
- 30 killed
- ARU leaders including Eugene Debs were arrested for violating a court order
- Pullman Co. reopned and prohibited unionizing
- The media was equally divided over support for Pullman vs. the employees
Industry Leaders
Both
- Andrew Carnegie - steel
- Carnegie Steel Co. (controlled raw materials, manufacturing, storage, and the distribution of steel)
- J.P. Morgan - finance
- J.P. Morgan & Co. (financed railroads and helped to organize U.S. Steel, General Electric, and other major corporations)
Captain of Industry
- Andrew Mellon - finance
- Secretary of Treasury, 1921-1932; reduced national debt and reformed tax structure
- Henry Ford - transportation
- Ford Motor Co. (world’s biggest automaker)
Robber Barons
- Jay Gould - railroad & finance
- Invested in railroad stocks
- Jim Fisk - finance
- Worked with Gould to profit off of Erie Railroad Stocks; contributed to Black Friday Crisis
- Cornelius Vanderbilt - transportation
- New York Central Railroad (offered rebates and drove out competition; Grand Central Station)
- John D. Rockefeller - oil
- Standard Oil Co. (controlled 90% of oil industry)
Robber Baron | Captain of Industry |
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- Employed ethically questionable methods to eliminate their competition and develop a monopoly in their industry
| - Often philanthropists.
- They made their wealth and used it in a way that would benefit society, such as providing more jobs or increasing productivity.
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- Sherman Anti-Trust Act
- Public began to dislike monopolies
- Congress illegalized trusts and monopolies
- Law is very lax until progressives strengthen it in the early 1900s
Immigration and Urbanization
- Impact of urbanization
- Increase in need for unskilled labor → rise in immigration
- By 1910, immigrants made up over half the population of 18 major cities
- Old wave immigrants (prior to 1886)
- Northern & Western Europe
- Protestant, skilled, literate, some wealth
- 3 main nationalities
- German - 5 million immigrants in 19th century
- Attracted to available farmland in midwest
- Irish - accounted for ⅓ of immigrants between 1815 to 1885
- Chinese - 25,000 immigrants from 1800 to 1850
- Attracted to gold rush and railroad labor
- New wave immigrants (1885 - 1930)
- 9 million new arrivals between 1900 and 1910
- 3x more than previous decade
- Characteristics
- From Eastern and Southern Europe, specifically Italy, Germany, Greece, Poland, Russia, and Austria-Hungary
- Catholic/Jewish, poor, unskilled, non-native speakers
Immigration Centers
- Ellis Island
- Built in 1892 as the first ever immigration center
- Screened immigrants coming into the U.S.
- Had to provide documents and pass certain tests
- Permitted 100 lbs of luggage
- Closed in 1940s and is currently a museum
- Most European immigrants passed through here
- 1892-1924: 12 million entered through EI
- Roughly 2% denied entry
- Angel Island
- Immigration center in San Francisco, CA
- Many Asian immigrants passed through
- More difficult immigration process compared to EI
- Poor facility, interrogations, extended detainment, etc.
Chinese Exclusion
- First U.S. law to restrict entry based on nationality
- Reduced the amount of legal Chinese immigrants
- Exempted students, merchants, teachers, and diplomats
- Avoided trade conflict with China
- The Scott Act (1888) - denied re-entry for Chinese citizens after leaving the U.S.
- The Geary Act (1892) - renewed Chinese Exclusion Acts for another 10 years
- Congress repealed the CEA’s after China became a U.S. ally in WWII
- Gentleman’s Agreement (1907-1908) - informal agreement between U.S. and Japan that limited Japanese immigration
- Japan wanted to stop anti-American riots because Asians were being placed into Asian only schools in the U.S.
Early 20th Century
- Mass transit networks developed
- Cities develop sewers and sanitation depts.
- Better police force
- Full time fire depts.
- Buildings are made from non-flammable materials and are equipped with sprinklers
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory
- Owned by Russian immigrants Max Blanck and Isaac Harris
- Rented top 3 floors
- 500+ employees
- Mostly young female immigrants (50% younger than 20)
- Work life
- 52 hour work week
- $7-12 per week (pay docked for supplies and errors)
- Overcrowded
- 1 bathroom break
- Door locked from outside to prevent theft or early leaving
- 1911 Factory Fire
- Building wasn’t up to fire code
- 145 killed
- Public Response
- Owners charges with 1st degree murder
- Unions demand change
- Organized a public funeral procession for the victims
- Public sympathy led to changes in policy
- Impacts
- National Womens’ Trade Union League collected testimony from workers to document unsafe working conditions
- Created the Citizens Committee for Public Safety
- 3 months later, NY passed laws regarding fire safety, factory inspection, sanitation, and employment rules for women and children (further provisions added in 1912)
Progressive Era
- A period of social and political reform that included changes in…
- Urbanization and immigration
- Workers’ rights
- Womens’ suffrage
- African American equality
- Public education and child labor
- Temperance
Muckrakers
- Jacob Riis - used photography to advocate for housing reform
- How the Other Half Lives, 1888, slideshow lecture
- $150 per lecture
- Chose photos that troubled the middle class
- Upton Sinclair - brought attention to conditions in meat factories
- The Jungle (1906), King Coal (1917), Oil! (1927)
- Public reception focused on treatment of food
Consumer Protection Laws
- Meat Inspection Act - 1906
- Federal guidelines for meat handling & safety
- Pure Food & Drug Act - 1906
- Ended cross-contamination between foods and medicines
- Required ingredients and expiration dates on labels
- Established the FDA to test and certify drugs before hitting the markets
Ending Child Labor
- National Child Labor Committee - 1904
- Worked to abolish child labor
- Keating-Owen Child Labor Act - 1916
- Limited the amount of hours a child could work
- Prohibited the transportation of goods produced by children
- By 1918, nearly every state had limited/banned child labor
Quiz on laws
- Which act was passed in 1862 and permitted the government to make grants of public land to private corporations to aid in the construction of the transcontinental railroad?
- Which act, also passed in 1862, distributed up to 162 acres of land to settlers to encourage westward expansion?
- Which act, passed in 1882, was the first U.S. law to restrict entry based on nationality, specifically targeting Chinese immigrants?
- Which act, passed in 1888, denied re-entry for Chinese citizens after leaving the U.S.?
- Which act, passed in 1892, renewed the Chinese Exclusion Acts for another 10 years and required Chinese residents to carry identification certificates at all times?
- Which act, passed in 1906 alongside the Meat Inspection Act, ended cross-contamination between foods and medicines and established the FDA to test and certify drugs before hitting the markets?
- Which act, passed in 1907-1908, was an informal agreement between the U.S. and Japan that limited Japanese immigration?
- Which act, passed in 1916, limited the amount of hours a child could work and prohibited the transportation of goods produced by children?