Industrial Revolution (after Civil War)
Government play in a crucial role in the nation's industrial expansion after the Civil War
More railroads were built up to the 1900s
Transcontinental railroad building was costly and risky so it required government help
It promised national unity and economic growth
Land grants for railroads were made in belts along the route
Within these belts, they were allowed to choose alternate mile square sections in a checkerboard pattern
Railroads withheld all land from other users until they determine the location of tracks and decided which sections were the choicest sections
In 1887 President Cleveland ended it and allowed settlement in unclaimed land grant areas
People later criticize that giving land to railroad companies was giving away valuable birthrights to greedy corporations
The government got long-term preferred rates for postal services in military traffic
Granting land was a cheap way to promote the transportation system because it avoided new taxes for direct cash grants
Could turn the land into gold by using it as collateral for a loan from private banker or sell it
Frontier villages turned into cities
Others withered away and became ghost towns
deadlock over the transcontinental railroad was broken when the south seceded leaving the land to the north
After Fort Sumter Congress started to strengthen the union by connecting California to the east
The union pacific railroad was created and started in Omaha Nebraska
Railroad was the priority after the Civil War
People in credit Mobilier construction company got a lot of profits
They made more money than they used on construction and paid congressmen to look the other way so they were basically stealing from the government
Central pacific railroad started building in California
Big four, four forcing men were the chief financial backers of the enterprise
They operated through two construction companies and made a lot of profit but they didn’t bribe
There was the same subsidies and incentive to rush as Union Pacific
Chinese laborers were cheap, efficient, and expendable but many lost their lives in explosions are other accidents
Central Pacific railroad could only chip a few inches a day while the Union Pacific railroad used sledgehammers and was much more efficient
In 1869 the rails met (wedding of the rails)
People celebrated
Union built 1086 miles in central built 689
The transcontinental railroad connected east to the west and facilitated trade with Asia and allowed growth
It was compared to the declaration of independence and the emancipation of slaves
It also divided bison herds and sped up their near extinction
It reduced food and supplies for Native Americans
Railroads:
Positive: | Negative: |
---|---|
It promised national unity and economic growth | Costly and risky |
government got long-term preferred rates for postal services in military traffic | Required gov help |
Granting land was a cheap way to promote the transportation system because it avoided new taxes for direct cash grants | Withheld all land from other users until they determine the location of tracks and decided which sections were the choicest sections |
Could turn the land into gold by using it as collateral for a loan from private banker or sell it | land to railroad companies was giving away valuable birthrights to greedy corporations |
Frontier villages turned into cities | Other towns withered away and became ghost towns |
The transcontinental railroad connected east to the west and facilitated trade with Asia and allowed growth | It also divided bison herds and sped up their near extinction |
They could carry food to many people and provide them with raw materials and marching | It reduced food and supplies for Native Americans |
Hurt land and because settlers who are following the roads plowed tall grass, planted corn fields and their cattle displaced | |
Buffalo were hunted |
4 other transcontinental railroad were built but had no loans from the government all but great northern received grants of land
Northern pacific railroad was from Lake superior to puget sound
South Pacific was from New Orleans to San Francisco
Great Northern was from Duluth to Seattle and was created by James J Hill one of the greatest railroad builders
Pioneer builders were over-optimistic, they didn’t want land bounties and pushed in areas that lack the potential population to support railroads
If they didn’t succeed they declared bankruptcy which took down the savings of trusting investors
bankruptcies, mergers, or reorganizations
The success of western lines was facilitated by wielding together and expanding the older eastern network
Vanderbilt made money in steamboat and then switch to railroads
He offered railroads at lower rates
He helped popularized steel rails which were safer and more economical because it could carry a heavy load
Standard gauge of track width eliminated the expense and inconvenience of numerous changes from one line to another
Westinghouse air brakes enhance efficiency and safety
Pullman palace cars began to carry well-healed Travelers in the 1860s
The cars (which were partly made of wood) contained kerosene lamp so alarmists called them torture chambers and potential funeral Pyres
Despite safety devices like the telegraph, double tracking and block signal accidents continue to happen
nation was united by iron and steel
The nation’s biggest business and employed more people than any other industry
It caused economic growth after the Civil War and opened the west with its wealth of resources
Trains carried raw materials to factories and then took final goods back
US was the largest integrated national market
Where are the largest single source of orders for the steel industry
It stimulated mining in agriculture in the west and took farmers Outland, carry the food to the market, and brought them back manufactured necessities
Railroads played the leading role in cities
They could carry food to many people and provide them with raw materials and marching
Old companies stimulated immigration because they want to people that their land grants could be sold so they advertise in Europe and sometimes offered to transport newcomers for free
Hurt land and because settlers who are following the roads plowed tall grass, planted corn fields and their cattle displaced Buffalo which were hunted
Time was bent to the railroads' need so every town had its own time dictated by the sun‘s position
This was very confusing/difficult for operators so on November 18, 1883 major rail lines decreed that the nation will be divided into four time zones
People were baffled and reset their clocks (day of two noons)
Railroads made millionaires
New aristocracy (Lord of the rail) replaced all southerners (Lord of the lash)
The lines became the playthings of Wall Street a stock speculators and railroad wreckers got rich
railroad companies like credit Mobilier started to become more corrupt
Jay Gould busted the stocks of the Erie, Kansas specific, union pacific, Texas and pacific railroads
Stock watering is the practice of making cattle thirsty by feeding them salt and having them prove themselves with water before waiting for sale
Railroad promoters inflated their claims of a line’s assets in profitability and sell stocks and bonds higher than its actual value
Railroad managers were forced to charge excessive rates and wage competitions in order to pay off exaggerated financial obligations
Cornelius Vanderbilt had so much power and money that he wasn’t scared of the law
Railroad bribed judges and legislatures and elected their own people to office
They showered free passes on journalist and politicians
Wealthy kings, virtual industrial monarchs, were manipulators of a huge monopoly and had more control over the people than the president
They began to ignore competition and collaborate to have total control
They made pooling arrangements, agreements to divide the business in a given area and share the profits in order to protect their profits
Others gave secret benefits to powerful shippers and turn for assured traffic
They slashed their rates on route where they face competition but made up for it by charging more
Small farmers usually paid highest rates while large customers got the best deals
Farmers, especially in the Midwest wondered if the nation escaped slavery power only to fall into financial power
People are started the battle the economic injustice slowly because they remember Jeffersons ideals didn’t like the government interfering with business and the American dream, and hope that anyone could become rich
Economic depression in the 1870s pushed farmers into protesting against being railroaded into bankruptcy
Under pressure from groups like the grange, patrons of husbandry many Midwest legislatures try to help
In 1886 the Supreme Court in Wabash, St. Louis and pacific railroad company V Illinois decreed that individual states had no power to regulate interstate commerce, between states
Congress passed the interstate commerce act in 1887 which prohibited rebates and pools and required railroads to publish the rates openly
It forbade unfair discrimination against shippers in outlawed charging more for a short haul a long one over the same line
It’s set up the interstate commerce commission to enforce the new legislation
Richard olney noticed that the new commission actually helped arose by providing a marketplace were competing business interest could resolve the conflict in a peaceable way
Country could avoid rate wars and attacked by state legislatures
ICA stabilized, not revolutionized the business system
First large scale attempt to regulate business at the interest of society by the government
Foreshadow the doom a business practices ensure that there was a public interest in private enterprise that the government was bound to protect
industrial expansion grew fast
Civil War created fortune to the sale of goods during the time of emergency
US dollars went into private hands while other countries dollars went to the public
Innovations from transportation brought natural resources like coal iron in oil to factories
Shipping systems through the great lakes carried iron for refining which helped make steel empire
Size of America’s market encourages innovators to invent mass production methods
Because of transportation across the nation in a large population anyone who had a new product that was available for a good price in large quantities thrived
Captains of industry had incentive to invent machines
They made it possible to replace expensive skilled labor with unskilled workers who are cheap and plentiful as a result from immigration
Cash register, stock ticker, typewriter helped business operations while refrigerator car, electric dynamo, electric railway helped urbanization
Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone which created a whole new communications network
Thomas Alva Edison invented the phonograph, mimeograph, Dictaphone in a lightbulb in 1879
Light bulb changed working habits because they can now work at night
Andrew Carnegie, Steel king
John D Rockefeller, oil Baron
J Pierpont Morgan, banker’s banker
Carnegie integrated every step of steel making
He’s miners mind everything, his ships carried it, his railroads delivered it to furnaces
Used vertical integration, combining into organization all phases of manufacturing
Was to improve efficiency by making supplies more reliable, controlling the quantity of the product at all stages, and eliminating middleman fees
Rockefeller used horizontal integration, ally with competitors to monopolize the market
He used trusts to control rivals
Stockholders in various small oil companies gave their stock to the board of his standard oil company in 1870
It consolidated the operations of the previously competing businesses
Standard oil scene control the market
Weaker competitions that didn’t use a trust went broke
Depressions in the 1870s and 80s 90s give Morgan business people who failed due to competition
He put officers of his own banking onto their boards of directors which is called interlocking directorates
Andrew Carnegie | John D Rockefeller | J Pierpont Morgan |
---|---|---|
Steel king | Oil Baron | Banker’s banker |
Integrated every step of steel making | He used trusts to control rivals Stockholders in various small oil companies gave their stock to the board of his standard oil company in 1870It consolidated the operations of the previously competing businesses | Depressions in the 1870s and 80s 90s give Morgan business people who failed due to competition |
Was to improve efficiency by making supplies more reliable, controlling the quantity of the product at all stages, and eliminating middleman fees | He sought to eliminate middleman and competitors | He put officers of his own banking onto their boards of directors which is called interlocking directorates |
preach that wealthy were only stewards of societies riches in our a blast assume moral responsibility for helping the less fortunate | He used a little business ethics, had little mercy and believed in survival of the fittest | made a reputation for himself through his Wall Street banking house by financing to re-organization of railroads, insurance companies and banks |
He was not a monopolist and dislike monopolistic trusts | In 1877 he controlled 95% of oil refineries | He didn’t believe that money power was dangerous unless in the hands of a person who is dangerous and he didn’t believe he was |
His organization was a partnership | Though he was obeying loss of nature his oil monopoly turned out to be a good product at a relatively cheap price |
Steel making for railroads was an example of heavy industry which concentrated on making capital goods not consumer goods
Steel used to be rare and expensive so it was only used for cutlery and iron was used for railroad/bridges
In the 1900s US is producing more steel than other countries
1850s Bessemer process was a method of making cheap steel
William Kelly discover that cold air blown on red hot iron caused the metal to become white hot by igniting the carbon and eliminating impurities
Carnegie enter the steel business and succeeded by picking high class associates and eliminating middleman
He was not a monopolist and dislike monopolistic trusts
His organization was a partnership
Morgan made a reputation for himself through his Wall Street banking house by financing to re-organization of railroads, insurance companies and banks
He didn’t believe that money power was dangerous unless in the hands of a person who is dangerous and he didn’t believe he was
In 1900 Carnegie wanted to sell because he was tired of making money off of steel and Morgan started to manufacture steel pipe tubing
Carnegie threatened to invade the same business if Morgan didn’t receive his price
Morgan agreed to buy out Carnegie for $400 million
Carnegie dedicated the rest of his life to giving money to libraries, pensions for professors and philanthropic purposes out of fear that he would die disgraced with so much wealth
Morgan to Carnegie‘s holdings and in 1901 launch the United States steel corporation, US‘s first billion dollar Corporation
Oil industry grew out of nowhere
Kerosene was the first major product
It produced a brighter flame than whale oil so while kerosene industry boomed, whaling industry died
Once Edison’s lightbulbs came kerosene lamps died
Oil industry was dying until the invention of the automobile
Gas burning internal combustion engine was better than steam and electricity
Rockefeller organize a standard oil company in 1870
He sought to eliminate middleman and competitors
He used a little business ethics, had little mercy and believed in survival of the fittest
In 1877 he controlled 95% of oil refineries
Though he was obeying loss of nature his oil monopoly turned out to be a good product at a relatively cheap price
Achieved important economics at home and abroad by production and distribution
Trust like sugar, tobacco, leather and harvester were created
Meat industry grew
New trust overshadowed old American aristocracy of modestly successful merchants and professionals
New rich was now in competition with patrician families for power and prestige
The Wealthy:
plutocrats, a person whose power comes from their wealth
Rockefeller thought the good Lord gave me my money
Carnegie preach that wealthy were only stewards of societies riches in our a blast assume moral responsibility for helping the less fortunate
Most offenders relied on survival of the fittest
Social Darwinist argue that individuals wonder stations in life by competing on the basis of their natural talents
The wealthy/powerful demonstrated greater abilities and the poor
Answers why are some nations were more powerful than others and have the right to dominate lesser people
Self justification for why the wealthy felt contempt from the poor
Many new rich work their way to the top so they thought the people who chose to be poor are lazy
New Rich use the clause that gave Congress sole jurisdiction over interstate commerce to thwart controls by state legislators
Giant trusts hid behind the 14th amendment
Court interpreted a corporation to be a legal person so it cannot be deprived of its property by a state without process of law
people began to try to stop monopolies
First they tried state legislatures but failed
Congress created the Sherman antitrust act of 1890
it forbade combinations in restraint of trade without any distinction between good or bad trusts, big not bad was the targets
It was used to curb labor unions or combinations that were deemed to be restraining trade
More trusts formed
New principal card from the anti-trust act and interstate commerce act was the private read should be treated as less important as public need
South still produced a small percentage of the nations manufactured goods
Plantation systems were now a pattern of absentee landownership
Sharecropping and tenant farming occurred
In 1880 machine made cigarettes cause tobacco consumption to go up
James B Cannon Duke took the new tech to mass produce coffin nails
He absorbed his main competitors into the American tobacco company
Industrialist try to get the south in factories but it remained mainly rural
Paper barrier of regional rate setting systems imposed by Northern Railroad interests was an obstacle for southern industrialist
Where roads gave preferred rates to manufacture goods from north to south but discriminated in favor of southern raw materials the other way
Tried to keep the south as a supplier raw materials but unable to make an industrial base
Pittsburgh plus, which deposit of coal and iron should have given steal a competitive edge but still overlords brought pressure To bear on compliant railroad so they steal from Southern labor was not treated from Pittsburg
South was better in manufacturing cotton textiles
Northern textiles started building mills in the south in response to tax benefits and cheap non-unionized labor
Mills made south’s economy better
Cheap labor was south‘s main attraction for investor so keeping cheap flavor was a religion
Southerners who were mostly white as blacks were excluded from most jobs, seek employment in the mills
Hillbillies or lintheads worked all day
They were paid 1/2 the northern counterparts, received payment as credit at a company store and had bad conditions
Many saw it as salvation, first steady jobs and wages
Standard of living increased
Enjoyed more physical comfort
Factories increased so there was more demand in American labor so immigrants came flooding in
Agriculture decreased
Jefferson ideals as a nation of small freehold farms decreased
Time was revolutionized
Rural migrants and immigrants were used to the clock of nature and had to switch to a different system when working in factories
As the typewriter and telephone were invented women found new social opportunities example Gibson girl magazine
For middle-class women, jobs are usually marriage and small families
Most women worked because they needed the money
They work the same amount of hours and had the same working conditions as men but we’re paid less
Class division increased
Group of socialist emerged, many were immigrants
In 1860 1/2 of all workers were self-employed
Wages went up and times are good for workers
Dependence on wages came with vulnerability of the swings in the economy
Fear of unemployment increased
Growing distance between work and class in middle class
reformers struggle to introduce security, job and wage protection, provision for temporary unemployment
Telegraph, 1866 and Suez canal, 1869 made international trade easier, cheaper and faster
American products went all around the world
wage workers didn’t share the same benefits with their employers
Individual originality and creativity were stifled
Less value on manual skills
New machines displaced employees
More jobs were created then destroyed but manual workers were still hit
Glutted labor market handicapped wage earners
Employers could take advantage of the railroad network and bring unemployed workers from anywhere to beat down Highway wage levels
Individual workers were powerless against the industry
The corporation could dispense the work or much more easily than the worker could to the corporation
Employers good pool well through stock holders , retain high-price lawyers by loyal press, put pressure on politicians, import strike breakers, employee thugs to beat up labor organizers
Corporations can call upon federal courts, had judges that would issue injunctions to stop striking
If defines ensued the company could request state or federal authorities to bring in troops
Employers could lock the door, lock out and starve them
Compel them to sign ironclad oaths/Yellow dog contracts which were agreements to not join a labor union
Middle class ignored strikes
Wages were highest in the world
People like Carnegie and Rockefeller made their way to the top so the commonly was at laborers could too
Big business might combine into trust to raise wages but workers must not combine into unions to get higher wages
Labor unions had been disorganized in 1861
Cost of living was incentive to unionization
Natural labor union, 1866 represented a lot of workers
Aimed to unified workers across locales and trades to challenge their bosses
It’s good to Chinese and made minimal efforts to include women in blacks
Blacks organize the colored national labor union
Black workers support for republican party and racism prevented that you from working together
Aim to settle dispute between eight hour workday but the 1870s depression left its staggering
Wage reductions in 1877 set off strikes on railroads
Knights of labor, the noble and holy order of the knights of labor 1869, started as a secret society until 1881
Sought to include all workers in one big union
Liquor dealers, gamblers, lawyers come up bankers, stockbrokers, basically nonproducers
Included everyone but Chinese and they supported the Chinese exclusion act of 1882 and anti-Chinese riots
Campaigns for economic/social reform like codes for safety and health
Terrence V Powderly let the knights to victory in some strikes for eight hour workdays
Successful strikes against Jay Gould’s Wabash railroad in 1885 membership to go up
Labor disorders broke out
May 4, 1886 the Chicago police had a meeting to protest alleged brutalities by authorities
Haymarket Square, bomb was thrown killed people
Police caught eight people and even though there were no proof that they had anything to do with the bomb they were charged with conspiracy
Five dead, one suicide, three jail
In 1892 John P. Altgeld Newly governor of Illinois let the three go
He got abuse and praise, so is very controversial
8 hour movement suffered and strikes failed because the knights were associated with the people that were charged for the bomb
The knights included skilled and nonwork skilled workers
Unskilled workers could easily be replaced but skilled workers couldn’t and use that to their advantage to bargain
Skilled got tired and sought refuge in American Federation of labor, exclusive skilled craft unions
American Federation of labor 1886 created by Samuel Gompers consisted of an association of self governing national unions which each kept its independence
No individual laborers allowed in the central organizations
Softer attempts at social reforms
sought better wages, hours and working conditions
Closed shop, all union labor
Used walk out or boycott
The stronger craft unions of the federation were able to amass of war chest to help prolong strikes
Attempted to speak for all workers but didn’t represent all of them
Composed of skilled craftsman, carpenters and brick layers
Let unskilled laborers, women, blacks fend for themselves
Nonpolitical but they did attempt to persuade their friends to reward or punish at the polls
Survived panic of 1893
Labor disorders continued and strikers lost half of their strikes
The greatest weakness was only embracing a small minority of people
The public was beginning to concede the right of workers to organize bargaining and strike
In 1894 Congress made Labor Day a holiday
A few industrialist bargained with unions and signed agreements to avoid economic warfare
Employees so fat and organize labor achieve/succeeded only after many more strikes/reserves
Government play in a crucial role in the nation's industrial expansion after the Civil War
More railroads were built up to the 1900s
Transcontinental railroad building was costly and risky so it required government help
It promised national unity and economic growth
Land grants for railroads were made in belts along the route
Within these belts, they were allowed to choose alternate mile square sections in a checkerboard pattern
Railroads withheld all land from other users until they determine the location of tracks and decided which sections were the choicest sections
In 1887 President Cleveland ended it and allowed settlement in unclaimed land grant areas
People later criticize that giving land to railroad companies was giving away valuable birthrights to greedy corporations
The government got long-term preferred rates for postal services in military traffic
Granting land was a cheap way to promote the transportation system because it avoided new taxes for direct cash grants
Could turn the land into gold by using it as collateral for a loan from private banker or sell it
Frontier villages turned into cities
Others withered away and became ghost towns
deadlock over the transcontinental railroad was broken when the south seceded leaving the land to the north
After Fort Sumter Congress started to strengthen the union by connecting California to the east
The union pacific railroad was created and started in Omaha Nebraska
Railroad was the priority after the Civil War
People in credit Mobilier construction company got a lot of profits
They made more money than they used on construction and paid congressmen to look the other way so they were basically stealing from the government
Central pacific railroad started building in California
Big four, four forcing men were the chief financial backers of the enterprise
They operated through two construction companies and made a lot of profit but they didn’t bribe
There was the same subsidies and incentive to rush as Union Pacific
Chinese laborers were cheap, efficient, and expendable but many lost their lives in explosions are other accidents
Central Pacific railroad could only chip a few inches a day while the Union Pacific railroad used sledgehammers and was much more efficient
In 1869 the rails met (wedding of the rails)
People celebrated
Union built 1086 miles in central built 689
The transcontinental railroad connected east to the west and facilitated trade with Asia and allowed growth
It was compared to the declaration of independence and the emancipation of slaves
It also divided bison herds and sped up their near extinction
It reduced food and supplies for Native Americans
Railroads:
Positive: | Negative: |
---|---|
It promised national unity and economic growth | Costly and risky |
government got long-term preferred rates for postal services in military traffic | Required gov help |
Granting land was a cheap way to promote the transportation system because it avoided new taxes for direct cash grants | Withheld all land from other users until they determine the location of tracks and decided which sections were the choicest sections |
Could turn the land into gold by using it as collateral for a loan from private banker or sell it | land to railroad companies was giving away valuable birthrights to greedy corporations |
Frontier villages turned into cities | Other towns withered away and became ghost towns |
The transcontinental railroad connected east to the west and facilitated trade with Asia and allowed growth | It also divided bison herds and sped up their near extinction |
They could carry food to many people and provide them with raw materials and marching | It reduced food and supplies for Native Americans |
Hurt land and because settlers who are following the roads plowed tall grass, planted corn fields and their cattle displaced | |
Buffalo were hunted |
4 other transcontinental railroad were built but had no loans from the government all but great northern received grants of land
Northern pacific railroad was from Lake superior to puget sound
South Pacific was from New Orleans to San Francisco
Great Northern was from Duluth to Seattle and was created by James J Hill one of the greatest railroad builders
Pioneer builders were over-optimistic, they didn’t want land bounties and pushed in areas that lack the potential population to support railroads
If they didn’t succeed they declared bankruptcy which took down the savings of trusting investors
bankruptcies, mergers, or reorganizations
The success of western lines was facilitated by wielding together and expanding the older eastern network
Vanderbilt made money in steamboat and then switch to railroads
He offered railroads at lower rates
He helped popularized steel rails which were safer and more economical because it could carry a heavy load
Standard gauge of track width eliminated the expense and inconvenience of numerous changes from one line to another
Westinghouse air brakes enhance efficiency and safety
Pullman palace cars began to carry well-healed Travelers in the 1860s
The cars (which were partly made of wood) contained kerosene lamp so alarmists called them torture chambers and potential funeral Pyres
Despite safety devices like the telegraph, double tracking and block signal accidents continue to happen
nation was united by iron and steel
The nation’s biggest business and employed more people than any other industry
It caused economic growth after the Civil War and opened the west with its wealth of resources
Trains carried raw materials to factories and then took final goods back
US was the largest integrated national market
Where are the largest single source of orders for the steel industry
It stimulated mining in agriculture in the west and took farmers Outland, carry the food to the market, and brought them back manufactured necessities
Railroads played the leading role in cities
They could carry food to many people and provide them with raw materials and marching
Old companies stimulated immigration because they want to people that their land grants could be sold so they advertise in Europe and sometimes offered to transport newcomers for free
Hurt land and because settlers who are following the roads plowed tall grass, planted corn fields and their cattle displaced Buffalo which were hunted
Time was bent to the railroads' need so every town had its own time dictated by the sun‘s position
This was very confusing/difficult for operators so on November 18, 1883 major rail lines decreed that the nation will be divided into four time zones
People were baffled and reset their clocks (day of two noons)
Railroads made millionaires
New aristocracy (Lord of the rail) replaced all southerners (Lord of the lash)
The lines became the playthings of Wall Street a stock speculators and railroad wreckers got rich
railroad companies like credit Mobilier started to become more corrupt
Jay Gould busted the stocks of the Erie, Kansas specific, union pacific, Texas and pacific railroads
Stock watering is the practice of making cattle thirsty by feeding them salt and having them prove themselves with water before waiting for sale
Railroad promoters inflated their claims of a line’s assets in profitability and sell stocks and bonds higher than its actual value
Railroad managers were forced to charge excessive rates and wage competitions in order to pay off exaggerated financial obligations
Cornelius Vanderbilt had so much power and money that he wasn’t scared of the law
Railroad bribed judges and legislatures and elected their own people to office
They showered free passes on journalist and politicians
Wealthy kings, virtual industrial monarchs, were manipulators of a huge monopoly and had more control over the people than the president
They began to ignore competition and collaborate to have total control
They made pooling arrangements, agreements to divide the business in a given area and share the profits in order to protect their profits
Others gave secret benefits to powerful shippers and turn for assured traffic
They slashed their rates on route where they face competition but made up for it by charging more
Small farmers usually paid highest rates while large customers got the best deals
Farmers, especially in the Midwest wondered if the nation escaped slavery power only to fall into financial power
People are started the battle the economic injustice slowly because they remember Jeffersons ideals didn’t like the government interfering with business and the American dream, and hope that anyone could become rich
Economic depression in the 1870s pushed farmers into protesting against being railroaded into bankruptcy
Under pressure from groups like the grange, patrons of husbandry many Midwest legislatures try to help
In 1886 the Supreme Court in Wabash, St. Louis and pacific railroad company V Illinois decreed that individual states had no power to regulate interstate commerce, between states
Congress passed the interstate commerce act in 1887 which prohibited rebates and pools and required railroads to publish the rates openly
It forbade unfair discrimination against shippers in outlawed charging more for a short haul a long one over the same line
It’s set up the interstate commerce commission to enforce the new legislation
Richard olney noticed that the new commission actually helped arose by providing a marketplace were competing business interest could resolve the conflict in a peaceable way
Country could avoid rate wars and attacked by state legislatures
ICA stabilized, not revolutionized the business system
First large scale attempt to regulate business at the interest of society by the government
Foreshadow the doom a business practices ensure that there was a public interest in private enterprise that the government was bound to protect
industrial expansion grew fast
Civil War created fortune to the sale of goods during the time of emergency
US dollars went into private hands while other countries dollars went to the public
Innovations from transportation brought natural resources like coal iron in oil to factories
Shipping systems through the great lakes carried iron for refining which helped make steel empire
Size of America’s market encourages innovators to invent mass production methods
Because of transportation across the nation in a large population anyone who had a new product that was available for a good price in large quantities thrived
Captains of industry had incentive to invent machines
They made it possible to replace expensive skilled labor with unskilled workers who are cheap and plentiful as a result from immigration
Cash register, stock ticker, typewriter helped business operations while refrigerator car, electric dynamo, electric railway helped urbanization
Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone which created a whole new communications network
Thomas Alva Edison invented the phonograph, mimeograph, Dictaphone in a lightbulb in 1879
Light bulb changed working habits because they can now work at night
Andrew Carnegie, Steel king
John D Rockefeller, oil Baron
J Pierpont Morgan, banker’s banker
Carnegie integrated every step of steel making
He’s miners mind everything, his ships carried it, his railroads delivered it to furnaces
Used vertical integration, combining into organization all phases of manufacturing
Was to improve efficiency by making supplies more reliable, controlling the quantity of the product at all stages, and eliminating middleman fees
Rockefeller used horizontal integration, ally with competitors to monopolize the market
He used trusts to control rivals
Stockholders in various small oil companies gave their stock to the board of his standard oil company in 1870
It consolidated the operations of the previously competing businesses
Standard oil scene control the market
Weaker competitions that didn’t use a trust went broke
Depressions in the 1870s and 80s 90s give Morgan business people who failed due to competition
He put officers of his own banking onto their boards of directors which is called interlocking directorates
Andrew Carnegie | John D Rockefeller | J Pierpont Morgan |
---|---|---|
Steel king | Oil Baron | Banker’s banker |
Integrated every step of steel making | He used trusts to control rivals Stockholders in various small oil companies gave their stock to the board of his standard oil company in 1870It consolidated the operations of the previously competing businesses | Depressions in the 1870s and 80s 90s give Morgan business people who failed due to competition |
Was to improve efficiency by making supplies more reliable, controlling the quantity of the product at all stages, and eliminating middleman fees | He sought to eliminate middleman and competitors | He put officers of his own banking onto their boards of directors which is called interlocking directorates |
preach that wealthy were only stewards of societies riches in our a blast assume moral responsibility for helping the less fortunate | He used a little business ethics, had little mercy and believed in survival of the fittest | made a reputation for himself through his Wall Street banking house by financing to re-organization of railroads, insurance companies and banks |
He was not a monopolist and dislike monopolistic trusts | In 1877 he controlled 95% of oil refineries | He didn’t believe that money power was dangerous unless in the hands of a person who is dangerous and he didn’t believe he was |
His organization was a partnership | Though he was obeying loss of nature his oil monopoly turned out to be a good product at a relatively cheap price |
Steel making for railroads was an example of heavy industry which concentrated on making capital goods not consumer goods
Steel used to be rare and expensive so it was only used for cutlery and iron was used for railroad/bridges
In the 1900s US is producing more steel than other countries
1850s Bessemer process was a method of making cheap steel
William Kelly discover that cold air blown on red hot iron caused the metal to become white hot by igniting the carbon and eliminating impurities
Carnegie enter the steel business and succeeded by picking high class associates and eliminating middleman
He was not a monopolist and dislike monopolistic trusts
His organization was a partnership
Morgan made a reputation for himself through his Wall Street banking house by financing to re-organization of railroads, insurance companies and banks
He didn’t believe that money power was dangerous unless in the hands of a person who is dangerous and he didn’t believe he was
In 1900 Carnegie wanted to sell because he was tired of making money off of steel and Morgan started to manufacture steel pipe tubing
Carnegie threatened to invade the same business if Morgan didn’t receive his price
Morgan agreed to buy out Carnegie for $400 million
Carnegie dedicated the rest of his life to giving money to libraries, pensions for professors and philanthropic purposes out of fear that he would die disgraced with so much wealth
Morgan to Carnegie‘s holdings and in 1901 launch the United States steel corporation, US‘s first billion dollar Corporation
Oil industry grew out of nowhere
Kerosene was the first major product
It produced a brighter flame than whale oil so while kerosene industry boomed, whaling industry died
Once Edison’s lightbulbs came kerosene lamps died
Oil industry was dying until the invention of the automobile
Gas burning internal combustion engine was better than steam and electricity
Rockefeller organize a standard oil company in 1870
He sought to eliminate middleman and competitors
He used a little business ethics, had little mercy and believed in survival of the fittest
In 1877 he controlled 95% of oil refineries
Though he was obeying loss of nature his oil monopoly turned out to be a good product at a relatively cheap price
Achieved important economics at home and abroad by production and distribution
Trust like sugar, tobacco, leather and harvester were created
Meat industry grew
New trust overshadowed old American aristocracy of modestly successful merchants and professionals
New rich was now in competition with patrician families for power and prestige
The Wealthy:
plutocrats, a person whose power comes from their wealth
Rockefeller thought the good Lord gave me my money
Carnegie preach that wealthy were only stewards of societies riches in our a blast assume moral responsibility for helping the less fortunate
Most offenders relied on survival of the fittest
Social Darwinist argue that individuals wonder stations in life by competing on the basis of their natural talents
The wealthy/powerful demonstrated greater abilities and the poor
Answers why are some nations were more powerful than others and have the right to dominate lesser people
Self justification for why the wealthy felt contempt from the poor
Many new rich work their way to the top so they thought the people who chose to be poor are lazy
New Rich use the clause that gave Congress sole jurisdiction over interstate commerce to thwart controls by state legislators
Giant trusts hid behind the 14th amendment
Court interpreted a corporation to be a legal person so it cannot be deprived of its property by a state without process of law
people began to try to stop monopolies
First they tried state legislatures but failed
Congress created the Sherman antitrust act of 1890
it forbade combinations in restraint of trade without any distinction between good or bad trusts, big not bad was the targets
It was used to curb labor unions or combinations that were deemed to be restraining trade
More trusts formed
New principal card from the anti-trust act and interstate commerce act was the private read should be treated as less important as public need
South still produced a small percentage of the nations manufactured goods
Plantation systems were now a pattern of absentee landownership
Sharecropping and tenant farming occurred
In 1880 machine made cigarettes cause tobacco consumption to go up
James B Cannon Duke took the new tech to mass produce coffin nails
He absorbed his main competitors into the American tobacco company
Industrialist try to get the south in factories but it remained mainly rural
Paper barrier of regional rate setting systems imposed by Northern Railroad interests was an obstacle for southern industrialist
Where roads gave preferred rates to manufacture goods from north to south but discriminated in favor of southern raw materials the other way
Tried to keep the south as a supplier raw materials but unable to make an industrial base
Pittsburgh plus, which deposit of coal and iron should have given steal a competitive edge but still overlords brought pressure To bear on compliant railroad so they steal from Southern labor was not treated from Pittsburg
South was better in manufacturing cotton textiles
Northern textiles started building mills in the south in response to tax benefits and cheap non-unionized labor
Mills made south’s economy better
Cheap labor was south‘s main attraction for investor so keeping cheap flavor was a religion
Southerners who were mostly white as blacks were excluded from most jobs, seek employment in the mills
Hillbillies or lintheads worked all day
They were paid 1/2 the northern counterparts, received payment as credit at a company store and had bad conditions
Many saw it as salvation, first steady jobs and wages
Standard of living increased
Enjoyed more physical comfort
Factories increased so there was more demand in American labor so immigrants came flooding in
Agriculture decreased
Jefferson ideals as a nation of small freehold farms decreased
Time was revolutionized
Rural migrants and immigrants were used to the clock of nature and had to switch to a different system when working in factories
As the typewriter and telephone were invented women found new social opportunities example Gibson girl magazine
For middle-class women, jobs are usually marriage and small families
Most women worked because they needed the money
They work the same amount of hours and had the same working conditions as men but we’re paid less
Class division increased
Group of socialist emerged, many were immigrants
In 1860 1/2 of all workers were self-employed
Wages went up and times are good for workers
Dependence on wages came with vulnerability of the swings in the economy
Fear of unemployment increased
Growing distance between work and class in middle class
reformers struggle to introduce security, job and wage protection, provision for temporary unemployment
Telegraph, 1866 and Suez canal, 1869 made international trade easier, cheaper and faster
American products went all around the world
wage workers didn’t share the same benefits with their employers
Individual originality and creativity were stifled
Less value on manual skills
New machines displaced employees
More jobs were created then destroyed but manual workers were still hit
Glutted labor market handicapped wage earners
Employers could take advantage of the railroad network and bring unemployed workers from anywhere to beat down Highway wage levels
Individual workers were powerless against the industry
The corporation could dispense the work or much more easily than the worker could to the corporation
Employers good pool well through stock holders , retain high-price lawyers by loyal press, put pressure on politicians, import strike breakers, employee thugs to beat up labor organizers
Corporations can call upon federal courts, had judges that would issue injunctions to stop striking
If defines ensued the company could request state or federal authorities to bring in troops
Employers could lock the door, lock out and starve them
Compel them to sign ironclad oaths/Yellow dog contracts which were agreements to not join a labor union
Middle class ignored strikes
Wages were highest in the world
People like Carnegie and Rockefeller made their way to the top so the commonly was at laborers could too
Big business might combine into trust to raise wages but workers must not combine into unions to get higher wages
Labor unions had been disorganized in 1861
Cost of living was incentive to unionization
Natural labor union, 1866 represented a lot of workers
Aimed to unified workers across locales and trades to challenge their bosses
It’s good to Chinese and made minimal efforts to include women in blacks
Blacks organize the colored national labor union
Black workers support for republican party and racism prevented that you from working together
Aim to settle dispute between eight hour workday but the 1870s depression left its staggering
Wage reductions in 1877 set off strikes on railroads
Knights of labor, the noble and holy order of the knights of labor 1869, started as a secret society until 1881
Sought to include all workers in one big union
Liquor dealers, gamblers, lawyers come up bankers, stockbrokers, basically nonproducers
Included everyone but Chinese and they supported the Chinese exclusion act of 1882 and anti-Chinese riots
Campaigns for economic/social reform like codes for safety and health
Terrence V Powderly let the knights to victory in some strikes for eight hour workdays
Successful strikes against Jay Gould’s Wabash railroad in 1885 membership to go up
Labor disorders broke out
May 4, 1886 the Chicago police had a meeting to protest alleged brutalities by authorities
Haymarket Square, bomb was thrown killed people
Police caught eight people and even though there were no proof that they had anything to do with the bomb they were charged with conspiracy
Five dead, one suicide, three jail
In 1892 John P. Altgeld Newly governor of Illinois let the three go
He got abuse and praise, so is very controversial
8 hour movement suffered and strikes failed because the knights were associated with the people that were charged for the bomb
The knights included skilled and nonwork skilled workers
Unskilled workers could easily be replaced but skilled workers couldn’t and use that to their advantage to bargain
Skilled got tired and sought refuge in American Federation of labor, exclusive skilled craft unions
American Federation of labor 1886 created by Samuel Gompers consisted of an association of self governing national unions which each kept its independence
No individual laborers allowed in the central organizations
Softer attempts at social reforms
sought better wages, hours and working conditions
Closed shop, all union labor
Used walk out or boycott
The stronger craft unions of the federation were able to amass of war chest to help prolong strikes
Attempted to speak for all workers but didn’t represent all of them
Composed of skilled craftsman, carpenters and brick layers
Let unskilled laborers, women, blacks fend for themselves
Nonpolitical but they did attempt to persuade their friends to reward or punish at the polls
Survived panic of 1893
Labor disorders continued and strikers lost half of their strikes
The greatest weakness was only embracing a small minority of people
The public was beginning to concede the right of workers to organize bargaining and strike
In 1894 Congress made Labor Day a holiday
A few industrialist bargained with unions and signed agreements to avoid economic warfare
Employees so fat and organize labor achieve/succeeded only after many more strikes/reserves