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THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA, 1865–1900

THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA, 1865–1900. AP US History East High School Mr. Peterson Spring 2011. Focus Questions. What innovations in technology and business drove increases in industrial production after 1865?

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THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA, 1865–1900

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  1. THE RISE OF INDUSTRIAL AMERICA, 1865–1900 AP US History East High School Mr. Peterson Spring 2011

  2. Focus Questions • What innovations in technology and business drove increases in industrial production after 1865? • How did Carnegie, Rockefeller, and other corporate leaders consolidate control over their industries? • Why did the South’s experience with industrialization differ from that of the North and the Midwest? • How did the changing nature of work affect factory workers’ lives, and how did they respond? • How did corporations undercut labor’s bargaining power in the 1890s?

  3. The Rise of Corporate America

  4. The Character of Industrial Change • Large-scale manufacturing • Large coal deposits • Technological innovation • Demand for workers who could be controlled • Constant pressure to cut costs and prices • Relentless drop in prices • Money supply shortage leads to high interest rates

  5. p. 538

  6. Railroad Problems and Innovations • 193,000 miles by 1900 • Collis Huntington, Jay Gould and others need capital • Land and loan subsidies from all levels of government • Bonds and stock to public • High levels of debt by 1900 • Magnetic telegraph • New organizations and accounting

  7. Consolidating the Railroad Industry • Large companies buy up smaller ones • Divide country into 4 time zones • Standard gauge track • Relied on shipping rate cuts • Interstate Commerce Act (1887) • Oversee railroads • Banned monopolistic activity • Banker J. Pierpont Morgan gets control of many railroads

  8. Applying the Lessons of Railroads to Steel • Andrew Carnegie • Rags to riches story • Builds own steel mill • Uses Bessemer process • “watch the costs, and the profits will take care of themselves” • Vertical integration • Could see big picture

  9. p. 539

  10. p. 539

  11. Fig. 18-2, p. 541

  12. Table 18-1, p. 541

  13. The Trust: Creating New Forms of Corporate Organization • Consolidation in many industries • Oligopolies • Petroleum drilled in 1859 • Edwin Drake • Titusville, PA • “crude-oil” distilled • Lubricants, kerosene

  14. John D. Rockefeller • Took over competition in oil industry • Lower prices • Set up pool of companies, trust • Standard Oil Trust • 90% of oil refining capacity • Integrated oil industry vertically and horizontally

  15. James B. “Buck” Duke • Cigarette industry • American Tobacco trust • Targeted young with trading cards and prizes

  16. p. 541

  17. Sherman Anti-Trust Act • 1890 • Outlawed trusts and monopolies • Ineffective • Failed to define trust or restraint of trade • United States v. E.C. Knight (1895) • Manufacturing not interstate commerce

  18. Stimulating Economic Growth

  19. The Triumph of Technology • New inventions • Streamlined manufacturing • Stimulated consumer demand • Singer Sewing Machine Company • Alexander Graham Bell-telephone

  20. Thomas A. Edison • “invention factory” • Phonograph- “sound writer” • Incandescent light bulb • Electric power system • Motion picture camera • Menlo Park laboratory • Model for other businesses

  21. p. 543

  22. Electricity • Thomas Edison • Interrelated system of power plants, transmission lines, light fixtures • Direct current-DC • George Westinghouse • Alternating current-AC • Systems combine-110 AC • Private ownership, regulated monopolies

  23. p. 544

  24. p. 545

  25. Specialized Production • Manufacturing • Skilled workers • Seamstresses • Shift styles quickly

  26. p. 546

  27. Advertising and Marketing • Mass-produced consumer goods • Flour, soap, matches, canned goods • Brand names, trademarks, guarantees, slogans, endorsements, unique products • Demand and brand loyalty

  28. p. 547

  29. Social and Environmental Costs and Benefits • Social benefits • Labor-saving products • Lower prices • Advances in transportation and communications • Social costs • Bankrupt companies and dreams • Expendable workers • Environmental devastation

  30. p. 548

  31. The New South

  32. Obstacles to Economic Development • Lagging industrial development • Lack of capital • Few banks • Growing cash crops such as cotton or tobacco made farmers vulnerable to world markets • Limited funds for education

  33. The New South Creed and Southern Industrialization • Henry Grady • Atlanta Constitution • Industrialize South • Attract Northern capital • More opportunities for black workers in industry

  34. The Southern Mill Economy • Mill towns supported textile industry • Center of textiles by 1920 • Augusta, GA: Lowell of the South • Low wages • Often paid in company scrip • Did little to help farmers/sharecroppers

  35. The Southern Industrial Lag • Birmingham (AL) Steel controlled by U.S. Steel • Higher prices, despite lower costs • Segregated work force • Environmental damage

  36. p. 550

  37. Factories and the Work Force

  38. From Workshop to Factory • Restructuring of work habits • Emphasis on workplace discipline • Example of shoemakers • Skilled artisan to unskilled factory worker • Lower-paid women and children

  39. p. 555

  40. The Hardships of Industrial Labor • High demand for unskilled laborers • Workers often drifted • 12-hour shifts • Dangerous work • Children as young as 8 • Railroads dangerous for adults • Minimal financial aid for disabled and families

  41. Immigrant Labor • French Canadians in NE • Chinese in West • Eastern and Southern European immigrants • Subject to discipline and eviction from company provided homes • Faced discrimination

  42. p. 559

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