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The Rise of Industrialism In America. 1865-1914. Industrialism is the movement from agriculture to manufacturin g (factories) as the main source of the economic growth Industrialism is the movement from hand-made goods to machine made goods
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The Rise of Industrialism In America 1865-1914
Industrialism is the movement from agriculture to manufacturing (factories) as the main source of the economic growth Industrialism is the movement from hand-made goods to machine made goods Industrialism made America the richest country in the world- #1 in manufactured goods What is Industrialism?
1. Abundant Supply of natural resources • Our country possessed a lot of coal, oil and iron • used to make and power factory machines • Iron was smelted into steel to build railroads, skyscrapers and bridges
150,000 miles of track by 1900 Railroads made our country a national market for the selling of goods Railroads allowed goods to be transported quicker and easier nationwide 2. Railroads
3. The Opening of International Markets • Our goods were exported worldwide ($2 billion worth by 1910) • Coca Cola became a worldwide favorite
4. More people moving to the cities • More labor for the factories • Many farmers left their fields to work in the cities • Immigrants poured into the cities
NewUse ofSpace NewClassDiversity NewArchitectural Style New Energy NewSymbols ofChange &Progress The City as aNew “Frontier?” New Culture(“Melting Pot”) Make a NewStart New Form ofClassic “RuggedIndividualism” New Levels of Crime, Violence, & Corruption
5. Government Support for Businesses • The government made major loans to businesses • Laissez faire (hands-off) approach by government • Few rules on worker safety • The rich businessmen did not pay personal income tax before 1913 • High tariffs on foreign goods imported into the country-protected US industries
The Invention of the Automobile • 1886 Karl Benz and Gottleib Daimler of Germany built of the first gas-powered cars • Very slow (4 speed,10 mph, 1.5 horsepower) • Henry Ford built the first American automobile in 1896 • 1908-the famous Ford Model T became the 1stmass-produced car
Model T Automobile “I am going to democratize the automobile” Henry FordI want to pay my workers so that they can afford my product!
Henry Ford and his first car (1896)-video clip on Henry Ford Cities episode 6, 4:45-10:00
How did the Invention of the car contribute to the Industrial age? • Allowed Americans more freedom of movement • Allowed more workers to travel greater distances to work (you could live farther from work) • Created more jobs so people can make the automobile • Federal Aid Roads Act (1916)-laid the foundation for modern system of roads
How was the automobile made? • The Assembly Line- single task production perfected in Henry Ford’s Detroit auto factories • Very repetitious work-made people feel like a machine
The Airplane 1.Wilbur Wright 2. Orville Wright Kitty Hawk, NC – December 7, 1903
The Industrial Giants Also called the “Robber Barons” by those who hated big business
John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil • JD’s Standard Oil controlled 90% of the oil industry (oil, oil pipelines and railroads-also called a trust) • JD almost had a monopoly (no competition) on US oil • JD was one rich “dude”-worth $900 million
Edwin Drake and Oil (1859) • *Edwin Drake was the first to drill for oil in the USA in Titusville, PA • Drake developed the first oil drill and well • But unfortunately did not patent his invention and died in poverty • Oil used to lubricate the machinery of the industrial age • The largest oil boom occurred in Texas
IDA TARBELL CARTOON SHOWING THE “OCTOPUS” STANDARD OIL SEIZING THE NATION’S OIL BUSINESSES
Steel Production • The Bessemer Process- easier and cheaper to smelt iron into steel molds • Steel became the “king industry” • Steel was used to make railroads, bridges and support beams for skyscrapers
Andrew Carnegie and US Steel • Drew’ went from rags to riches to become another very rich dude • Carnegie’s Pittsburgh, PA-based company (US Steel) controlled over 80% of all steel production • 1900- Carnegie had earned a personal fortune of over $40 million • 1901-sold US Steel to JP Morgan in order to devote himself to philanthropy (gave 90% of his fortune away)
D. H. Burnham • 1846 – 1912 • Use of steelfor a skyscraper or other super structure.
John A. Roebling:The Brooklyn Bridge, 1913 Built w/ Carnegie’s Steel
The Brooklyn Bridge today Single Image Photograph
William Le Baron Jenney • 1832 – 1907 • “Father of the ModernSkyscraper”
Statue of Liberty, 1876(Frederic Auguste Bartholdi) Watch Statue of Liberty clip from America the Story of us (1st part of Cities-10 minutes)
Cornelius the “Commodore” Vanderbilt • “Modern Colossus of Railroads” • Millionaire who gained control who took over much of nation’s railroads • Operated 4,500 miles of track
JP Morgan • NY Bank owner and multi-million $ investor • Most powerful figure in American finance • Eventually took over much of the railroads by 1898 • Steel owner-eventually Carnegie sold US Steel to him in 1901
The Invention of Electricity • 1880-Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb • Used to power many new inventions- escalators, elevators, automatic doors, air conditioning, central heating • Department Stores- Macy’s, Sears, JC Penney were the first of big ones to include many of these new inventions
Thomas Edison • “The Wizard of Menlo Park”
Alternate Current (AC) George Westinghouse
The Edison Phonograph (1877) • Made the human experience repeatable in a away never before possible!
I Love this Guy!!!!!! Willis Carrier-invented the 1stAir Conditioner
The Invention of the Telephone • Alexander Graham Bell patents the invention • Bell used copper electric wires to transmit speech • The phone revolutionized communication