html5-img
1 / 18

The Gilded Age 1877-1900

The Gilded Age 1877-1900 . Technological Advances . Telephone Bicycle Typewriter Elevator Root Beer Linoleum “floor covering of the future” Steel (skyscrapers, bridges) . Industrialization and The Rise of Big Business .

qamra
Télécharger la présentation

The Gilded Age 1877-1900

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Gilded Age 1877-1900

  2. Technological Advances • Telephone • Bicycle • Typewriter • Elevator • Root Beer • Linoleum “floor covering of the future” • Steel (skyscrapers, bridges)

  3. Industrialization and The Rise of Big Business • During the Gilded Age, huge corporations were formed that employed thousands and produced enormous amounts of goods • The founders of these companies amassed great wealth while their workers were poorly paid

  4. Captains of Industry • Andrew Carnegie: bought out his suppliers and his competitors until he controlled the steel industry. • John D. Rockefeller: turned his company into a “trust” by buying stock in his competitors companies until he controlled them.

  5. Sherman Anti-Trust Act • Passed in 1890 to make trusts illegal • Companies found many ways to get around this law • 1906-, the government brought suit against Standard Oil and in 1911 the trust was finally ordered to dissolve

  6. The Problems of the Industrial Workers • There was almost no federal government regulation of businesses at this time, therefore there was: nominimum wage,nomaximum number of hours per week,nohigher pay for overtime,noregulation of unhealthy or unsafe working conditions, andnohealth insurance or other employee benefits. • Industrialization created low-wage, low-skilled jobs that made employees easy to replace. This led to the growth of labor unions.

  7. Communication Improves • 1866- Transatlantic telegraph cable • 1876- telephone- by 1900- 1.5 million phones installed • Improvements in printing- wide circulation of newspapers- mass advertising

  8. Mass Production • From small shops to large factories • Workers perform 1 task over and over again • Long hours • 10-15 hours per day • 6-7 days per week

  9. Child Labor

  10. The Early Labor Union Movement • Labor Unions tried to improve wages and working conditions by collective bargaining and threatening strikes • Between 1877 and 1893 there were several huge strikes • Union popularity declined because the public associated labor unions with violence

  11. The Problems of Farmers • Westward expansion led to overproduction of crops – farm prices drop • Railroad rates going up- more expensive to transport crops • Farmers became deeply in debt • Farmers began the Populist Movement • Asking for rr regulation and monetary reform to releive their indebtedness

  12. Problems of Immigrants • The thousands of immigrants that came from Southern and Eastern Europe between 1890-1915 were often poor and illiterate • They accepted unskilled jobs in factories and had to move in to overly crowded cities

  13. Ellis Island, N.Y., Angel Island, CA.

  14. Problems of Immigrants (Con’t) • Triple Hardship: low wages, pooe housing conditions, and nativism (prejudice against immigrants) • Nativists encouraged the government to pass immigration restriction laws

  15. Problems of Minorities • The right to vote promised by the Fifteenth Amendment was undermined by the use of poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses • Asians: The Chinese Exclusion Act banned further immigration from China

  16. Big Cities • Tightly knit ethnic communities begin to shape the big cities

  17. Urban Problems • Industrial cities grew rapidly ad poor workers lived in slums • Police and fire departments were understaffed • Clean water and sewer systems were inadequate • Tenement houses were were crowded and unsafe

  18. Urban Problems (Con’t) • City governments were often corrupt “political macines” stayed in power by winning the votes of the immigrants, but often abused their power • Graft is when a public official uses his office to make himself rich through bribery or stealing public funds

More Related