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Chapter 19: The Growth of Industry. “What do I care about law? Ain't I got the power?” Cornelius Vanderbilt. Section 1: Railroads lead the way. The first transcontinental railroad was completed in 1869. Several others were built shortly after
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Chapter 19: The Growth of Industry “What do I care about law? Ain't I got the power?” Cornelius Vanderbilt
Section 1: Railroads lead the way • The first transcontinental railroad was completed in 1869. Several others were built shortly after • By 1890 there were five major rail lines, with hundreds of smaller lines branching off them • Small railroad companies combined into larger corporations. This is called consolidation
Railroad Expansion • Suddenly there were a handful of powerful people at the top of the industry. They were called Railroad Barons. • Barons like Cornelius Vanderbilt made a large fortune owning railroads. There were no laws regulating business, and Railroad Barons took advantage of the average worker while making an obscene amount of money.
Railroads and the Economy • Railroads allowed raw materials from the west to be transported to the east. • The steel industry boomed because of railroads demand for steel tracks. • The coal industry boomed due to fuel demands, and the lumber industry was successful as well.
Railroads and the Economy ctd • Railroads developed a Standard Gauge – which created the same sized track for all railroads. • Large railroads offered discounts called Rebates to their biggest customers • Barons agreed to pools- which were deals between barons so railroads would all agree to higher rates. With no competition Barons could set the price to whatever they wanted
Railroads Change America • Railroads allowed industry to expand to the west. (Mining, Farming, Ranching, etc…. REMEMBER?!) • Most importantly the west was starting to become populated due to an easier path to the West Coast
Section 2: Inventions “Anything that won't sell, I don't want to invent. Its sale is proof of utility, and utility is success.” Thomas Edison
The Telegraph • Samuel Morse invented the Telegraph in 1844. There were thousands of telegraph lines by 1860. • Trained operators used Morse code to communicate. • The telegram was also used by businesses across the country to communicate to one another
Bell and the Telephone • Alexander Graham Bell came to America from Scotland to help hearing impaired people to speak. • He also experimented with sending voices through electrical wires. By 1876, he created a device that would send the sound of your voice electronically through wires
Bell and the Telephone ctd • This device he named the telephone. • He formed the Bell telephone company in 1877. By 1890 he had sold thousands of telephones to businesses across the country. Eventually the technology became available to the public.
Invention Boom • Between 1860 and 1890, the United States government granted more than 400,000 patents- or owning the rights for new inventions. • Many helped businesses. • ex: Christopher Sholes’s Typewriter (1868), and William Burroughs's Adding Machine (1888).
Invention Boom • In 1888 George Eastman invented a small box camera (Kodak). • In 1899 John Thurman developed a vacuum cleaner which simplified housework.
Thomas Edison • He had trouble in school. He was considered dull by teachers, had bad hearing, and stopped attending eventually. • He was home taught and loved science. He worked at a railroad yard and set up a lab in a freight car. His first invention was a gadget that sent electronic telegraph signals. Designed so he could sleep on the job.
Edison • He went into the invention business in his 20’s. • In 1879 he developed the first workable light bulb. He then built (designed) the first central electric power plant in 1882 and illuminated 85 buildings in NYC!
George Westinghouse • In 1885 George Westinghouse took Edison’s light bulb further. • He built transformers that could send electricity further and more cheaply over longer distances.
Henry Ford and the automobile • While engineering in Detroit, Michigan, Henry Ford experimented building an engine that ran on gasoline. • In 1903 he established an auto making company and began making cars.
Automobiles • In 1906 Ford decided he wanted to make an easy to make, inexpensive car that the public could buy. • The Model T was the first car available to the public. During the next 18 years, Ford sold 15 million Model T’s.
Assembly Line • Ford Pioneered a new, fast way to make cars. On The Assembly Line each worker had one specific task that was performed again and again. • Mass Production of goods was the idea of creating large amounts of supplies very quickly. It also made it so products could be sold more quickly
Chain Stores • In 1863, with new discoveries in transportation and communication, mail delivery became popular. • Ordinary people were able to use catalogs to order items from companies.
Chain Stores • Merchants could sell goods across the country as easily as selling them across town. • Chain stores such as Montgomery Ward, Sears, and Woolworths appeared all over the country and competed with local merchants for business.
Section 3: An Age of Big Business “Do you know the only thing that gives me pleasure? It's to see my dividends coming in.” John D. Rockefeller
Section 3: An Age of Big Business • In Western Pennsylvania, oil was discovered in the 1850’s beneath the ground. Shortly it was discovered oil could be burned to produce heat, light, and to lubricate machinery. • The discovery led to a multimillion dollar petroleum industry
Factors of Production • There were three main factors that led the United States from an agriculture society to an industrial one. • Land • Labor • Capitol
Land • Transportation advances made it possible for many Americans to move west and tap the natural resources of the country. • Land means not the land itself but all natural resources available. • Natural resources stimulated industry • Ex: Lumber, Coal, Oil
Labor • Large amounts of workers were needed to turn natural resources into goods. • Between 1860 and 1900, the population of the United States nearly doubled
Capital • Capital = money • It also means the equipment, buildings, machinery, and tools used in production. • The more capital you have the more powerful your business is
Corporations • Corporations are companies that sell parts of themselves to the public. The parts are called Stocks or shares of the company. • The people who invest in the company by buying stock are called its shareholders.
Corporations • Shareholders earn dividends which are cash payments from the corporations profits. • If the stock rises, the shareholders make money by then selling the stock they bought for more money than they bought it for.
Corporations • If a company fails, the shareholders lose their investment, and lose money. • In the late 1800’s hundreds of thousands of people shared company profits by buying and selling profits at markets known as stock exchanges
Banks • The growth of corporations helped fuel American Industry after the civil war. • Businesses needed money to start out and at times would take out loans. • Banks would make profits because of the interest on the loan.
The Oil Business • John D. Rockefeller made his fortune from oil. • In 1870 when he was 26 he set up his own oil refinery in Cleveland. • The Standard Oil Company set out to dominate the oil industry
The Oil Business • Rockefeller eventually acquired the oil refineries in Cleveland and other cities. • Rockefeller used Horizontal integration- combining competing firms into one corporation, to build his empire. • Standard Oil produced their own tank cars, pipelines, and barrels made from forests that the company bought. Standard Oil became the largest corporation of the time period.
Standard Oil Trust • Rockefeller lowered his prices to drive rivals out of business • He formed a Trust in 1882, which is a group of companies merged by the same board of directors. • Rockefeller had created a Monopoly, or had total control of the entire oil industry.
The Steel Business • The Bessemer Process and the open-hearth process were two new, cheap methods to produce steel that changed the industry • The leading steel maker was Andrew Carnegie.
Carnegie • Carnegie used Vertical Integration- acquiring companies that provided the equipment and services he needed. • In 1901 Carnegie sold his company to banker J. Pierpont Morgan. He combined it with other businesses to make Americas first billion dollar industry.
Philanthropists • Philanthropy- the use of money to benefit the community. • Rockefeller established the University of Chicago and the Rockefeller’s Institute for Medical Research in NYC. • Carnegie built Carnegie hall, a music hall in NYC. He donated $350 million to various projects.
Corporate Dominance • States started making Mergers,or the combining of companies easier. • By 1900 1/3 of all American manufacturing was controlled by less than 1% of the countries corporations • These giant corporations helped the economy, but without competition consumers were victims of high prices.
Sherman Antitrust Act • The act was passed in 1890 an sought to prohibit trusts and monopolies. • Unfortunately, it did not clearly define a trust or monopoly, and big businesses were able to get around the law.
Section 4: Industrial Workers “We must learn to live together as brothers or we are going to perish together as fools.” Martin Luther King Jr.
Section 4: Industrial Workers • Workers paid a price for economic progress. • As mass production spread, the workday became less personal. • Many worked 10 to 12 hours a day, six days a week. • Many lost their jobs when the business wasn’t doing well, or replaced by immigrants willing to work for less pay
Accidents Were Common • Steel workers suffered burns from hot spills. • Coal miners died in cave-ins and from the effects of dust and gas. • Garment workers worked in Sweatshops. Sweatshops were overcrowded, had poor lighting, and were fire hazards.
Women in the Workplace • Most women had domestic jobs, but the industrial era allowed women to join the workforce, especially the textile industry. • By 1900 over 1 million women worked in industry • Women generally received half the pay of men for the same work
Child Labor • Thousands of children under 16 years old worked in factories. • Child labor laws were passed, stated children had to be at least 12 to work. • These were ignored by businesses, and did not apply to farmers
Knights of Labor • Labor Unions are workers that organized into groups to demand better pay and work. • One of the first groups, the Knights of Labor became a national organization in the 1880’s. It had more than 700,000 members by 1886. • A number of strikes turned public opinion against the union, and it fell apart in the 1890’s.
American Federation of Labor • A group of national trade unions formed the American Federation of Labor in 1881 (AFL) • Led by Samuel Gompers, the organization pressed for better hours, pay, and working conditions. • They practiced Collective Bargaining, which allowed unions to negotiate with management. • Had more than 1.6 million members by 1904.
Unions • Economic conditions were hard in the late 1800’s/early 1900’s/ • Workers would strike regularly • Companies would hire Strikebreakers or people that would replace the striking workers
Unions • Anti-labor feeling grew when striking workers and police clashed in Chicago in 1886. • Several were killed in the Haymaker Riot.
Unions • Workers went on strike in Carnegie’s steel plants in Homestead, PA. • Carnegie replaced the workers with non labor workers, then hired 300 men to protect them • Violence broke out that left 10 people dead.