1 / 21

Chapter 19: The New Industrial Order

Chapter 19: The New Industrial Order. NATION OF NATIONS, SIXTH EDITION DAVIDSON • DELAY • HEYRMAN • LYTLE • STOFF. Preview.

germainem
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 19: The New Industrial Order

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. Chapter 19: The New Industrial Order NATION OF NATIONS, SIXTH EDITION DAVIDSON • DELAY • HEYRMAN • LYTLE • STOFF

  2. Preview • “At the heart of the new order reshaping American society was not just industry but systems of industry—systems of transportation and communication, systems for managing large corporations and raising the money to finance them. Workers fought to create systems of labor as well…”

  3. The Highlights • The Development of Industrial Systems • Railroads: America’s First Big Business • The Growth of Big Business • The Workers’ World • The Systems of Labor

  4. The Development of Industrial Systems • Natural Resources and Industrial Technology • Bessemer process • Petroleum industry • Environmental costs • Systematic Invention • Edison’s contribution • The spread of an electrical power system

  5. Transportation and Communication • The problem of scale • Telegraph: timely information could be received nationwide • Telephone: New Haven, Connecticut, opened the first telephone exchange • Finance Capital • Sources of capital: savings of firms and later savings and investment of individuals • Growth of a complex network of financial institutions

  6. The Corporation • Advantages of the corporation: raise large sums of money, outlive its owners, limited liability, separated owners from day-to-day management • By the turn of the century, corporations were making two-thirds of all manufactured products in the U.S. • An International Pool of Labor • Global labor network • Migration chains • Domestic sources

  7. Occupational Distribution, 1880 and 1920

  8. Railroads: America’s First Big Business • A Managerial Revolution • Pioneering trunk lines • The new managers: beneath owners but with wide authority over operations

  9. Competition and Consolidation • Railroads saddled with enormous fixed costs: equipment, payroll, high debts • The “Erie Wars” • Pooling: informal agreements among competing companies to act together • The Challenge of Finance • New ways of raising money • Investment bankers advised companies about their business affairs

  10. The Growth of Big Business • Growth in Consumer Goods • The pool: Salt makers drew together in the nation’s first pool • Horizontal growth: joining loosely together with rivals • Vertical integration: integrated several different activities • Carnegie Integrates Steel • 1875: Carnegie opens first mill in midst of a severe depression

  11. Rockefeller and the Great Standard Oil Trust • Rockefeller’s methods of expansion • The trust: stockholders of corporation surrendered their shares “in trust” • The Mergers of J. Pierpont Morgan • The holding company • The merger movement • Corporate Defenders • The gospel of wealth • Social Darwinism

  12. Corporate Critics • Socialist Labor party • Sherman Antitrust Act • United States v. E.C. Knight Co. • The Costs of Doing Business • The boom-and-bust cycle • Three severe depressions rocked the economy in the last third of the nineteenth century “Andrew Carnegie invoked the gospel of wealth to justify his millions, but a group of radical critics looked at his libraries and foundations as desperate attempts to buy peace of mind.”

  13. Boom and Bust Business Cycle, 1865-1900

  14. The Workers’ World • Industrial Work • Pattern of industrial work • Taylorism: time-and-motion studies • Worker citizens: expected enough money to support and educate, as well as enough time to stay abreast of current affairs

  15. Children, Women and African Americans • On average children worked 60 hours a week • Even more than women, African American men faced discrimination in the workplace • The American Dream of Success • Rising real wages • Social mobility

  16. The Systems of Labor • Early Unions • National Labor Union • NLU wilted during the depression of 1873 • The Knights of Labor • Terence Powderly • Looked to abolish the wage system and replace with a cooperative economy

  17. The American Federation of Labor • Samuel Gompers • Failure of organized labor • The Limits of Industrial Systems • Spontaneous protests • Molly McGuires • Great Railroad Strike • Laundresses strike • Haymarket Square riot

  18. Management Strikes • Pullman strike (1894) • Management weapons: “yellow dog” contracts, lockouts “In a matter of only 30 or 40 years, the new industrial order transformed the landscape of America. It left its mark elsewhere in the world, too.”

More Related