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America's Late 19th Century: Industrialization, Immigration, and Migration

Explore the impact of industrialization, immigration, and migration during America's late 19th century. Learn about the rise of big business, the challenges of urbanization, and the struggles faced by immigrants and laborers. Discover the key players, social reforms, and the power of the railroad industry. Delve into the lives of the working class through the eyes of Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle". Get ready to debate the question, "Was America the land of opportunity?"

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America's Late 19th Century: Industrialization, Immigration, and Migration

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  1. Chapter Overview Bravo Class!

  2. What we have covered • We have studied 3 facets of U.S. History during the late 19th century • Industrialization • Migration from rural to urban areas • Immigration • Study this power point and be ready to debate the issue when answering the question, “Was America the land of opportunity?”

  3. Overview • Industrialization brought: • Big Business which brought: • Wide spread railroad expansion and use • People in search of opportunities and a better life. • Immigration • Rural(country)-to-Urban(city) Migration • People moved to the cities in search of work • Cities became overcrowded • People needed help so they were in need of social reforms, religion, new politics, labor unions, and new laws to protect their rights. • Farming communities suffered because of the move away from farms

  4. Industrialization • Industrialization brought: • Railroads • Made of Steel • Steel made of iron ore • Migration from farms to Cities • Business Growth/Big Business • Captains of Industry • One owned steel company! • Created Monopolies because they wanted more money and power • Called for laws to control/new politics • Sherman Anti-Trust Act • Interstate Commerce Act • People of all races • Immigrants, Asians, African Americans • Labor Unions • Haymarket Affair

  5. Immigration • Immigration brought: • Cultures from Asia, Southern and Eastern Europe • Need for dealing with increase in Asian population. • Chinese Exclusion Act • Increased population in the cities • Increased need for controlled sanitation • The Jungle was written because of the poor conditions of meat factories. • The book forced the law to change and resulted in the Meat Inspection Act.

  6. Migration • Migration from farms to cities brought: • African American people to the cities. • Immigrants to the cities • Fear of different races of people. • Chinese Exclusion Act • Jim Crow Laws(Ida Wells) • Disfranchisement of Blacks • Segregation in cities • Need for workers who were trained and educated. • Americanization • Lack of Educational Opportunities for African Americans. (W.E.B. Dubois, Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver) • Farming communities suffered Creating ‘populist’ party • City people losing hope • Call for social reform/social gospel to give hope • D.L. Moody • Salvation Army • YMCA

  7. Transcontinental Railroads/Mining Towns Key Points: • Mining was not just for gold • Lead, Silver, Copper, Ore too! • These mining companies sold to steel companies. • Steel companies were owned by the Captains of Industry • Mining conditions were horrible! • Mining brought “boomtowns” • What do you think they were?

  8. Boomtown

  9. Other key points about mining • Mining brought wealth • Wealth brought the railroads • Railroads brought the farmers and the ranchers to the city.

  10. Transcontinental Railroads • Advantages • Mining companies could ship raw materials to factories. • Manufacturers(factories) shipped finished products through the country. • What do you think were the result of these advantages? • Who were the miners?/Who were the factories?/Who bought the finished products?

  11. Where did the money come from? • The banks made loans to the manufacturers (factories). • 2 of the Captains of Industry were bankers.

  12. Why migrate West? • Homestead Act 1862 • Gave public land to people free or at a low cost. • Americans and Immigrants migrated west. • Gold, Coal, and Iron because the new industries were using them!

  13. Captains of Industry • Andrew Mellon- banker • Andrew Carnegie – steel industry • J.P. Morgan – Financier (merged with Carnegie to form U.S. Steel) • John D. Rockefeller- Standard Oil • They were realists –LIVE LIFE TO THE FULLEST! • Who benefitted from the Railroad Industry/Why?

  14. All of them! • Mellon- Banker • Companies need money to operate • Andrew Carnegie • He vertically integrated a small company • He bought all the companies that produced the products needed to make steel and well as the companies that produced shipped and sold it.

  15. Captains of Industry • John D. Rockefeller • Factories need oil to run their machines and to ship goods. • He horizontally integrated his businesses. • He bought all the oil companies! • He created the first monopoly or trust.

  16. Things they had in common • Social Darwinism – survival of the fittest • Laissez- faire – “leave it alone” • Entrepreneurs • Started their own business • Philanthropists • Donate lots of money to “good” causes.

  17. Laborers and Labor Unions • No wealth for them. • Over crowded cities • No education for their children • Poor sanitation

  18. The Jungle • Written by Upton Sinclair in 1906 • Main character, Jurgis Rudkus, is an immigrant worker in a Chicago meatpacking district. • Jurgis has a tragic life! • Sinclair, details the conditions of the unsanitary conditions (Tuberculosis) • The Jungle catches the eye of President Roosevelt. • Investigators find Sinclair’s description accurate. • Congress then passed the Meat Inspection Act 1906 and the Bureau of Chemistry which became the Food and Drug Administration.

  19. Haymarket Riot • U.S. Labor Unions set a general strike for an 8-hour work day. • Union workers McCormick Harvesting Machine Company were attacked by Pinkerton Guards (They worked for Carnegie to control Unions). • Strike Breakers crossed the picket lines and were attacked by strikers. • Police fired on the crowd and killed 2 workers • In response local anarchists called a rally in Haymarket Square. • Police ordered the rally to stop • A bomb was thrown at the police, shots were exchanged and many were killed. • It was suspected that Pinkerton threw the bomb force a response from the police and stop the strikers.

  20. Social Gospel Movement • Massive migration to cities (Urbanization) • People needed help • Christians believed God was the answer • Developed Salvation Army, YMCA and settlement houses

  21. African Americans during the Gilded Age • Booker T. Washington • Lived from 1856-1915 • The most influential black educator of the late 19th century. • Accepted racial subordination, disfranchisement and social segregation. • Blacks should be allowed to advance economically and educationally (vocation). • Disfranchisement • 15th amendment -blacks the right to vote. • To stop them from voting, all people were required to pay high poll taxes and read complicated laws.(disfranchisement.)

  22. George Washington Carver • Lived from 1860-1943 • Inventor, Agricultural Chemist, Educator • Revolutionized agricultural but convincing farmers to plant peanuts, not cotton. • Developed over 325 uses for peanuts • Worked under Booker T. Washington at the Tuskegee Institute. • Also believed in disfranchisement of Blacks. • Education = Economic success

  23. Other African Americans • Ida Wells – Led anti-lynching crusade in the 1890’s • Lynching • (of a mob) kill (someone), especially by hanging, for an alleged offense with or without a legal trial. W.E.B Dubois 1868-1963 -pushed for the right to vote - co-founded NAACP - opposed Booker T. Washington’s Atlanta Compromise - Believed that Blacks should have equal rights “in every realm of a person’s life, not just a vocational (skill or trade) education.”

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