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The Rise of Big Business

The Rise of Big Business. Corporations!!!!!!!. A form of group ownership by a number of different people Took advantage of expanding markets Investors lose no more than original investment Good for risky industries like RR or mining. Advantages of a Corporation.

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The Rise of Big Business

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  1. The Rise of Big Business

  2. Corporations!!!!!!! • A form of group ownership by a number of different people • Took advantage of expanding markets • Investors lose no more than original investment • Good for risky industries like RR or mining

  3. Advantages of a Corporation • Access to huge amounts of money • Funded new technology • Ran large plants across the country • Operated in several different regions • Same rights as an individual • Buy & sell property • Sue in courts • Maximized profits • Decreased cost of production • Established Research labs to improve products • Paid lowest possible wages to works • Paid little for raw materials • Widely advertised

  4. MONOPOLIES/OLIGOPOLIES • Attempted monopolies • Complete control of a product or service • Bought out or ruined competitors • Oligopolies – two or three businesses control an entire market Examples today – Fast Food, Cars, Drug stores and Supermarket chains • Cartels—businesses making same product limit production and keep prices high – work together

  5. Corporations Integration – Growth Trust Companies assign their stock to a board of trustees Board combines stock into new organization & runs the organization Rockefeller used this to get around an Ohio law that said he couldn’t buy out competitors or own their stock • Horizontal: Combining many firms in the same business • Vertical: Gaining control of the many different businesses that make up all phases of a product’s development • Standard Oil Co. : oil wells/pipelines, tank cars/railroads, retail outlets

  6. “Robber Barons” v. “Captains of Industry” • Feeling that trusts, cartels, & monopolies gave an unfair advantage • Small businesses bought out or destroyed • Unfair high prices for consumers • Poor were being swindled • Businessmen served the country positively • Provided jobs for the large & growing workforce • Developed efficient business practices • Developed technology, stimulated economy, & innovation • Philanthropists • Universities, museums, libraries—help poor rise

  7. John D. Rockefeller • Oil tycoon • Standard Oil Company • World’s first billionaire • Gave 10% of each paycheck to the church • Used horizontal & vertical integration • Made deals with railroads to increase profits

  8. Andrew Carnegie • Steel Tycoon—Carnegie Steel Company • From Rags to Riches-Scottish immigrant • Second richest man in history • Donated to establish Libraries, schools, universities • Donated over 80% of his fortune • “Gospel of Wealth” • Responsibility of wealth

  9. OTHER GREAT ENTERPRENEURS VANDERBILTS - Transportation PULLMAN – Railroad Cars

  10. ENTREPRENEUR USE OF WEALTH? BILTMORE ESTATE - ASHEVILLE PULLMAN’S ESTATE

  11. Social Darwinism • Darwinism applied to American capitalism • Theory developed by Charles Graham Sumner • Wealth is a measure of a person’s inherent value • The wealthy were the most “fit” • Argued for laissez-faire policies • Intervention would disrupt natural selection—wrong to use public funds to aid poor Used for discrimination!

  12. INTERSTATE COMMERCE ACT!!! Senate created Interstate Commerce Commission to oversee the railroads. First ever federal body established to monitor business in America • Advantages • Could obtain Railroads’ records & run investigations of unfairness • First of many other federal agencies set up to monitor American businesses • Disadvantages • Could only monitor railroads that crossed state lines • Couldn’t make laws or control transactions

  13. Sherman Antitrust Act • 1880-passed by Senate • Outlawed any trust that operated “in restraint of trade or commerce among the several states.” • Seldom enforced • Used by big business against labor unions • Both the ICC & Antitrust Act started a trend in the government limiting power of corporations

  14. The Organized Labor Movement Workers & Big Business Clash

  15. Workers • Low wages • Immigrants—large % of workforce • Desperate for any work • 12 hour days/6 days a week • Worked long hours on machines • Dangerous working conditions

  16. Worker Hardships • Sweatshops • Dirty, Dangerous, overheated, bad ventilation, poor lighting • Accidents—faulty equipment & lack of proper training • Strict regulation to ensure productivity • Fines for breaking rules & working slowly

  17. Child Labor • Most women worked in factories • Both parents worked • Brought children to work • Kept them off streets, and they could earn a wage • Nearly 1 in 5 children between 10-16 ages worked • Mines, factories, textiles, canneries, newsboys/messengers, • Harsh conditions • Stunted physical & mental growth

  18. Company Towns • Many workers lived in communities owned by business & rented to employees • Forced to buy goods at the “company store” • Goods sold on credit with high interest • Most of wages owed back to employer • “Wage slavery” • Employees couldn’t leave until they repaid loans, or they would be arrested • Created a workforce that was forced to be loyal

  19. NATIONAL LABOR UNION 1. leader William Sylvis 2. made up of individual unions from across the country 3. 300 local union chapters 4. urged to admit women and African Americans 5. huge membership 650 6. success: 8 hour work day for government employees 7. Labor Reform Party - ran a Candidate 8. Only lasted for a few years for President.

  20. National Colored Labor Union Led by Isaac Meyers Had to be created because Southerners refused to join the union if blacks were accepted Met in large churches to plan their strategies

  21. The Knights of Labor • Founded in 1869 by Uriah Smith Stevens • Included all workers—any trade, skilled or unskilled • Actively recruited African Americans • Worked as a secret society • 8 hour day and equal pay for equal work • Strikes as a last resort • TERRENCE POWDERLY reorganizes the movement • Abandoned secrecy of the union • By 1885, the Knights included 700,000 men and women across the nation—all races and ethnicities • Largely disappeared by the 1890s after a series of failed strikes

  22. The American Federation of Labor (AFL) • Formed in 1886 by Samuel Gompers • Head of the local cigar makers’ union in NY • Strictly a craft union of skilled workers • Made up of 100 local unions for specific crafts/trades • Gained bargaining strength through the AFL • Goals: strike and pension fund for workers in need, wages, working hours, working conditions • Less successful than the knights • Excluded women-Gompers thought they would drive wages down • Open to African Americans in theory, but were often excluded

  23. INTERNATIONAL WORKERSOF THE WORLD 1. leader - William “Big Bill” Haywood 2. workers from around the country should unite as a brotherhood 3. welcomed every one!! 4. nicknamed WOBBLIES

  24. AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION 1. leader Eugene Debs 2. believed skilled and unskilled workers should unite 3. organized railroad workers – others joined his cause 4. membership increased with strike victories 5. Leadership became associated with socialism

  25. INTERNATIONAL LADIES GARMENT WORKERS UNION 1. leaders - Pauline Newman - Mary Harris Jones 2. Issues - working conditions Triangle Shirtwaist fire in New York – 145 workers died in a locked work area - fought for fire codes - 54 hour work week for women and minors, - prohibition of Sunday work - abolition of child labor

  26. The Railroad Strikes • 1877--Workers went on strike in response to wage cuts – B&O railroad began the strike -Violence and massive destruction in several cities • Strikebreakers hired to perform jobs of striking workers and needed protection • State and federal government sent in troops to restore order • Set the stage for following violent strikes

  27. Haymarket Square • May 1, 1886—Workers participate in a national demonstration for an 8-hour workday • Strikes erupt & fights break out • Strikers v. strikebreakers • Strikers v. police • May 4th—protestors gather in Haymarket square in Chicago • Protester threw a bomb that killed a policeman • In the chaos that followed, dozens of people were killed

  28. Impact of Haymarket Square • 8 anarchists tried for murder—4 executed • Governor of Illinois pardoned three of the others—scanty evidence for convictions • Americans became wary of labor unions • Knights of Labor were blamed and membership fizzled out • Employers and the American public associated union activities with violence

  29. Homestead Strike • Carnegie Steel plant cut wages • Union called a strike • Henry Frick, Carnegie’s partner, brought in the Pinkerton agents – a private police force • Pinkertons and strikers engage in standoff for two weeks • killed several strikers & wounded many others

  30. Pullman Palace Car Company • Luxury railroad cars • George Pullman owned housing, stores, and churches in the company town • Charged steep rents • Cut wages several times, but never reduced rents or price of goods • After rent deduction, worker’s paycheck in late 1800s equaled about $0.40 in today’s dollars!

  31. Pullman Strike of 1893 • Workers laid off and wages cut by 25% • Workers tried to negotiate with Pullman, but he shut down the plant • Workers turned to the American Railway Union • Eugene V. Debs • A.R.U. called for a nationwide strike • By June of 1894, 300,000 rail workers had walked off the job • Strikers were able to disrupt railroad traffic and mail delivery

  32. The Pullman Strike & Eugene V. Debs • Railroad owners used the Sherman Antitrust Act against the strikers • unions were operating the restraint of trade or commerce between several states • July 4, 1894, Cleveland sent in troops & ended the strike • Debs imprisoned for refusing to end the strike • acted against interstate commerce • spent 6 months in jail & became a Socialist

  33. Impact of Pullman Strike • Employers often cited the Sherman Antitrust Act to appeal for court orders against unions. • Federal government often approved appeals • Limited union gains for over 30 years • Eugene Debs • 1897—Founded American Socialist Party • 1905—Helped found Industrial Workers of the World aka Wobblies. • Radical union of unskilled workers-many socialists • Led many strikes-often violent

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