690 likes | 929 Views
2d Industrial Revolution and the Growth of Big Business. Georgia Performance Standards: SSUSH11a-d. SSUSH11 The student will describe the economic, social, and geographic impact of the growth of big business and technological innovations after Reconstruction.
E N D
2d Industrial Revolution and the Growth of Big Business Georgia Performance Standards: SSUSH11a-d
SSUSH11 The student will describe the economic, social, and geographic impact of the growth of big business and technological innovations after Reconstruction. a. Explain the impact of the railroads on other industries, such as steel, and on the organization of big business. b. Describe the impact of the railroads in the development of the West; include the transcontinental railroad, and the use of Chinese labor. c. Identify John D. Rockefeller and the Standard Oil Company and the rise of trusts and monopolies d. Describe the inventions of Thomas Edison; include the electric light bulb, motion pictures, and the phonograph, and their impact on American life
Growth of Railroads • Need: • Faster mode of transportation • Results: • Creation of a national market • Standardized “American” culture • Helps lead to: • Urbanization • Industrialization, • Organized Labor • Immigration
Railroads and the West The "West"
Railroads and the West • Government involvement in settlement: • Morrill Act (1862) • Public land used or sold to found colleges • Examples: UGA, Ft. Valley, Auburn, AL A&M • Homestead Act (1862) • People could gain property after living on it and farming for 5 years
Railroads and the West • “Railheads” • Cities on a rail line that served to move cattle eastward • Cattle Drives • Ranching • “open range” • Introduction of barbed wire
Transcontinental Railroad • Prior: • Routes to California • Overland by wagon train (2 months) • Water, via Panama/Nicaragua (2-6 months) • Water, via Cape Horn (6-10 months) • Pacific Railroad Acts • Central Pacific – from Sacramento CA east • Union Pacific – from Council Bluffs IA west
Transcontinental Railroad • Problems: • Weather • Geography • Supplies • Had to be shipped to San Francisco California Iowa
Transcontinental Railroad • Meeting: • Promontory, Utah • May 10, 1869
Transcontinental Railroad meeting at Promontory Summit, Utah
Chinese Labor and Railroads • Early labor: • Miners • Viewed as unreliable, expensive • Move to Chinese immigrants • Cheap • Economic conditions in China were poor • By 1868, 12,000 were employed by the Central Pacific Railroad (80% of their workforce)
Chinese Labor • Harsh treatment • Paid less • Discriminated against due to ethnicity
Reaction to Chinese Laborers The Mongolian invasion has begun at last in good earnest…the first detachment of Chinese laborers…numbering 250 men, arrived… carrying their baggage on poles…in true Oriental fashion. Most of these men were employed in the construction of the Pacific Railroad…. - Harper’s Weekly, 22 January, 1870
Monopoly: control over all or almost all trade or production of a good Trusts: a large corporation or combination with a monopoly of some service or commodity. Rise of Trusts/Monopolies • Cause: • Rise of urban centers (cities) • Rise of industrialization/mass production • Transportation improvements • Two Major Corporations: • Standard Oil • U.S. Steel
Big Business • A pejorative (negative) term used to describe the political and economic power of a corporation that influences prices of goods • Wal-Mart • Exxon • Home Depot • Now it’s your turn.
Monopoly • Monopoly • One company has exclusive control over their entire industry • Wipe out all of the competition • Two Methods: • Vertical Integration • Horizontal Integration
Vertical Integration • One company controls all means of production and distribution from beginning to end • Middleman is eliminated • Costs less for company to create a product • Lower prices • Consumers go with cheaper prices • Competition eliminated
Vertical Integration One Company Owns all Phases of Production From Top To Bottom Raw Materials Assembly and Manufacturing End Product Distribution
Horizontal Integration • Buy out the competition • If companies refuse to sell, lower prices to undercut the competition • Consumers flock to lower prices • Competition goes bankrupt or is forced to sell
Horizontal Integration To Form a Giant Company (Trust) Small Business Small Business Small Business Purchased by one Company Small Business Small Business Small Business Small Business Small Business Small Business Small Business Small Business Small Business
Steel Industry • Needed to build railroads, buildings • Mass production, perfected by Carnegie, allowed U.S. steel production to skyrocket
U.S. Steel • Formed in 1901 • World’s first billion dollar company • Produced 67% of U.S. steel in that year
Robber Baron • Negative - a business leader that builds wealth by lying, cheating and stealing • Robs from consumers • Abuses employees and workers • Drives competitors out of business (And enjoys it!) • Drains the country of natural resources • Bribes government officials
Captain of Industry • Positive - a business leader that positively contributes to the country • Creates jobs • Increases availability of goods • Expands markets • Helps the economy • A philanthropists – donates money or goods to a charity • Creates museums, libraries, universities