1 / 65

Industry Comes Of Age

Industry Comes Of Age. Chapter 24 1865-1900. Railroads. 1865 – only 35,000 miles of rail, with most of the track lying east of the Mississippi River 1900 – 192,556 miles of rail, with most of the track lying west of the Mississippi River

leora
Download Presentation

Industry Comes Of Age

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. Industry Comes Of Age Chapter 24 1865-1900

  2. Railroads • 1865 – only 35,000 miles of rail, with most of the track lying east of the Mississippi River • 1900 – 192,556 miles of rail, with most of the track lying west of the Mississippi River • Congress began to advance loans to 2 companies to build a transcontinental railroad • Frontier villages became cities if a railroad was placed nearby

  3. Union Pacific Railroad • Commissioned by Congress to push westward from Omaha, Nebraska

  4. Central Pacific Railroad • Commissioned by Congress to push eastward from Sacramento, California • They had to push over the Sierra Nevada Mountains

  5. Big Four • There were four chief financial brokers of the transcontinental railroad • Two included: • Leland Stanford of California – had huge political connections • Collis P. Huntington – an adept lobbyist • Railroads made a profit of $105 million

  6. Chinese Workers • 10,000 Chinese workers poured into the Western United States • Cheap, efficient, and expendable • Hundreds died from explosions while trying to clear the path for the railroad

  7. Promontory Point, Utah • In 1869, the 2 lines finally met up just outside of Ogden, UT • Union Pacific – laid 1,086 miles of track • Central Pacific – laid 689 miles of track

  8. Steel • The need for this metal increased because it was safer for railroads to travel on steel tracks • It was more economical and steel could carry a heavier load • Bessemer Process – 1850s – making cheaper steel by blowing cold air on red-hot iron, making the metal white-hot igniting the carbon and eliminating impurities

  9. RR Improvements • Standard gauge – universal width of railroad tracks came about after Civil War • Westinghouse air brake – 1870s more efficient and much safer • Pullman Palace Cars – advertised as “gorgeous traveling hotels”

  10. Corruption • This is still the Gilded Age, and corruption lingers in all aspects of life. • If you can make money at it, it was probably corrupt • $ = corruption • Credit Mobilier & Jay Gould • Stock watering – RR stocks were grossly inflated, and then stocks were sold

  11. Andrew Carnegie • Kingpin of steel makers • Scottish; hard-worker • Eliminated middle-men • Not a monopolist • 1900 – made $25 M in profit alone • No income tax, so he was a real millionaire

  12. J. Pierpont Morgan • JP Morgan was a legendary Wall Street banker • RR, insurance companies, and banks

  13. Morgan and Carnegie • By 1900, Carnegie was eager to sell his holdings in steel • Morgan invested into steel pipe production, and wanted to own more steel • Morgan agreed to buy Carnegie out for $400 million • Carnegie spent the rest of his life giving away money to libraries, universities, and philanthropies

  14. JP Morgan • Controlled United States Steel Corporation • Capitalized at $1.4 Billion • US Steel was the United States’ first billion dollar corporation

  15. John D. Rockefeller • Lanky, shrewd, ambitious, abstemious (didn’t drink, curse, or smoke) • Came to dominate the oil industry • 1870 Standard Oil Company of Ohio • Oil – kerosene and gasoline

  16. Rockefeller and Standard Oil • Controlled 95% of all oil refineries in the United States • Eliminated middle-men, and created an oil monopoly • Became one of the richest “robber-barons” in US history

  17. America Moves to the City Chapter 25 1865-1900

  18. Population • 1870 – 40 million people in US • 1900 – 80 million people in US • The lure of industrial jobs brought people to the city • Rural people began to move to Urban areas in search of a better job, and better way of life

  19. Urban Frontier • 1860 – no city with 1,000,000 people • 1890 – NYC, Chicago, and Philadelphia all had 1,000,000 people • 1900 – NYC had over 3.5 million people • NYC became the 2nd largest city in the world to London, England

  20. The Skyscraper • Cities grow up and out • Louis Sullivan, a Chicago architect, built the 1st 10 floor building • “form follows function” • The electric elevator perfected the skyscraper

  21. Commuting • Americans became commuter to and from work • Electric trolleys expanded the reach of the average citizen • Different districts for business, industry, and residences emerged • Residential districts were segregated by race and class

  22. Technology • City lights, electricity, indoor plumbing, and telephones all added to the luxury of city life • 1900 – 1 million telephones in use

  23. Waste • Country – very little waste • City – produced much more trash • Waste disposal – new issue to the urban age • Criminals flourished in the city • Impure water, uncollected garbage, unwashed bodies, droppings from animals, HORRIBLE STENCH • “the best and the worst combined”

  24. SLUMS • Worst conditions were called slums • Foul, crowded, filthy, rat-infested • 1879 – dumbbell tenement – 7-8 stories, multiple families, shallow, sunless, ill-smelling, no ventilation, shared hallway toilets

  25. Slums • Flophouse – poor could stay on poor mattresses for a few cents a night • The wealthy left the city altogether, and moved to the suburb

  26. New Immigration • 1880s – over 5 million immigrants came to the US (avg. 2,100/day) • Before, most had been from British Isles, W. Europe, Germany, and Scandinavia • They were Anglo-Saxon, some Irish-Catholic, Catholic Germans • 1880s – immigrant stream changed

  27. New Immigration • Immigrants began to come from S. and E. Europe • Italians, Croats, Slovaks, Greeks, Poles • With Orthodox churches, synagogues, • From countries with little or no democracy

  28. Europe • Had no room for its people because: • Old World was growing vigorously • Fish and grain from New World helped Old World population • Potato changed Europe • Created an Army of unemployed in Europe

  29. “America Fever” • USA was painted as a land of fabulous opportunity, freedom from conscription, and no religious persecution • Industry needed people to work for low wages • States needed people for #s • Steamships needed paying freight • 1880s – Russians turned violently on their Jews

  30. Birds Of Passage • Many were migrant workers who came to the US to work for months for American $$$ and returned home to Europe with their earnings

  31. Social Conscience • Clergy brings Christianity to the slums and factories • Washington Gladden – Congregationalist from OH that predicted socialism would be the logical outcome of Christianity

  32. Jane Addams – Hull House • From a wealthy Illinois family • 1st generation of college educated women • 1889 opened Hull House in Chicago • Urban settlement house • Condemned war and poverty • Offered instruction in English, counseling, and child-care

  33. Nativism • Viewed the Eastern and Southern Europeans as inferior • Blamed them for degradation of govt., working for low wages, importing socialism, communism, and anarchy • Anglo-Saxons worried they would be outbred and outvoted

  34. American Protective Association (APA) • 1887 • 1 million members • Urged voting against Catholic candidates • Very anti-Catholic • Organized labor was nativist because of the language barrier

  35. Chinese Exclusion Act - 1882 • 1st restrictive immigration laws keeping a race totally out of the US • This law barred all Chinese from entering the US for 10 years

  36. Undesirables • People who were forbidden grew to include: the insane, polygamists, prostitutes, alcoholics, anarchists, and diseased people • 1886 – Statue of Liberty was given by France to celebrate America’s open arms to immigrants • Nativists hated the idea

  37. Religion • Urban cities posed challenges for American churches • Protestants, in particular, had many doctrines and teachings that were irrelevant in urban cities • Church became a sacred diversion, or amusement for some

  38. Religion • John D. Rockefeller – pillar of Baptist Church • J.P. Morgan – pillar of the Episcopal Church • Materialism prevailed – worshipped money as achievement • “God causes the righteous to prosper”

  39. Dwight Lyman Moody • Chicago shoe salesman turned preacher, evangelist • Country boy preaching the gospel of kindness and forgiveness in the city • Spellbinding sermons • Moody Bible Institute - 1889

  40. Religion • Roman Catholic and Jewish faith was growing in the city • Strength came from New Immigrants • 1900 – Catholics largest single denomination in the US

  41. Cardinal Gibbons • Urban Catholic leader devoted to American unity • Immensely popular with Catholics and Protestants • Knew every president from Johnson to Harding • (like a Billy Graham)

  42. Religion • 1890 – 150 different religious denominations • Salvation Army – soldiers without swords – est. in England in 1879

  43. Charles Darwin • On The Origin of Species • 1859 • English naturalist • Theory that humans evolved slowly from lower forms of life • “the survival of the fittest” • Evolution cast doubt on the literal interpretation of the Bible

  44. Evolution • Fundamentalists – believed in God’s creation of the earth in 6 days • Modernists – flatly refused to accept Bible as science or history • Teachers of biology who embraced evolution were removed from their post

  45. Education • Tax supported elementary schools began b4 Civil War • Free government can’t exist in a country of ignorance • 1870 – most states mandated grade-school attendance

  46. High Schools • High Schools began to spread in the 1880s and 1890s • Before the war, private academies were the only high schools • Tax supported high schools were rare • 1900 – 6,000 HS w/ free texts supported by tax $

  47. Normal College • Teacher training expanded in the late 19th century • 1910 – 300 Normal Schools • Southwest Texas State started as a normal school

  48. Education • Kindergartens – borrowed from Germany • Strength of Catholic parochial schools grew • 1870 – 20% of US was illiterate • 1900 – 10.7% of US was illiterate

  49. African Americans • Suffered most because of lack of education opportunity • 44% of non-whites were illiterate in 1900

  50. Booker T. Washington • Ex-slave who saved pennies to pay for his schooling • 1881 – became head of the black normal & industrial school @ Tuskegee, Alabama • Self-help advocate

More Related