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Working ConditionsRise of Big Business – Part 3
Growth of Big Business• Lower production
costs– Things were cheaper
• Mass production– More stuff was made
• Trusts are formed• Advertising• Transportation
creates a national market– No longer HAVE to sell
to JUST the local community
Child Labor and Heavy Industries
Working Conditions During Industrialization
• Assembly Line – made production faster!
• Child labor• Low wages; long hours• Unsafe• Sweat Shops - factory with
bad work conditions
Garment Industry of New York City
Women in the Tobacco IndustryNorth Carolina
Children Working in the Coal Mines
Emphysema and Black Lung
Dangers in Textile MillsWomen faced issues with their lungs from working in textile mills as well, breathing in cotton and fiber filaments all day. Many women and children lost fingers and toes in the high velocity machines as well.
Steel Mills were extremely dangerous work environments.Due to the open cauldrons of molten steel, and the heavy mechanized tools which could crush limbs, steel mills were notoriously dangerous. And most companies offered no compensation to workers injured on the job.
The Meatpacking IndustryDue to the de-assembly line methods used in meat packing plants – requiring hasty knife work, many workers were injured on the job – losing fingers, or worse!
When Andrew Carnegie attempted to slash his workers wages, they walked out on strike. When he hired strikebreakers, or “scabs” to replace them, they fought violently to prevent the mills from re-opening. Eventually, the Pennsylvania State Militia forced and end to the conflict using violent force of their own.
The Homestead Strike of 1892
In one of the saddest and most well publicized disasters of the early 20th Century, a group of approximately 150 immigrant laborers were trapped – literally locked in by their employers – in a burning building in New York City. Changes to fire codes and improvements to the working conditions were soon passed to protect employees and factory workers.
The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire of 1911
Improved Working Conditions• Formation of unions– American Federation of Labor:1. Only skilled workers2. NO women!3. Higher pay, less hours, better conditions4. Used collective bargaining
– Knights of Labor: 1. ANYONE could join
This even meant women and African-Americans
2. End child labor3. Shorter workday4. Did not prefer strikes
Strikes• When workers refuse to work in order to gain
something – usually better pay or working conditions