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The Rise of American Business, Industry, and Labor (1865 - 1920) Civil War changed everything! North was already industrializing (bullets, railroads, etc) South was ruined! (NEW SOUTH)

Big Business- Industrialization

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Page 1: Big Business- Industrialization

The Rise of American Business, Industry, and Labor (1865 - 1920)

• Civil War changed everything!

• North was already industrializing (bullets, railroads, etc)

• South was ruined! (NEW SOUTH)

Page 2: Big Business- Industrialization

RAILROADS!!!!!

Page 3: Big Business- Industrialization

Before the Civil War….

• …most businesses were sole proprietorships (single owners). Factories need more

start-up capital($$) then a single person business.

The birth of corporations!

What is a corporation?

Page 4: Big Business- Industrialization

What do these terms mean? (homework)

• 1) Monopoly• 2) Conglomerate• 3) Merger• 4) Trust• 5) Holding Company• 6) Capitalism• 7) Communism• 8) Entrepreneurs

•9) Laissez-Faire•10) Social Darwinism•11) Robber Barons•12) Philanthropists•13) Labor Union•14) Collective Bargaining•15 Sherman Antitrust Act

Page 5: Big Business- Industrialization

Entrepreneurs!

• Andrew Carnegie

• John D. Rockefeller

• J.P Morgan

• Henry Ford

Page 6: Big Business- Industrialization

Entrepreneurs!

• Andrew Carnegie Scottish Immigrant who

started working in a factory at age 12.

Invested wisely and entered the steel industry at age 38.

By 1901 sold his steel company for $250,000,000!

Gave hundreds of millions to charities (libraries)

Wrote the book: Gospel of Wealth

Page 7: Big Business- Industrialization

Entrepreneurs!

• John D. Rockefeller Entered the oil-refining

business during the Civil War. Used ruthless means to

eliminate his competition. By 1882 his company,

Standard Oil Company, controlled 90% of all American oil refining.

Created the Standard Oil Trust to control more aspects of oil production.

Gave hundreds of millions to charities.

Rockefeller Center

Page 8: Big Business- Industrialization

Entrepreneurs!

• J.P Morgan Banker who made many

loans to up and coming businesses.

Purchased and reorganized many bankrupt businesses (profit).

Bought Carnegie Steel and reorganized it into the United States Steel Corporation (the world’s largest).

Page 9: Big Business- Industrialization

Entrepreneurs!

• Henry Ford Ford Motor Corp

(cars)

Created the assembly line

Paid laborers a good wage

Page 10: Big Business- Industrialization

Laissez-Faire (hands off)

• The government largely kept “hands off” towards American business. Businesses were

booming! The economy was doing well. Foreign trade reached new heights.

Why did this change around the end of the 1800’s?

Page 11: Big Business- Industrialization

HANDS ON

• Why? 1) The economy took a

turn for the worse

2) Growing criticism that big business made profits on the backs of the American poor/immigrant

3) Growing political pressure for change

Page 12: Big Business- Industrialization

RAILROADS!!! (again)

• In the late 1800’s, railroads developed a number of business practices that hurt farmers and small businesses (pricing). These small business

lobbied to have the government change these policies.

Railroads lobbied to allow them to stay the same

Page 13: Big Business- Industrialization

Please research the following

Supreme Court Cases from this era: (homework)

1) Munn v. Illinois (1877)

2) Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway v. Illinois (1886)

3) United States v. E.C. Knight Company (1895)

4) In re Debs (1895)

Page 14: Big Business- Industrialization

RAILROADS!!! (again)

• List several reasons why railroads were so important to so many people.

• What was it about railroads? How did they effect American society?

• How did railroads effect other businesses? Did railroads create a market for other businesses? Like what?

Page 15: Big Business- Industrialization

Public Pressure: ICC

• Public pressure forced Congress to pass the Interstate Commerce Act Created the ICC

which regulated railroads and ended abuses like rebates.

(precedent)

Page 16: Big Business- Industrialization

Public Pressure: Sherman

• Late 1800’s: some business had no competition (monopoly) Public outcry was

significant Politicians passed the

Sherman Antitrust Act (see vocabulary)

Business combination Illegal: “in restraint of trade or commerce”

US v. E.C. Knight Company

Precedent

Page 17: Big Business- Industrialization

Labor Rising

• Conditions for working people had slowly improved with time However, wages were

still low,unemployment was uncertain and could end suddenly.

Business owners had tremendous power over employees!

Page 18: Big Business- Industrialization

Labor Rising

• Union Tools: Collective Bargaining Strikes Pickets

Page 19: Big Business- Industrialization

Knights of Labor

• Formed in 1869 - Terence Powderly

• Haymaker Riot ended their influence in 1886

• Welcome skilled, unskilled, and African-Americans

• Fought for broad social reforms 8 hour work day end to child labor equal opportunities for

women

Page 20: Big Business- Industrialization

American Federation of Labor

• AFL - Samuel Gompers• 1886 • A collection of craft unions. • Fought for “bread and

butter” issues Higher wages, better

hours, better working conditions

• Extremely powerful with over 1,000,000 members by 1900

Page 21: Big Business- Industrialization

Labor Conflict

• Describe the following events for homework:

Great Railway Strike of 1877

Haymaker Riot Homestead Strike Pullman StrikeGive details, who - what -

when - why - results?

Page 22: Big Business- Industrialization

Great Railway Strike of 1877

Great Railway Strike of 1877

- Railroad workers went on strike after several pay cuts. (several states)

- President Rutherford B. Hayes sent federal troops to end the strike

- Workers got very little

Page 23: Big Business- Industrialization

Haymaker Riot

Haymaker Riot- Labor Rally (organized by

Knights of Labor) that ended in a bomb blast- 7 police died

- Chicago- 1886- Public blamed Knights of

Labor despite the fact they had nothing to do with the violence.

Page 24: Big Business- Industrialization

Homestead Strike

Homestead Strike- 1892 - Union members

went on strike (pay cuts) at the Carnegie steel plant

- Homestead, Pennsylvania

- Violence ensued- 16 people died- fewer

then 25% of the strikers got their jobs back

- Set the steel labor movement back 20 years

Page 25: Big Business- Industrialization

Pullman Strike

Pullman Strike- 1894 - Railroad

workers went on strike in Illinois

- Tied up other rail lines.

- President Grover Cleveland sent in troops to end the strike

- In re Debs