Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

110
Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

description

Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth. Industry Boom. the nation expanded west and found deposits of coal, iron, and copper, Government created policies that favored industrial growth Including tariffs Tax on imports. Steel and Oil. Building blocks of modern United States. Inventions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Page 1: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Chapter 18Industry and

Urban Growth

Page 2: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 3: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 4: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 5: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Industry Boom

• the nation expanded west and found deposits of coal, iron, and copper,

• Government created policies that favored industrial growth– Including tariffs

– Tax on imports

Page 6: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 7: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Steel and Oil

• Building blocks of modern United States

Page 8: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Inventions

• In the late 1800s Americans started to create many new inventions– In 1897 the government issued more patents than

in the ten years before the Civil War• America became known as the land of

Invention

Page 9: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Inventions

• Thomas Edison- invented the light bulb, phonograph, motion picture camera, and hundreds of other devices

• In 1882, Edison opened the nation’s first electrical power plant in New York City– Helped to bring in the age of electricity

motion pict ure.3gp

Motion Picture Sneeze.3gp

Page 10: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 11: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Inventions

• Communications– In 1876 Alexander Graham Bell built a device that

carried the human voice (telephone)• By 1885 more than 300,00 phones had been sold

– Succeeded in 1876 when he sent the first telephone message to his assistant “Mr. Watson, come here. I want you.”

Page 12: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 13: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Inventions

• Other inventions include the type writer, shoe making machine, light weight camera, flash for the camera

Page 14: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 15: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Inventions

• In 1900 only 8,000 Americans owned automobiles

• Henry Ford perfected a system that made the automobile available to millions, known as the assembly line– By 1917 more than 4.5 million Americans owned

cars

Page 16: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 17: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 18: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 19: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 20: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 21: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 22: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Inventions

• In 1903 Wilbur and Orville Wright were the first people ever to fly– The first flight lasted 12 seconds and flew 120 feet

Page 23: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 24: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

New Ways of Doing Business

• Business expansion was led by bold entrepreneurs

• Businesses became corporations– Corporations limited the risk of investors

Page 25: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

New Ways of Doing Business

• Banks lent huge amounts of money to corporations, which led to industries growing faster

Page 26: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Growth of Big Business

• Government had a laissez-faire approach to business in the late 1800s

• They allowed for the rapid growth of big business and for the creation of monopolies

Page 27: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Growth of Big Business

• Andrew Carnegie– Managed to gain control of the steel industry– Believed that the rich had a duty to improve

society (Gospel of Wealth)

Page 28: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Growth of Big Business

• John D. Rockefeller– Started an oil refinery at the age of 23– Used his profits to buy other oil companies and

managed to take control of the oil industry

Page 29: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Working Conditions

• Industries attracted millions of new workers• Most were immigrants or native born whites

Page 30: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Working Conditions

• Women worked and outnumbered men in some industries, such as textile mills, tobacco factories, and the garment sweatshops of New York

• Children worked in bottle factories, textile mills, tobacco factories, coal mines, and sweatshops– Most child laborers could not go to school, and

had little chance of improving their lives

Page 31: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Working Conditions

• New York City, March 25, 1911 fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory.– Hundreds of workers raced to the exits only to find

the exits were locked– Nearly 150 people died as a result of the fire

Page 32: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 33: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 34: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Working Conditions

• Factory work was dangerous– Workers would breathe in fibers or dust while

working at textile mills or mines and would come down with lung diseases

– Steelworkers risked death and burns from the molten metal

• Social Darwinists believed that harsh conditions were necessary to cut costs, increase production, and ensure survival of the business

Page 35: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Lewis Hine

• was an American sociologist and photographer. Hine used his camera as a tool for social reform. His photographs were instrumental in changing the child labor laws in the United States

Page 36: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 37: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 38: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 39: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 41: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 42: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 43: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 44: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 45: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Workers Organize

• Workers attempted to form unions in order to secure safer working conditions, higher wages, and shorter hours

Page 46: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Workers Organize

• Knights of Labor-1869– One of the earliest and most powerful unions in

the United States– Success were undercut by a series of violent labor

disputes• Haymarket Square (May 4, 1886)

Page 47: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 49: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Workers Organize

• 1886 Samuel Gompers formed a new union called the American Federation of Labor (AFL)– By 1904 the AFL had over one million members

Page 50: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Workers Organize

• The AFL believed in using collective bargaining and strikes but only if all else failed

• AFL only allowed skilled workers and banned African Americans, immigrants, and unskilled workers

Page 51: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Workers Organize

• Bitter Strikes– In 1893 the nation was hit by a severe economic

depression• Businesses cut production, fired workers, and cut

wages

Page 52: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Workers Organize

• Pullman Strike– Workers’ pay was cut by 25%

• Angry workers walked out – Railroad workers also walked out in support– Rail lines were shut down from coast to coast– President Grover Cleveland sent in federal troops

to end the strike

Page 53: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Workers Organize

• Army fired into the crowds killing two protesters

• Most Americans sided with owners when workers would strike

Page 54: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 55: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Rapid Growth of Cities

• New technology helped cities grow– Elevated trains, electric streetcar, subways

• Public transportation allowed for the creation of the suburbs (people no longer had to live in the city in order to work in the city)– Creation of steel bridges (Brooklyn Bridge) helped

to create suburbs

Page 56: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 57: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 58: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 59: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 60: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Rapid Growth of Cities

• Cities also began to expand upward with skyscrapers

Page 62: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 63: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 64: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 65: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Problems of Urban Life

• People lived in crowded tenements– Buildings had no windows, heat, or indoor

plumbing– 10 people might live in a single room– Street were littered with garbage• Outbreaks of diseases were common• in one Chicago tenement half of all babies died before

age of one

Page 66: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 67: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 68: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 69: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 70: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

• Jacob Riis helped to bring attention to the horrible living conditions and wrote a book entitled How the Other Half Lives

Page 71: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 72: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 73: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 74: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 75: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 76: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Problems of Urban Life

• In 1880s cities began to improve urban life– Installed streetlights, set up fire, sanitation, and

police departments• social reformers worked to help the poor– Jane Addams, opened a settlement house in the

slums of Chicago

Page 77: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 78: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Colossus Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,

With conquering limbs astride from land to land;Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand

A mighty woman with a torch, whose flameIs the imprisoned lightning, and her nameMother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand

Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command

The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame."Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries she

With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,

The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,

I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

Page 79: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

• Between 1865 and 1915 about 25 million immigrants entered the United States – (that is more than the population of the entire

country in 1850)

Page 80: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

Why were there so many immigrants coming to the United States?

Page 81: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

• countries were becoming over populated • immigrants wanted religious freedom• were trying to escape political persecution

Page 82: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

Why the United States?

Page 83: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

• The U.S. was seen as a land of opportunity where they could build a better life– U.S. had jobs, promise of freedom, a tradition of

democracy and liberty

Page 84: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 85: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

• In early 1800s most immigrants were Protestant and from northern and western Europe (most spoke English)

• In the late 1800s “new immigrants” began to arrive from Italy, Poland Russia, and Greece– Most were Catholic or Jewish and most did not

speak English

Page 86: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

• Coming to America– Immigrants came by boat and were crammed

below decks in steerage– Most people coming from Europe landed in New

York and after 1892 went through Ellis Island

Page 87: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 88: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 89: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 90: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

• About 2/3 of immigrants settled in cities and near people from the same country

Page 91: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

The New Immigrants

• New immigrants worked hard to assimilate– It was easier for children to assimilate

• Goal of many immigrants was to educate their children so they would be better off

Page 92: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Nativism

• Increased immigration led to a wave of nativism– People that sought to preserve the U.S. for native-

born American citizens• Nativists argued that the new immigrants

would not assimilate

Page 93: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Educating Americans

• Before 1870, fewer than half of American children went to school

• United States realized the need for an educated workforce

• States passed compulsory education laws

Page 94: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 95: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 96: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Educating Americans

• The School Day– Typical school day lasted from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00

p.m. – Pupils learned the three r’s “reading, ‘riting, and

‘rithmetic

Page 97: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Educating Americans

• As more Americans began to read, more books and magazines became available– Most people read low-priced paperbacks that told

about thrilling adventures (“Wild West” or “rags-to-riches”)

Page 98: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 99: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

New American Writers

• Some writers were realists– Realists described the hardships of most

immigrants living in the slums

Page 100: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

– Jack London• The Call of the Wild• White Fang

Page 101: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

• Kate Chopin– The Awakening

Page 102: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

• Mark Twain– Huckleberry Finn

Page 103: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Newspaper Boom

• The amount of newspapers in the united states grew very quickly in the late 1800s– The spread of education was one reason for the

growth of the newspaper industry– The newspaper boom was linked to urbanization

Page 104: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Newspaper Boom

• Joseph Pulitzer created the first modern newspaper, New York World

Page 105: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Newspaper Boom

• Pulitzer added features to the newspaper, like The Yellow Kid

Page 106: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 107: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth

Newspaper Boom

• New York World became known for its sensational headlines that told of crime and scandal.– This style of writing became known as yellow

journalism

Page 108: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 109: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth
Page 110: Chapter 18 Industry and Urban Growth