Industrial America in “The Gilded Age”

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Industrial America in “The Gilded Age”

description

Industrial America in “The Gilded Age”. I. Captains of Industry. Robber Barons Andrew Carnegie, Carnegie Steel Rockefeller & Standard Oil’s Monopoly Social Darwinism, Origin of Species (1859). Andrew Carnegie. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil. II. America’s New Labor Supply. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Industrial America in “The Gilded Age”

Page 1: Industrial America in “The Gilded Age”

Industrial America in “The Gilded Age”

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I. Captains of Industry• Robber Barons

• Andrew Carnegie, Carnegie Steel

• Rockefeller & Standard Oil’s Monopoly

• Social Darwinism, Origin of Species (1859)

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Andrew Carnegie

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Rockefeller’s Standard Oil

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II. America’s New Labor Supply

• New Wave of Immigration, 1880

• Segmented Working Class

• Dangerous Working and Living Conditions

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New Wave of Immigration, 1880 - 1915

• 1870 – 1880 = 2.8 million

• 1880 – 1890 = 5.2 million

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Oyster Canning Factory, Alabama, 1911

Glass Worker, Virginia, 1911

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Globe Cotton Mill, 1909 Pennsylvania Coal Mine, 1911

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Women’s Factory Work

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III. Labor Strikes Back in the Gilded Age

• Trade Unionism• Knights of Labor,

Terence Powderly• Haymarket Square

Riot, Chicago, 1886• American Federation

of Labor, Samuel Gompers

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Knights of Labor

Terence Powderly

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Haymarket Square Riot, 1886

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American Federation of Labor’s Samuel Gompers

• Recruited U.S.-born Skilled workers

• “Pure and Simple” Moderate Unionism

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What was it like to live in a city during the Gilded Age?

Newberry Street, New York City, 1905

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Hester Street, New York City, 1904

New York City, 1899

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IV. Party Politics in the City: Bosses & Machines

• Partisan Voters

• City “Machines” and “Bosses”

• New York’s Tammany Hall & Boss Tweed

Boss Tweed

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Puck Magazine, 1894

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V. Poverty in the City• Ellis Island

• Tenement Housing

• Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives (1890)

• Forms of Leisure

Times Square, New York, 1904

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Ellis Island

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Ellis Island Medical Exam, 1913

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Angel Island Immigration Station

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Tenement Housing, New York City

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Tenement Apartment, New York, 1890s New York, 1910

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Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives

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Forms of Leisure: Coney Island, Brooklyn

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VI. Middle Class Society & Culture

• Victorian Morality

• Cult of Domesticity

• Department Stores, “Palaces of Consumption”

Tea room inside The Emporium in San Francisco, 1904

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Catherine Beecher’s The American Woman’s Home (1869)

Behaviors to avoid:

Reaching over another person’s plate; standing up to reach distant articles instead of asking to have those passed; using the table-cloth instead of napkins; eating fast and in a noisy manner; putting large pieces in the mouth; and picking the teeth at the table.

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Macy’s, New York,1900

Dome of Marshall Fields, Chicago

Window Shopping outside Macy’s