The Rise of an Industrial America

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THE RISE OF AN INDUSTRIAL AMERICA 1870-1900

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The Rise of an Industrial America. 1870-1900. All in One Score . From 1880 – 1900 the US became the world’s leading industrial power Despite experiencing its industrial revolution 30-50 years after the leading powers in Europe By 1900 US manufacturing output exceeded that of:. Combined. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Rise of an Industrial America

Page 1: The Rise of an Industrial America

THE RISE OF AN INDUSTRIAL AMERICA

1870-1900

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All in One Score From 1880 – 1900 the US became the

world’s leading industrial power Despite experiencing its industrial revolution 30-

50 years after the leading powers in Europe

By 1900 US manufacturing output exceeded that of:

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Great Britain France

Germany

Combine

d

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period?

Coal Iron Copper Lead

Timber

Oil

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period (Cont.)?

Abundant Labor Supply = Immigrants

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period (Cont.)?

Advanced Transportation Network – Canals and Railroads

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period (Cont.)?

Huge and Continually

Growing Natural Population

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period (Cont.)?

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period (Cont.)?

• Labor saving technologies and inventions

• Creation of US Patent System

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period (Cont.)?

Business Friendly Government Policies Such As:

Subsidizing TARIFF

Low CorporateTaxes

Laissez-Faire Policies

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Why was the U.S. able to make such an impact in such a short period (Cont.)?

Talented Businessmen

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Talented Businessmen Such As:

Andrew Carnegie

JD Rockefeller Andrew Mellon

JP Morgan

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Andrew CarnegieCarnegie Steel Company sold to JP Morgan in 1901

and it became US Steel.Andrew Carnegie – the philanthropist $$Carnegie introduced the idea of Vertical Integration:

Controlling all steps in the production of your product – from raw materials to consumer distributionStep 1

Step 2

Step 3 Step 4

All Controlled by the company implementing

vertical integration

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Example: Hamburger

Step 1: Owns the farm that

raises the cows for meat & dairy

Step 2: Owns the factories

that process the meat and dairy

Step 3: Owns the distribution

centers that transport

processed meat to markets

Step 4: Owns the fast food

restaurants that sell hamburgers

to consumers

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Steel Industry Contributions

Bessemer ProcessSkyscrapers

Office buildings Desperately needed residential spaces

BridgesSubway systems

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JD RockefellerCreated and ran the country’s first official

monopoly – the Standard Oil Company.Introduced the concept of horizontal

integrationControlling all of the companies that engage in

one specific step in the process of productionVertical integration Step #4: “Owns the

fast food restaurants that sell hamburgers to consumers.”

• Horizontal integration is not concerned with steps 1-3, but wants to control all of the restaurants that sell hamburgers to consumers in Step #4.

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What is the object of the game?

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The object of the game is to become the wealthiest player through buying, renting and

selling of property –

TO ELIMINATE THE COMPETITION

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Example: Hamburger

McDonald’s: Owned & Operated by Company A

Burger King: Owned and Operated by

Company A

Wendy’s: Owned and Operated by Company A

Step #4: Owns the fast food restaurants that sell hamburgers to consumers

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Company A = A TrustWhat is a trust?How do trusts operate?

What tactics are used?Are trusts and monopolies the same thing?Which still exists today –

Horizontal or Vertical Integration?Specialization

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Oil Industry Contributions

The monopoly – purpose to eliminate competition

Technological advancesMany companies follow Rockefeller’s lead

Sugar, Tobacco, and Meat packing industries

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Government’s Response to establishment of trusts:Laissez Faire Capitalism:

Government does not get involved in the “business of business.”

What do aliens have to do with it you ask?

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Government’s Response to creation of trusts:

The idea of government regulation of business was ALIEN to those living in the 19th century. HOWEVER,

Congress did pass the Sherman Anti-Trust Act in 1890. What did it do?:

Prohibited the creation of trusts, BUT too many loopholes existed.

It was similar to:

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Sherman Antitrust Act 1890

Using this cute pup as your guard dog.

Yeah we have a guard dog, but . . . . .

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The Business of Railroads1865: 35,000 miles of railroad existed in the

US1900: 193,000 miles of railroad existed in

the USWhat did the ability to transport goods

nationwide encourage?companies to mass produce people to mass consume.

Building Railroads stimulated other industries.

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Railroad Industry

Federal Land Grants: 80 RR companies received 170 million acres of land – WHY?RR companies ended up with ½ the available

land and after the RR was constructed the RR companies sold the land

Outrageous

Prices

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Railroad Industry

Business friendly government policies and federal land grants both provided TOO MUCH incentive to would be railroad companies. AS A RESULT:

TOO MANY RR lines were laid during the late 1800s1890s were also a time of economic crisis TOO MANY RR lines combined with

economic crisis led many RR companies into bankruptcy.

All these railroads – I just can’t

compete! Now I have no

money!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

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Railroad Industry

Business Friendly

Government Policies

Federal Land

Grants

Too Many RRs

Too Many RRs

1890s Economic Crisis

Bankrupt Railroads

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Railroad IndustryBanks consolidated bankrupt railroads.

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Railroad Industry

American Express

Inc.

• Angry Consumers & Farmers• Government Slow to Respond

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Impacts of Industrialization Emergence of Department Stores & Shopping

Sears, Marshall Fields, Macy’s, Montgomery Ward Emergence of Packaged Goods Increased Standard of Living Created Sharper Class Divisions Helped the Emergence of a Middle Class

Middle Management Created an uneven distribution of wealth

10% of the population controlled 90% of the wealth 90% of the population shared 10% of the wealth

Horatio Alger Myth = “The Self-Made Man” emerges Workers worked an average 10 hour day 6 days a week Immigrants competed for jobs – consequence? Working women – types of work

Textiles, garments. Food processing, secretaries, operators, typists Labor Discontent

Skilled v Unskilled labor Dangerous working conditions Need for labor unions