Gilded Age
A name for the late 1800s, coined by Mark Twain to describe the tremendous
increase in wealth caused by the industrial age and the ostentatious lifestyles
it allowed the very rich. The great industrial success of the U.S. and the
fabulous lifestyles of the wealthy hid the many social problems of the time,
including a high poverty rate, a high crime rate, and corruption in the
government.
Characteristics of Capitalism
Factories are privately owned, but subject to government regulation.
Employers furnish raw materials and machinery; workers provide the labor.
The owners get profits and the workers get wages.
Advantages & Disadvantages of Corporations
Advantages to big business:
• Build modern and efficient plants and factories.
•Acquire up-to-date and specialized machinery. • Maintains a large distribution market for its products.
• Increased sales through national advertising.
Disadvantages to big businesses:
• Tends to be Monopolistic- destroys smaller independent
competition.
• Enormous wealth and power is concentrated into the hands
of a few.
The game Monopoly is based on the concept of monopolizing
the board and getting rid of your competition as practiced by
many industrial giants during the Gilded Age.
Socialism and Communism
Socialism is the social theory advocating community control of the means of
production.
Communism is the social system based on collective ownership of all
productive property.
Class System
People having the same social, economic, or educational status
Robber Barons
American capitalists that became wealthy through exploitation (as of
natural resources, governmental influence, or low wage scales).
Social Darwinism
Applied Darwin's theory of natural selection and "survival of the fittest" to
human society, the poor are poor because they are not as fit to survive. Used
as an argument against social reforms to help the poor.
Years later, Adolph Hitler would
subscribe to social Darwinism as
a basis for Nazi racism.
Charles Darwin: His evolution theory was very controversial in the
late 1800s and caused many heated debates. Many big business
leaders subscribed to this belief as to why they were justified in
monopolizing business and controlled their wealthy status in society.
Market Economy
An economy in which decisions regarding investment, production and
distribution are based on supply and demand.
The prices of goods and services are determined in a free price system.
Mixed Economy
A mixed economy is that the means of production are mainly under private
ownership and that profit-seeking enterprises and the accumulation of capital
remain the fundamental driving force behind economic activity.
However, the government would wield considerable indirect influence over
the economy through fiscal and monetary policies designed to counteract
economic downturns, financial crises, and unemployment.
Planned Economy
An economic system in which the government controls and regulates
production, distribution, prices, etc.
Charles Darwin & the Origin of Species
Presented the theory of evolution, which proposed that creation was an
ongoing process in which mutation and natural selection constantly give rise
to new species.
Sparked a long-running religious debate over the issue of creation.
Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919)
Known as the “Steel King,” dominated the steel industry.
Carnegie Steel Company of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Andrew Carnegie: One of the wealthiest men in
the world was once denied boarding of a
London subway because he never carried
money with him.
Today’s Pittsburgh
Steelers adopted
Carnegie’s Steel
Company’s logo as their
own in honor of
Carnegie.
Steel Industry
The railroads were the biggest customers because of the thousands of miles
of steel track needed.
Bessemer Process
A process for removing air pockets from iron, and thus allowed steel to be
made more affordable, leading to faster expansion of railroads construction
of skyscrapers, and advances in shipbuilding and construction.
Gospel of Wealth
Andrew Carnegie was a philanthropist who donated large sums of money for
public works. His book argued that the wealthy have an obligation to give
something back to society.
Gustavus Swift
In the 1800s he enlarged fresh meat markets through branch slaughterhouses
and refrigeration. He monopolized the meat industry.
Gustavus Swift
Phillip Armour (1832-1901)
Pioneered the shipping of hogs to Chicago for slaughter, canning, and
exporting of meat.
Cornelius Vanderbilt
In 1869, Vanderbilt extended his New York Central railroad to reach Chicago
without having to transfer trains multiple times.
This greatly helped the railroad industry by making travel faster and much
easier for passengers.
Rebates
Developed in the 1880s, a practice by which railroads would give money
back to its favored customers, rather than charging them lower prices, so
that it could appear to be charging a flat rate for everyone.
Trust
A business arrangement under which a number of companies unite into one
system, in effect destroying competition and creating a monopoly.
Pierpont Morgan
Financier who arranged the merger which created the U.S. Steel Corporation,
the world's first billion dollar corporation.
Everyone involved in the merger became rich. (Vertical consolidation).
John D. Rockefeller
New York industrialist; made hundreds of millions of dollars in the 19th
century with Standard Oil Company.
Rockefeller came to own more than 90% of America’s oil industry.
Early oil drill in Titusville, Pennsylvania.
In May 1911, the U.S.
Supreme Court ordered that
John D. Rockefeller’s
Standard Oil be dismembered.
Ironically, as the company was
split into many separate pieces
and the pieces sold,
Rockefeller made a huge
profit on the sales.
Standard Oil
An oil company founded by John D. Rockefeller that monopolized the oil
industry as it served as the nation's first trust.
Vertical Integration
A business strategy in which one corporation owns not only the company
that produces the finished product, but also the companies that provide the
materials necessary for production.
Horizontal Integration
Buy out your competition until you have control of a single area of industry.
Holding Companies
A company that buys controlling amounts of stock in related companies, thus
becoming the majority shareholder, and holding considerable say over each
company's business operations.
Sherman Antitrust Act (1890)
A federal law that committed the American government to opposing
monopolies, it prohibits contracts, combinations and conspiracies in
restraint of trade.
Samuel Morse and the Telegraph
Samuel Morse developed the telegraph which used lightning wires and the
Morse code, an electronic alphabet that could carry messages.
A telegraph line was constructed between Baltimore and Washington, D.C.
and the first message sent on May 24, 1844 was “What Hath God Wrought”
Alexander Graham Bell
Alexander Graham Bell is most well known for inventing the telephone. He came to
the U.S as a teacher of the deaf, and conceived the idea of "electronic speech" while
visiting his hearing-impaired mother in Canada. This led him to invent the
microphone and later the "electrical speech machine“ his name for the first telephone.
When commercial telephone service was introduced between New York
and London in 1927, the first three minutes of a call cost $75.00
Thomas Edison
US inventor who invented the phonograph, the motion picture camera, the
electric light bulb, and came up with the innovative idea of central power
companies that provided electrical power to large numbers of customers.
Electric Light Bulb
Invention by Thomas Edison that greatly transformed how people lived and worked.
Light bulbs provided much more light than oil lamps and meant that people could
work and do more after dark factories and businesses could stay open longer and
produce more.
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