changing american society 1865-1914

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CHANGING AMERICAN SOCIETY 1865-1914

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CHANGING AMERICAN SOCIETY 1865-1914. Thematic History of the Late 19 th Century. INDUSTRIALISM Producing goods by machines rather than by hand. IMMIGRATION People moving into a country from another country. URBANIZATION The growth of cities. INDUSTRIALISM - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

CHANGING

AMERICAN

SOCIETY1865-1914

Page 2: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

Thematic History of the Late 19th Century

INDUSTRIALISMProducing goods by machines rather than by

hand

IMMIGRATIONPeople moving into a country from another

country

URBANIZATIONThe growth of cities

Page 3: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

INDUSTRIALISMProducing goods by machines rather than by

hand

I. AMERICA’S RESOURCES

A.Natural Resources:

B.Human Resources:gold, silver, water, timber, coal, iron ore

work ethic, increasing population, entrepreneurship

Page 4: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

C.Technology

D.TransportationScience applied to business

Roads, railroads, steamboats, canals

Page 5: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

You may want to take some notes from this video clip.

Page 6: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

II. ORGANIZING AMERICA’S INDUSTRY

A.Types of Businesses

1. Sole proprietorship: owned by one person

Small scale Individual control Owner bears

responsibility and liabilityFor example….

Page 7: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

2. Partnership: owned by two or more people

Shared responsibility Increased resources Potential for

disagreements

For example….

Page 8: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

3. Corporation: owned by shareholders who purchase stock in the company

Limited losses, limited gains

Shareholders have limited liability

Size, if too large, makes running a corporation difficult

For example….

Page 9: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

How do shareholders

profit from ownership in

a corporation?

DIVIDENDA portion of earnings paid to a stock holder

Ralph owns 100 shares of Ford. If the board of directors

authorizes a dividend payment of $.30 per share, how much

will Ralph receive?

CAPITAL GAIN

Sale of stock at a higher price than

purchased

Ralph bought his shares at $10 per share; he sells them at $12 per share. How much does he

gain?

Page 10: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

B. Financing industry

1. Capital: money used to make more money; investment

2. Bank loans

3. Bonds: loans from the public, repaid with interest

Stock – investing by owningBond – investing by loaning

Page 11: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

C.Growing industry1. Trust: a combination of several

companies into a corporation; merger

2. Monopoly: exclusive control of the manufacture and distribution of a productVERTICAL

MONOPOLYControl of entire

manufacturing process, from start to finish

HORIZONTAL MONOPOLY

Control of a key step in the manufacturing

process

Page 12: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

A Gallery of American IndustrialistsCornelius Vanderbilt

1794-1877- shipping and transportation -

Philip Armour1832-1901

- grain and meatpacking -

Page 13: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

Andrew Carnegie1835-1919- steel -

J. Pierpont Morgan1837-1913- finance -

Page 14: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

John D. Rockefeller1839-1937

- oil -Charles Pillsbury

1842-1899- flour and milling -

Page 15: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914
Page 16: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

III.AMERICA’S RESPONSE TO INDUSTRIALISM

A.Changing American life1. Increased trade, prosperity

2. Changed standard of living+ leisure time, professional sports

modernization- pollution, crime, overcrowding

3. Changing social structure Women working outside the home Child labor Greater distinction between the “haves”

and “have-nots”

Page 17: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

The “Haves”

Biltmore Estate

The “Have-nots”

Lyndhurst

Page 18: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

B. An Emphasis on Capitalism1. Capitalism: economic system

based on free enterprise, private property and individual investment

a. Laws of supply and demandb. Laissez-faire: government has a

“hands-off” policy concerning business

2. Social Darwinism: the theory of evolution (biological) applied to society (cultural-economic); the stronger, more successful businesses will survive—the weaker will not

Page 19: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

C.Government Regulation of Business

1. Purpose: to protect the consumer and to encourage competition

2. Examples:

a. Interstate Commerce Act (1887) regulated railroad rates

b. Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890) prohibited large corporations from restricting trade or commerce

Page 20: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

D.Rise of Labor Unions

1. Purpose: to protect the worker from abuses by the management and to negotiate for better benefits

Salary, hours, working conditions, safety

2. Examples:

a. Knights of Labor (founded by Uriah Stevens): the first union; tried to organize all workers into a brotherhood

Page 21: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914
Page 22: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

b. American Federation of Labor (Samuel Gompers) joined workers of local craft unions with people of the same skill; local unions will associate with state and national unions

OVTA

Page 23: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

3. Actions of unions

a. Collective bargaining: the right of the union to represent workers in negotiations

b. Strike: refusal to work in order to have demand met

c. Picket: demonstration to publicize disagreements between employer and employee

Page 24: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914
Page 25: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

d. Injunction: a court order to return to work

E. Increase in Wealth

1. Materialism: placing excessive emphasis on wealth or material possessions

2. Philanthropy: charitable giving by the wealthy

Page 26: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914
Page 27: CHANGING  AMERICAN  SOCIETY 1865-1914

Erie Canal: http://www.lakelandschools.org/lt/NewYorkVM/canalmap.gif

Cornelius Vanderbilt: http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/3/35/225px-Vanderbilt.jpg

Philip Armor: http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/5/50/180px-Philip_D_Armour_in_the_1880s.jpg

J. Pierpont Morgan: http://teachpol.tcnj.edu/amer_pol_hist/fi/00000107.jpg

Andrew Carnegie: http://www.creativeenergy.org/images/andrew_carnegie.jpg

John Rockefeller: http://shots.oxo.li/hot/OXO-World/John_D_Rockefeller.jpg

Charles Pillsbury: http://www.kipnotes.com/pillsbury.jpg

“After the feast”: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/historyofus/teachers/pdfs/segment9-4.pdf

Founders of the Knights of Labor: http://6hourday.org/images/FoundersKoL1886.jpg

Knights of Labor symbol: http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/a/a7/KOLlarge.jpeg

Uriah Stevens: http://www.freemasonry.bcy.ca/biography/images/stevens_u.jpg

Samuel Gompers: http://content.answers.com/main/content/img/BritannicaConcise/images/24735.jpg

IBEW: http://www.ibew683.org/ibew683.jpg

Teamsters: http://www.focusink.com/images/teamsters_official_logo.gif

PSEA: http://cattyea.org/images/psea2.png

Strike: http://weblogs.newsday.com/entertainment/tv/blog/strike.jpg

American Workers’ Union Strike: http://www3.niu.edu/~td0raf1/radicalunionism/548_214_Hooverville_street_protest_zm.jpg

Writers’ Strike: http://flowtv.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/wga9.jpg

Sit down strike 1937: http://info.detnews.com/dn/history/labor/images/flint1.gif

Lyndhurst: http://www.lyndhurst.org/images/LyndhurstFront.jpg

Biltmore: http://www.biltmore.com/images/content/biltmore_img_media.jpg