US History Chapter 24 Notes

  • Industry Comes of Age (1865-1900)
  • Rather than become politicians, intelligent people were running corporations.
  • So political force declined while the economy became strong.
  • The US became a global industrial power.
  • The Iron Colt Becomes and Iron Horse
  • Industry and corporations began to have a much stronger effect on the government.
  • Amount of railroad track more than quintupled during this time period, to almost 200,000 miles.
  • A lot of this was in the western part of the country.
  • Transcontinental Railroads:
  • A problem with building them, since they were dependent on large cities nearby, and those large cities were dependent on them. For that reason, private citizens wouldn’t fund them.
  • So in order to make one, Congress had to loan money to companies to build them.
  • They started doing this for two companies in 1862. They also loaned land.
  • Congress would give them vast areas of land in which to build- they would pick alternate square-mile chunks of land to build on.
  • But they wouldn’t let anyone settle anywhere until they’d chosen.
  • ...Until Grover Cleveland stopped this in 1887.
  • In exchange for these grants, the government got help for the postal service and military.
  • Granting land was preferred over granting money because no new taxes had to be made.
  • Later, the land would be sold off by the railroad companies.
  • Important cities in the west were those that had a railroad nearby.
  • So towns really wanted railroads, and would bribe the builders.
  • Spanning the Continent with Rails
  • There had been arguments in the 1850s about which half would get the transcontinental railroad.
  • Then, the South seceded.
  • 1862- Congress started the railroad in order to support the Union and secure CA.
  • They called this the Union Pacific Railroad- from Omaha, NB westward.
  • The company building it was given lots of land and loans depending on terrain difficulty.
  • 1865- Railroad creation sped up, and Crédit Mobilier Construction Company did some underhanded practices, and was purposely ignored by bribed congressmen.
  • Many railroad workers were Irishmen, who also fought off Native Americans as they attacked.
  • So there were many, many deaths.
  • In CA, they built the Central Pacific Railroad from Sacramento through NV.
  • The “Big Four”, successful people with political connections, funded the project.
  • They made a lot of money, but not illegitimately.
  • They had the same subsidies, and employed a lot of Chinese-American workers.
  • They couldn’t build as fast because of the terrain (Sierra Nevada). Many died.
  • 1869- The two railroad lines met in Ogden, UT. The UPR had built much more than the CPR.
  • This railroad allowed the west to thrive, and also helped trade with Asia.
  • Binding the Country with Railroad Ties
  • By 1900, there were another four transcontinental railroads.
  • But those ones didn’t get loans of money from the government, only land grants.
  • 1883- Northern Pacific Railroad finished (Lake Superior to Puget Sound).
  • 1884- Atchinson, Topeka, and Santa Fe finished.
  • 1884- Southern Pacific Railroad finished (New Orleans to San Francisco).
  • 1893- Great Northern Railroad finished (Duluth to Seattle).
  • This was made by James J. Hill (Canadian-American). He was excellent.
  • Railroad organizations had a lot of problems with bankruptcy and building unused, unwanted tracks.
  • Railroad Consolidation and Mechanization
  • In order for the western railroads to work, the eastern ones had to work too, especially NY Central.
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt led this expansion of NY Central. He made a fortune.
  • Vanderbilt also helped the railroads by introducing the stronger steel rail (instead of iron).
  • This was much safer and allowed for transport of heavier goods.
  • Also, railroad track widths were standardized, so people didn’t always have to change trains.
  • 1870s- Westinghouse air brake adopted, making trains safer.
  • Pullman Palace Cars were made- this was like first-class. (But with kerosene lamps. Bad idea.)
  • There were many, many disasters, and vast numbers of people died in train accidents.
  • Revolution by Railways
  • Railroads allowed for the unification of the country and a stronger economy.
  • Railroads shipped raw materials and manufactured goods, leading to much investment.
  • Railroads also allowed for more industrialization because of fast transportation.
  • In the west, there was more mining and agriculture, since products could be transported.
  • Railroads brought food to cities, allowing for cities to expand greatly.
  • Railroads encouraged immigration.
  • The western plains were filled with cornfields and cattle fields (since buffalo were almost gone).
  • MI, WI, and MN forests were chopped down to build houses.
  • Railroads builders split the country into four time zones (before, everyone had gone by the sun).
  • New aristocrats were those who had made a fortune in building railroads.
  • Wrongdoing in Railroading
  • The Crédit Mobilier Company wasn’t the only one to engage in underhanded practices.
  • Jay Gould was a very notorious railroad financier who made illegitimate money through speculation.
  • The corrupt financiers would do “stock watering” very often. They would claim their railroads were much better than they actually would, and then would earn much more money from stocks.
  • This led to railroad managers have to charge the public more.
  • The public suffered a lot at the hands of corrupt financiers, who repeatedly did things to damage the public, and also bribed judges, congressmen, lobbyists, etc.
  • They would put their supporters into office and wouldn’t charge those politicians to ride.
  • Financiers had more power over the public than the government, especially when they started forming alliances and partnerships.
  • This began with the “pool”, which split up the business in an area. Profits were shared.
  • Financiers would also make deals with shippers of goods.
  • Government Bridles the Iron Horse
  • Americans, especially poor farmers in the Midwest, were not thrilled with the railroad aristocracy.
  • However, they also loved capitalism, so they weren’t quick to change their ways.
  • 1870s- There was a depression, and farmers finally decided to strike back.
  • Some of them formed the “Grange”, and pressured lawmakers in the Midwest into regulation of monopolies.
  • 1886- Supreme Court, in Wabash case, said that individual states couldn’t regulate interstate commerce, only intrastate commerce. Interstate regulation was left to the federal gov’t.
  • Grover Cleveland, president at the time, didn’t want to regulate anything.
  • 1887- Congress didn’t care what GC wanted. They made the Interstate Commerce Act.
  • This stopped rebates and pools. Railroads had to openly declare rates for riding.
  • Shippers couldn’t be discriminated against.
  • No charging more for a short haul than a long one.
  • Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) was made to enforce this.
  • The ICC didn’t really oversee the railroads as strongly as the public had wanted.
  • But it was a place for railroad companies to resolve disputes without corruption.
  • The ICA was the first big attempt by Washington to regulate business for the people’s sake.
  • Later, the government would make many more regulatory agencies.
  • Miracles of Mechanization
  • 1860-1894- US went from fourth greatest manufacturing nation to first.
  • There was much more money available to fund projects. Millionaires became more common.
  • The Civil War and profiteering allowed for people to become rich.
  • The US started using natural resources such as coal, oil, and iron.
  • 1890s- Mesabi Range of Minnesota-Lake Superior region being used for iron.
  • Steel became very important, and cheap immigrant labor allowed for more steel production.
  • As usual, conditions were terrible and many immigrants died.
  • Many people also got new technologies patented; Eli Whitney’s idea of mass production was used.
  • Cash register, typewriting, refrigerator car, electric railway, etc.
  • 1876- Alexander Graham Bell makes the telephone. It becomes very important to everyday life.
  • Many women start working in the switchboards as operators.
  • Thomas Alva Edison also invented many things during this time: the phonograph, mimeograph, Dictaphone, and moving picture.
  • 1879- He perfected the light bulb, which led to everyone sleeping fewer hours.
  • The Trust Titan Emerges
  • Competition was still central to the industrial leaders of the time.
  • Leaders were Andrew Carnegie (steel), John Rockefeller (oil), and J. Pierpont Morgan (bank).
  • Carnegie made an integrated his manufacture of steel- all steps of production were done by his employees- this was called “vertical integration”.
  • This helped control quality, eliminate fees, and make things more reliable.
  • Rockefeller did “horizontal integration”, where he would make alliances with competitors so that he could get a monopoly on the market.
  • He made the Standard Oil Company. Then, small oil companies would give stock to his company, and then he would make all their operations part of his operation.
  • This was a “trust”. Rockefeller used it to take over petroleum market.
  • 1890s- Morgan was met with many bankrupt businessmen during the depression.
  • So he consolidated their enterprises and put his own men into boards of directors.
  • This was “interlocking directorates”.
  • The Supremacy of Steel
  • Steel was used to make everything- buildings, railroads, etc.
  • There was a new focus on capital goods instead of consumer goods (clothes, etc.)
  • But before Vanderbilt started using it in NY, steel was very rare and expensive.
  • By 1890, US made over 1/3 of the world’s steel.
  • 1850s- Bessemer process was created for making steel much more cheaply.
  • William Kelly (American) had developed it first though
  • US had an advantage in steel production because of coal, iron, and cheap labor.
  • Carnegie and Other Sultans of Steel
  • Carnegie was a Scottish immigrant who came to US poor and quickly became rich.
  • He started a steel business in Pittsburgh and created a very strong business.
  • But he did NOT like monopolies, only partnerships.
  • 1900- Carnegie was making ¼ of US Bessemer steel and getting rich. No income tax!
  • J. Pierpont Morgan was a banker who had financed railroad and insurance schemes.
  • He was supposedly very trustworthy.
  • 1900- Carnegie wanted to sell his enterprise. Morgan was financing steel pipe tubing.
  • Carnegie threatened to ruin Morgan by entering that business.
  • So Morgan bought his enterprise for $400 million. Then Carnegie became a philanthropist.
  • 1901- Morgan reorganized and expanded Carnegie’s business and made it the US Steel Corporation.
  • It was worth more than a billion dollars- the first of its kind.
  • Rockefeller Grows an American Beauty Rose
  • There had been a bit of oil found earlier which was used for medicines and such.
  • 1859- “Drake’s Folly”, a well in PA, begins producing oil.
  • This became an extremely valuable asset- more valuable than the gold from before.
  • The oil industry began by producing kerosene, which was used in lamps.
  • It became an important export, and whaling (for whale oil) declined.
  • But...kerosene then was quickly replaced by electricity and the light bulb.
  • Then, the automobile was developed. It was better than steam and electricity, and by 1900 it was being used instead of those technologies. So oil was still useful.
  • John D. Rockefeller became a rich businessman with an interest in oil.
  • 1870- He made the Standard Oil Company of OH (The trust was made in 1882).
  • His company did not follow ethical guidelines, and he tried to destroy all competition.
  • 1887- He controlled nearly all the US oil refineries.
  • JDR valued combination of companies and monopolies with no competition.
  • Though this caused a lot of problems, he did make a good, cheap product.
  • Other trusts started too- sugar, tobacco, leather, harvester, and the meat industry.
  • The new rich business class replaced the old aristocracy.
  • The former aristocracy was mostly full of antitrust people, then.
  • The Gospel of Wealth
  • Some millionaires credited god and religious piety for their wealth.
  • Carnegie said moral responsibility had to come with wealth.
  • Others followed Social Darwinism, a survival-of-the-fittest philosophy of economics.
  • A lot of wealthy people at that time were self-made, and they hated the poor.
  • Plutocrats were greatly helped by the Wabash case- no states could regulate interstate trade.
  • Plutocrats used the 14th amendment (rights for former slaves) to their advantage by saying that a corporation was a person and that it had rights to due process, etc.
  • In fact, corporate lawyers may have stealthily made the amendment purposely vague.
  • Plutocrats would try to incorporate in states with the fewest restrictions, like NJ.
  • Government Tackles the Trust Evil
  • The public started trying to fight back against the plutocrats, first using state legislatures.
  • That failed, so they went to Congress.
  • Congress made Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890.
  • This forbade combinations to lower the amount of trade (trusts).
  • But this stopped good as well as bad trusts.
  • The law wasn’t really enforced well, and it had too many loopholes.
  • It was used to stop labor unions that lowered trade.
  • Lots of new trusts were still made during this time.
  • No well-enforced laws were made until 1914 to deal with trusts.
  • The South in the Age of Industry
  • The south still didn’t make many manufactured goods. Now they had sharecroppers and tenants.
  • 1880s- A machine was made for manufacturing cigarettes (instead of hand-rolling them).
  • 1890- James Buchanan Duke had made a business in this, and then absorbed the competitors to make the American Tobacco Company.
  • Some people wished the south would become industrialized, but it didn’t happen.
  • Henry W. Grady (Atlanta Constitution (newspaper) editor) supported this.
  • But the south was prevented from industrialization by northern railroad creators who made different rate setting systems.
  • The railroads also charged more for manufacturing goods to go north, and less for raw crops to go north than south.
  • In Birmingham, AL, there was coal and iron ore, but the steel industry never developed there because of the interference of Pittsburgh manufacturers.
  • 1880- Northerners built cotton mills in the south for cheap labor in the textile industry.
  • Textile industry did become important in the south, but the workers were horrible treated and poorly paid. Many “owed their souls to the company store”.
  • The Impact of the New Industrial Revolution on America
  • Post-War, the economy and quality of life increased dramatically.
  • Cities expanded and multiplied, and immigrants constantly came to work in them.
  • Jefferson had wanted free enterprise with no restrictions, but now that small farms were replaced with industry, that wouldn’t work anymore.
  • In addition to tariffs, the federal government had to keep corporations in check.
  • Industries had strict discipline, in contrast to more casual farming lifestyles.
  • This came as a surprise to many new factory workers.
  • Women were the most affected by the rise of industry.
  • The typewriter (stenographers) and the switchboard (telephone operators) caused this.
  • The “Gibson Girl” image of a strong young woman became very popular (1899).
  • They married later and had fewer children.
  • Most of them worked because they needed the money. Working conditions were bad and they earned less than men.
  • There were stronger class divisions, leading to more class warfare.
  • Warfare was based on jealousy or on socialist ideas of some immigrants.
  • 1900- 1/10 of people owned 9/10 of wealth in US.
  • 1860-1900- US went from ½ of workers being wage workers to 2/3 being wage workers.
  • Wages were getting higher, but they were also subject to economic strains and employers.
  • People were also very afraid of unemployment.
  • Reformers wanted job security and unemployment provisions.
  • Industry filled the US markets with products, so they had to sell kerosene and such abroad.
  • In Unions There Is Strength
  • Wage workers faced poor conditions and the employers no longer cared about them on an individual basis. Creativity and individuality was discouraged.
  • Workers were replaced with machines (but this didn’t cause more unemployment long term).
  • In the short term though, many people lost jobs.
  • Wages didn’t have to be high since there were always more unemployed people to work.
  • Workers didn’t really have a chance standing up to corporations alone.
  • The corporations had bought out the press, the legislators, etc.
  • Corporations could also get the federal courts to get injunctions to stop strikes.
  • Then, if the strike continued, troops could be brought in.
  • Corporations also locked out strikers until they were starving.
  • Corporations made them sign “ironclad oaths” and “yellow-dog contracts”, that they wouldn’t join labor unions.
  • Corporations also had company stores, which many workers “owed their souls to”.
  • Middle class people didn’t care about the plight of the workers, since they thought workers could easily become millionaires if they worked harder.
  • They thought unions were too socialistic for the US.
  • Labor Limps Along
  • Post-War, labor unions became more common since labor was needed and livings costs were high.
  • 1872- 32 national unions- bricklayers, typesetters, etc.
  • 1866- National Labor Union that went for 6 years with thousands of members.
  • (It discriminated against Chinese, and somewhat against women and African Americans.)
  • Colored National Labor Union was made by blacks, but it couldn’t work with the NLU well.
  • (This was because of racism and support of different political parties.)
  • NLU wanted arbitration for conflict and an 8-hour workday.
  • They got the workday for government workers.
  • 1870s- Depression.