Big Business and Labor Unions

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1865-1900
 Natural
and human resources
o The United States was blessed with
abundant supplies of coal, iron,
petroleum, and timber. For example,
the Mesabi Range in Minnesota
contained the world’s largest deposits
of iron ore.
o Labor was both plentiful and
inexpensive. A huge pool of unskilled
American workers included many
women and children. In addition,
waves of European immigrants
provided a seemingly inexhaustible
supply of low-wage laborers.
 Government
support
o Nineteenth century federal and state governments were
committed to the concept of private property and limited
regulation of business activity (laissez-faire).
o While the federal government was reluctant to regulate
business, it did enact high protective tariffs to shield
companies from foreign competition.
o A group of ambitious, and sometimes ruthless,
entrepreneurs took advantage of this stable business
environment to build a number of enormously profitable
corporations.
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The golden age of railroads
o America’s railroad network
increased from 35,000 miles in
1865 to 193,000 miles in
1900. Railroad construction
stimulated industrial growth by
consuming vast quantities of
iron, steel, coal, and lumber.
o Aided by the Bessemer process
o The railroads played a key role
in creating an interconnected
national transportation
and communication
network.
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Horizontal and vertical integration
o Railroads, steel companies, and oil
refineries all faced intense
competition from ambitious rivals.
During the 1880s and 1890s,
corporate executives used
horizontal and vertical integration
to create huge consolidated
organizations.
o Horizontal integration
• A company controls all the firms that
produce the same product it does
• Eliminates competition
• Practiced by John D. Rockefeller and
Standard Oil
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Horizontal and vertical integration
 Vertical
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integration
A company buys out all
firms that contribute to its
final product
Includes raw material,
ships, railroads, etc.
Practiced by Andrew
Carnegie (steel)
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Edison and the business of invention
o Thomas Edison was one of the most prolific inventors in American
history. His list of inventions included the first photograph and the
first commercially successful incandescent light bulb.
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The World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893
o Held in Chicago, the World’s Columbian Exposition celebrated the 400th
anniversary of Columbus’ discovery of America.
o The fair was more than a tribute to Columbus. It also celebrated
Chicago’s dynamic growth and America’s amazing technological
progress.
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Between 1869 and 1899 the value of American
manufactures increased by 600 percent. America’s
booming economy produced unprecedented personal
fortunes. The new millionaires filled their mansions with
fine furniture and precious works of art. By 1900, the
richest 2 percent of American households owned over onethird of the nation’s physical wealth.
Social Darwinism was a set of beliefs that both explained
and justified how a small group of business and industrial
leaders could accumulate such great wealth.
According to Social Darwinists, individuals and corporations
are also engaged in a ruthless struggle for profit in which
only the fit survive and succeed.
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Wealthy “captains of industry” such as Rockefeller and Carnegie
used the “law of competition” to explain their wealth and praise
the free market economic system that made it possible. In an
often quoted statement, Rockefeller explained that, “The growth
of a large business corporation is merely the survival of the
fittest…The American Beauty rose can be produced in the
splendor and fragrance which brings cheer to its beholder only by
sacrificing the early buds which grow up around it. This is not an
evil tendency in business. It is merely the working out of a law of
nature and a law of God.”
Social Darwinism explained that wealth is a reward for hard work
and talent, while poverty is a punishment for laziness and bad
judgment. Governments must therefore avoid the temptation to
regulate economic activities by supporting wage increases and
social welfare programs. These policies are doomed to fail
because they interfere with the natural workings of a free market.
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Andrew Carnegie was an ardent supporter of Social Darwinism. He believed
that disparities in wealth were inevitable in a free economic system.
However, he also believed that great wealth brought great responsibilities.
In his 1889 “The Gospel of Wealth” essay, Carnegie warned that men who
died wealthy would pass away “unwept, unhonored, and unsung.” The
public would justly condemn these men because, “The man who dies thus
dies disgraced.” Instead of squandering their money
on passing fantasies, men of wealth have a duty to
regard their surplus fortunes as a trust to be
administered for the benefit of the community.
Carnegie encouraged philanthropists to support
public libraries, universities, museums, and other
“ladders upon which the aspiring can rise.”
Carnegie practiced what he preached. After selling
his huge steel and iron holdings to J.P. Morgan for
$500 million, Carnegie devoted the rest of his life to
promoting the public good. His munificent (very
generous) grants supported parks, hospitals, concert
halls, and especially public libraries (over 2,500).
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Wage and working conditions
o Owners enjoyed enormous profits while their workers earned meager
salaries. For example, Marshall Fields, the founder of a Chicago-based
chain of department stores, earned $600.00 an hour while his
shopgirls survived on a salary of just $3.00 to $5.00 a week. In 1900,
a male industrial worker earned an average of $597.00 a year while his
female counterpart earned an average of only $314.00 year.
o Factory laborers typically worked ten-hour days, six
days a week. Hours were even longer in steel mills
where workers put in 12-hour shifts for $1.25 a day.
o America’s poorly paid workers were also unprotected
by safety regulations. American industry had the
highest accident rate in the world. Health hazards
abounded in factories, mines, and railroad yards. In
1890, railroad accidents injured one railroader for
every 30 employed workers.
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The Knights of Labor
o The Knights of Labor was founded in 1869. In attempted to unify all
working men and women into a national union under the motto, “An
injury to one is the concern of all.” With the exception of lawyers,
bankers, and saloon keepers, the Knights accepted anyone who
worked for wages, including women and African Americans.
o The Knights denounced “wage-slavery” and were dedicated to
achieving a “cooperative commonwealth” of independent workers.
The Knights hoped to achieve this idealistic goal by encouraging
workers to combine their wages so that they could collectively
purchase mines, factories, and stores.
o The Knights’ open-membership and a few successful strikes
contributed to a period of rapid growth in the 1880s. Membership
rolls swelled from 42,000 to 1882 to over 700,000 in 1886.
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The Knights of Labor
o The Knights began to lose
strength when newspapers
unjustly blamed them for
causing the Haymarket
Square riot. As a result of
this misrepresentation, the
public erroneously (wrongly)
linked the Knights with
violent anarchists who
opposed all forms of
government. The economic
depression following the
Panic of 1893 ended the
union’s importance.
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Samuel Gompers and the AFL
o As the Knights of Labor declined in national
importance, the American Federation of Labor (AFL)
began to grow. Founded in 1886, the AFL was an
alliance of skilled workers in craft unions. Unlike the
Knights of Labor, the AFL did not welcome unskilled
workers, women, or racial minorities.
o Led for 37 years by Samuel Gompers, the AFL
opposed political activity not directly related to the
union. Instead, Gompers advocated using collective
bargaining and, if necessary, strikes to win concrete
“bread and butter” goals such as higher wages,
shorter hours, and better working conditions.
o Membership in the AFL grew steadily as it replaced
the Knights of Labor as America’s most powerful
labor union. By 1904, the AFL had 1.7 million
members and Gompers was recognized as a
national spokesman for American laborers.
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The Industrial Workers of the World
o The ALF’s commitment to craft unionism excluded many workers.
Like the Knights of Labor, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW
or Wobblies) was intended to be “One Big Union” that would unite
all skilled and unskilled workers.
o While the AFL pursued “bread and butter”
issues, the IWW was founded on what
one of its early leaders called “the
irrepressible conflict between the
capitalist class and the working class.”
o The Wobblies never attracted more than
150,000 members. Branded as
dangerous radicals and agitators, they
faded from the national scene by the end
of World War I.
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The Great Railroad Strike of 1877
o The Panic of 1873 triggered a severe depression
that bankrupted 47,000 firms and drove wholesale
prices down by 30 percent. As orders for industrial
goods fell, railroad lines in the East began a series of pay cuts. On
July 16, 1877 railroad workers spontaneously walked off their jobs
to protest a second wage cut by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
Walkouts and sympathy demonstrators quickly formed as the
strike spread from Maryland to California.
o The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 was the first major interstate
strike in American history. As the strike rippled across the country
it paralyzed rail service. Looters and rioters destroyed millions of
dollars of property. State militia and federal troops called out by
President Hayes finally crushed the strikes. Over 100 workers
died before the troops finally restored order.
o The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 signaled the beginning of a
period of strikes and violent confrontations between labor and
management. Between 1880 and 1900 over 23,000 strikes, the
most in the industrial world, shook America and hardened
relations between unions and owners.
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The Haymarket Square Riot, 1886
o On May 4, 1886 nearly 1,500 working people gathered at Chicago’s
Haymarket Square to protest violent police actions the previous day
at a strike at the McCormick reaper factory. As about 180
policemen tried to disperse the crowd, an unidentified person
hurled a bomb into the police ranks. The explosion killed seven
officers and injured sixty-seven other people. The police fired wildly
into the crowd, killing four people and wounding over 100 others.
o Although no one knew who threw the bomb, outraged and
frightened Americans blamed anarchists. Supported by an alarmed
public, employers compiled blacklists of strikers and used private
security firms to break strikes.
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The Homestead Strike, 1892
o The Amalgamated Association of Iron and
Steel Workers was the largest craft union in
the AFL. The union’s history of friendly
relations with Andrew Carnegie’s company
abruptly changed in 1892 when Henry Clay
Frick became president of the Homestead
plant outside Pittsburgh. Frick was determined
to replace expensive skilled workers with new
labor-saving machinery. He reduced the
number of workers and slashed salaries by
nearly 20 percent in a deliberate attempt to
break the union.
o When the Amalgamated called for a strike,
Frick closed the Homestead plant and hired
300 union-busting Pinkerton detectives to
protect nonunion workers. Enraged strikers
fired at barges carrying Pinkertons to the plant.
Three detectives and ten workers died before
the Pinkertons finally surrendered.
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The Homestead Strike, 1892
o
The workers’ victory proved to be short-lived. The governor of Pennsylvania
ordered the state’s entire contingent of 8,000 National Guard troops to
Homestead to protect the plant. The strike finally ended four months later
leaving the Amalgamated Association broken and defeated. The
Homestead Strike underscored the government’s determination to protect
property rights and maintain law and order. The strike ushered in a decade
of violent strikes that set back the industrial union movement for forty
years.
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The Pullman Strike, 1894
o The Pullman Strike was one of the most serious labor
strikes of the late nineteenth century. It began as a
dispute between the Pullman Palace Car Company and its
3,000 employees. Following the Panic of 1893, the
Pullman company cut the wages of its workers by about
25 percent. However, the company did not reduce the
rent or prices it charged workers in companyrun stores at the “model” town of Pullman
just outside of Chicago.
o As tensions mounted and negotiations failed,
many workers joined the American Railway
Union led by Eugene Debs. Fearing that they
had no alternative, desperate Pullman
workers walked off their jobs. The American
Railway Union then staged a nationwide
boycott of Pullman cars. Because most
railroad companies used Pullman cars, rail
traffic ground to a halt in Chicago and across
twenty-seven states and territories.
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The Pullman Strike, 1894
o
President Cleveland had no sympathy for
the striking workers. He called out
federal troops to break the strike on the
grounds that it obstructed delivery of the
U.S. mail. The Pullman strike once again
demonstrated that the federal
government would actively intervene to
crush strikes and protect management.
The strike left Debs disillusioned and
embittered. Within a few years, he
became a key leader of the Socialist
Party of America.
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You may “recover” one grade from this semester. This is an
optional assignment. If you lost points for late work, cheating,
etc. there is no way to recover those points back.
Just about anything is possible but here are some suggestions:
o Turning in test corrections for Unit 1 or Unit 2 (but not both)
o Turning in a missing classwork or homework assignment
o Retaking a reading/vocabulary quiz
o Rewriting the FRE from Unit 2 Exam
o Rewriting your DBQ or FRE from Comp 1 (but not both)
o Submitting/Resubmitting a Summer Assignment
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Be sure to check your grade report carefully and chose wisely. If
you have questions or need advice on picking the right thing, let
me know.
The last day for this “gift” is Friday, December 16th.
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