I. Why was there such vast growth so rapidly in the U.S.?
1. War: Why would war encourage industrial growth?
Example #1: Morrill Act (1862)
Example #2: Railroads:
1860: 30,000 miles of r.r.
1864: Congress grants 131 million acres
1910: 240,000 miles of railway
2. Resources: land, raw materials, people,
ideas=booooooom!
1864: 872,000 tons of iron and steel
1919: more than 24 million tons
1860: 20 million tons of coal
1910: 500 million tons of coal
1860: 500,000 barrels of petroleum
1910: 209 million barrels of petroleum
3. Integration:
a. Horizontal Integration:
--monopolize one part of the productive process
Example: meatpacking plants
b. Vertical Integration:
--monopolize all elements of productive process
Example: Andrew Carnegie: mining iron ore, own blast furnaces (factories), own shops, own ships, own railroad and rail lines
4. Mindset:
a. Small Government is Best:
Laissez faire: “let it do”
Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations (1776)
b. Aggressive Business Mentality:
The Robber Barons
Andrew Carnegie
J.P. Morgan
Jay Gould: “Mephistopheles of Wall Street”
(bribed Grant’s brother in law for gold secrets)
Cornelius Van Derbilt:
(steamships and railroads: $100 million)
Gentlemen:
You have undertaken to cheat me. I will not sue you, for law takes too long. I will ruin you.
Sincerely,
CVD
c. Justifying the New World:
How do you justify the world when fabulous wealth and wretched poverty exist so closely together?
William Graham Sumner: Social Darwinism
The New Impoverished City
Rapid Urbanization:
1860: 25 million Americans lived in rural areas
6.2 million in what the Bureau of the Census
called "urban territory" (2500 or more)
1910: 42 million of the 92 million in urban areas
Tenement Buildings:
1879 NYC law declared that every room must have a window and every floor must have a bathroom
Contamination:
1877-Philadelphia: 82,000 privies
Boston Harbor was “one vast cesspool, a threat to all
the towns it washed.”
Crime-Filled:
Murder Rate: 1266 in 1881
7340 in 1898
(an increase of 25 per million people, to 107 per million people)
Women in Workforce:
1/7th of the Paid workforce
(2.6 million of the 17.4 million)
500,000 married, yet they were paid less than
men, especially after 1900 when the “family wage” idea spread.
Immigration:
Newspaper in 1900: "It is well known that nearly every foreigner…goes armed. Some carry revolvers, while many others hide huge ugly knives upon their person."
Senator William Bruce (Maryland):
Immigrants are “indigestible lumps in
the national stomach.”
1890-1900: 3.5 million
1900-1910: 7 million
Ellis Island:
“Such an impulse toward better things there certainly is. The German rag-picker of thirty years ago, quite as low in the scale as his Italian successor, is the thrifty tradesman or prosperous farmer of to-day. The Italian scavenger of our time is fast graduating into exclusive control of the corner fruit-stands, while his black-eyed boy monopolizes the boot-blacking industry in which a few years ago he was an intruder.”
Jacob Riis on social fluidity
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVUXA9ZW0Bw
Ragtime to Jazz
Child Labor:
1900: 700,000 10 and 15 year olds in workforce.
--Monangah, West Virginia, 1907:
Martin Honick
Children Working in the cotton mills (Tennessee Valley)
"They were children only in age…little, solemn pygmy people, whom poverty had canned up and compressed…the juices of childhood had been pressed our…no talking in the mill…no singing…they were more dead than alive when at seven o clock, the Steam Beast uttered the last volcanic howl which said they might go home…in a speechless, haggard, over-worked procession."
What if you do not want to justify the disparity between rich and poor? What could you do?
II. Progressivism:
Mulberry Bend (so dangerous and impoverished, it was destroyed to make the park below)
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