Transcript
Page 1: Big Business and Labor

Big Business and Labor

Page 2: Big Business and Labor

Andrew CarnegieEntered the steel business in 1873Modeled his industry off of Great Britain’s

◦By 1899 he manufactured more steel than all companies in Great Britain combined

Business Strategies◦Vertical integration-a process in which he

bought out all his suppliers (ex: coal fields and iron mines, ore freighters, and railroad lines

◦Horizontal integration-having companies producing similar products merge to have a monopoly

Book Page 448

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Social DarwinismGrew out of the English Charles

Darwin’s theory of evolutionHelped regulate economics with

laissez faire ◦Natural law governed business not

the government

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“If ya can’t beat em, Join em!”Many industrialists pursued

horizontal integration in the form of mergers

Holding companies◦Set up monopolies by setting up a

company that did nothing but hold stocks

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RockefellerJohn D. Rockefeller

◦Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company of Ohio

◦Formed trust agreements◦People in the trust turned their stock

over to a group of trustees◦These companies were in turn

entitled to dividends on profits earned by the trusts

◦Not Legal Mergers!

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Robber BaronsRockefeller earned high profits by

under paying his employees◦Then was able to sell oil at a lower

price◦Once he controlled the market he

would hike the price back upRockefeller, ruthless

businessman, heavy philanthropist

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“What a funny little government”

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Sherman Antitrust actMade it illegal to form a trust that

interfered with free trade between states or other countries

The act never defined the term “trust” and the government eventually quit trying to enforce the act

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Labor Unions EmergeLong hours and Danger

◦12 hour work days◦Six days a week◦No vacation, sick leave,

unemployment compensation or workman’s compensation

1882 an average of 675 laborers were killed in work related accidents EACH WEEK!

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FamilyBetween 1890-1910

◦Women working for wages doubled from 4 million to more than 8 million

◦20% of boys under the age 15 ◦10% of girls under the age 15

Some as young as 5 years old

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Labor Organizing1866 first labor union formed National Labor Union (NLU)

◦Refused to admit African Americans lead to the creation of the CNLU

NLU wanted to link existing local unions◦Knights of Labor

“An injury to one is the conern of all”Both supported

◦8 hour workday◦“equal pay for equal work”

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Union MovementsSamuel Gompers led the Cigar Makers’

International Union to join with other craft unions to form the American Federation of Labor (AFL)

Focused on◦Collective bargining on wages, hours and

working conditionsUsed strikes as a major tactic

◦Led to the average weekly wages to rise from $17.50 to $24

◦Work week from 55 hours to 49 hours

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Strikes turn violentThe Great Strike of 1877

◦ B&O railroad workers protest wage cut◦ Federal troops had to be called in to end the strike

after several state governors' had to ask President Hayes to stop the strike

The Haymarket Affair◦ 3,000 people gather at Chicago’s Haymarket Square◦ Protesting police brutality after one striker had been

killed and several injured ◦ Someone tossed a bomb into the police line and the

police fired on the workers◦ Seven police officers and several workers died in the

following chaos

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Strikes turn ViolentThe Homestead Strike

◦ Three detectives and nine workers died, steelworkers forced out the Pinkerton Detective Agency and kept the plant closed until the National Guard arrived

The Pullman Company Strike◦ More than 2,000 workers laid off and wages cut by

25 to 50% for the others◦ Many workers were taking home less than $6 a week◦ Pullman hired strikebreakers and federal troops were

sent in ◦ Pullman fired most of the strikers and blacklisted

many of them so they would never be hired again

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Women Organize Marry Harris Jones- supported the Great Strike of

1877 and later organized for the United Mine Workers of America

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory◦ Fire broke out on March 25 in New York City◦ Doors had been locked to prevent theft◦ Only one door could be opened, but it was blocked by fire◦ The women were on the 8,9, and 10th floors and the New

York Fireman’s latter only reached 6 floors high 146 women died

◦ Public was outraged when the jury acquitted the factory owners of manslaughter

◦ Triangle Fire


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