APUSH Notes Gilded Age Notes

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APUSH Notes

Industrial America
● Major Themes (All concurrent)
○ Industrialization
○ Labor-capital conflict
○ Political corruption
○ Immigration
○ Urbanization
○ The “New Woman”
○ New South
○ Westward Expansion
○ Glimmers of Progressive Reform (attempts to fix
corruption/inefficiencies)
● Questions to Consider for this era
○ Is Industrialization compatible with republicanism?
○ Which is more important: freedom or equality?
○ Can we regulate a capitalistic economy without killing it?
● Corruption-
○ Ulysses S. Grant’s presidency
■ “Waving the bloody shirt” remember what he did during the
Civil War
○ Era of unprecedented growth and corruption
○ Scandals-
■ Jim Fiske and Jay Gould corner the gold market
■ Boss Tweed- NYC corruption
■ Credit Mobilier scandal- transcont. RR
■ Whiskey Ring- robbing millions
● Panic of 1873
○ Causes-
■ Overproduction of RR, mines, factories, farm products
■ Bankers made risky loans
■ Loans went unpaid
■ 15,000 businesses went bankrupt
● Politics in the Gilded Age
○ Era of “forgettable” presidents (Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, and
Harrison)
■ HIghly competitive era in US history, voter turnout reached its
highest ever
○ Social issues split the parties
○ Patronage and bribery dominated politics (Outgrowth of Spoil
System)
○ Pendleton Act of 1883- merit system for making appointments
■ Set up Civil Service Commision
■ 1884= 10% of federal jobs classified
■ 1980= 90% of federal jobs classified
● Technological Innovations
○ Steel
○ Oil
○ Electricity
○ Business Advances
● Pop Culture-
○ 1880: 50% of Americans work in agriculture
○ 1920: 25% of Americans work in agriculture
○ Many Depressions lead to social unrest
● Railroad Building
○ Gov. Subsidized transcontinental RR
○ Pacific Railway Act
○ Union Pacific RR
○ Irish Immigrants
○ Northern Pacific, Atchison-Topeka-Santa Fe, Southern Pacific,
Great Northern
● Consolidation and Mechanization
○ Cornelius Vanderbilt-
■ Steel Rail
○ Jay Gould
○ Improvements in RR
■ Steel, standardized gauge of track width, air brake
■ Standardized time- 1884
● Significance of RR
○ Spurred Industrialization
○ United nation physically
○ Enormous domestic market for raw materials and manufactured
goods
○ Stimulated three western frontiers
■ Led to urbanization
○ Facilitated influx of immigrants
■ Investment from abroad
○ Tremendous wealth enters a few hands
■ Native Americans displaced again
● Robber Barons of the Gilded Age-
○ Jay Gould “stock watering”
○ Vanderbilt- monopolized NY area railroads
○ Carnegie- gave away 90% of fortune
○ J.P Morgan- bought out Carnegie created steel monopoly
● Cut Throat Competition
○ Tycoons- most proportionally rich americans ever
○ “Pools” form defensive alliances to protect profits
○ Long haul vs short haul
■ Devastated farmers
● Government Regulation of RR’s
○ Laissez-faire
○ Supreme Court decisions
■ Farmers protest
○ Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)
■ 14th amendment
■ Protected businesses from federal regulation if business was
only within a state
○ Munn vs. Illinois (1877)
○ Wabash Case (1886)
■ State had no right to regulate interstate commerce
■ Corporation was a “person” = 14th amendment
■ Difficult for gov. to regulate - courts sided with business
● Economic System Review
○ Capitalism= free market- laissez faire
■ No gov role
○ Socialism= mixed economy
■ Significant role of gov in basic industries
■ Tied to “radical” immigrants/ labor unions
○ Communism= planned economy
■ Radicalism/Anarchists in late 1800’s
● Petroleum Industry
○ Oil- keystone for lamps
○ John D. Rockefeller-
■ “The way to make money is to buy when blood is running in
the streets”
○ Standard Oil Company-
■ By 1877- owned 95% of all oil refineries
■ Rule or ruin
■ Produced a quality product at a cheap price
○ Horizontal Integration
■ All companies bought by one large company
● Creates one giant company that can control pricing for
product
● Steel Industry Emerges
○ Cornerstone of 2nd industrial revolution
○ Andrew Carnegie- “rags to riches”
■ Impoverished Scottish immigrant
■ Worked his way up
■ Invested in steel
■ By 1890 controlled 25% of nations steel
■ Sold company to JP Morgan
■ Carefully cultivated image
○ Vertical Integration-
■ Resources-transportation-steel mills- giant steel company
owning every step of the process
○ Gospel of wealth-
■ Will give away over 90% of his wealth
● Social Darwinism-
○ Nouveau riche
○ Old $ vs. new $
○ Charles Darwin- humans evolved, natural selection
○ Herbert Spencer- natural selection applies to the economy and
politics as well as biology
○ Divine Providence- god chooses winners and losers in society and
blesses those who are deserving with wealth
● Impact of the Industrial Revolution
○ Standard of living ^
○ Agriculture eclipsed by industry
○ Free enterprise towards monopoly
○ Regimented workplace
○ Women- economic, social independence
○ Urban centers mushroomed
○ Social stratification
● Urbanization
○ Population of USA
○ 1870-1900: population nearly doubled
○ NY 3 ½ million people, 2nd largest city in the world
○ Skyscrapers-
■ Louis Sullivan
○ Brooklyn Bridge
○ Streetcar suburbs- allowed for different districts within city
● Class Distinctions
○ Nouveau Riche- richest people of the country
○ Middle Class- doctors, lawyers
○ Working class- usually going between jobs
● Questions about Labor in the Gilded Age
○ What do workers want?
○ Why do many Americans fear unions?
○ Why so much conflict and violence?
● Rise of the Labor Movement
○ Gov siding with big business-
■ Scabs- crossed picket lines when there was a strike
■ Federal courts fairly conservative
■ Ironclad oaths
● “Yellow dog” Contract
■ Corporations owned company towns
○ Public grew tired of frequent strikes
● Civil War Boosted Labor Unions
○ Drain of human resources
○ Mounting cost of living
○ National Labor Union (1866)
■ Skilled craft members
■ Focused on social reform
■ NLU killed by depression of the 1870's
● Bread and Butter Issues
○ Less work days
○ Better work conditions
○ Better pay
● First great wave of immigration
○ 1840’s-1850’s
○ “Old immigration”
○ Britain, Ireland, Germany
○ Germans- serious but alcohol loving
○ Irish- dirty, poor, east coast “scum”
● Ellis Island was “the Great Filter”
● Characteristics of “New” Immigration
○ Lived in “enclaves” (china town, little italy, korea town)
○ Orthodox christians or jews
○ Came from countries with little democracy
○ Illiterate
○ Established foreign language businesses
● Why from south and east Europe
○ Customary jobs gone
○ US welcomed groups who were willing to work
○ Better living conditions than other parts of the world
○ 1st generation migrates for their kids, give them a better future
○ Steam ships want passengers
○ Industrialists wanted low wage workers
○ Birds of passage- about a quarter of immigrants went back after
earning enough money to go back and have a better life in their
home country
● Chinese Immigration
○ Burlingame Treaty(1868)- allowed unrestricted immigrants to work
on the transcontinental railroad
○ Chinatowns
○ Immigration caused intense tension with whites in CA
○ Workingmen’s party of CA- anti chinese, called for chinese
exclusion in 1870’s
○ 1882- chinese exclusion act
○ 1885- contract labor prohibited
○ 1892- Federal Immigration Act
■ Ellis Island opens
■ Four Categories of Exclusion
● Health
● Poverty
● Criminality
● Radicalism
● Many types of Nativism-
○ Disease
○ Superstition
○ Poverty
○ Anarchy
○ Sabbath desecration
○ Intemperance
○ Crime
● Antiforeignism-
○ Alarmed at high birth rates
○ Mongrelization of races
○ “Starvation” wages
○ Foreign doctrines- socialism, communism, anarchy
● Subduing Native Americans
○ Plains indians
■ Tribal organization
○ Gov’t policy to indians
○ Had to negotiate with federal gov.
○ Warfare (1868-1890)
■ Sand Creek Massacre (1864)- killed over 400 under the
pretext of peace
■ Battle of Little Big Horn- General George Custer pursued the
Sioux indians and clashed with 2500 well trained warriors
with 2600 whites, all white forces died
■ Battle of Wounded Knee (1890)
● Results of Indian Wars-
○ 1890- reservation system
○ Killing of buffalo
○ Railroads through west
○ National Sentiment-
■ Helen Hunt Jackson- A Century of Dishonor
■ Dawes Severalty Act- create nuclear families, given 160
acres of land, if they behave they’ll then own the land
■ Impact- indigenous population dwindled to 240,000, gov
protections put in by 1930, now over 2 million
● Three Western Frontiers-
○ Transcontinental RR reshapes US economy
○ Mining
○ Comstock Lode
○ Significance of mining-
● Cattle Raising-
○ Transportation of meat to urban centers
○ “Long Drive”
○ Influence of Spanish-
○ Cowboys-
● Farming-
○ Homestead Act of 1862-
○ Results- you were not given very good land, roughly ⅔ of families
left
○ Sod homes
● End of the Frontier
○ New states (1870-1890)
○ Oklahoma Land Rush
○ Safety valve theory
● Economic Problems Plaguing Farmers
○ Deflated currency
○ Low food prices
○ Natural disasters
○ Lands overassessed- property taxes
○ Agriculture trusts
○ Farmers underrepresented politically
○ First Farmers’ Alliance
● Politics in the 1890s-
○ The Grange (1867)- founded by Oliver H. Kelley
○ Objective- organize and educate farmers so that they have a voice
○ Established cooperatives- (individualism vs collectivism)
○ Go into politics
■ Goals- regulate railroad rates
○ Mary Elizabeth Lease- made about 150 speeches
● The People’s Party
○ Attracted Farmers Alliances and disenfranchised southern whites
○ Excluded blacks (downfall of organization)
● Election of 1892-
○ Omaha Platform-
■ Graduated income tax
■ Gov. ownership
■ Initiative & referendum- people force state legislature to vote,
people vote themselves directly on the issue
■ Direct election of senators
■ 8 hour workday
● Panic of 1893
○ Worst depression of century
○ 1st urban/ industrial depression
○ Causes- stock market crashed
○ Deficit- lack of gold
○ Morgan Bond Transaction- gave US 65 million for 7 million fee
○ Coxey’s Army (1894)
● Election of 1896-
○ William McKinley
○ William Jennings Bryan-
■ Cross of Gold Speech
● Legacies of Populism
○ Political influence- 25 years
○ Rural ideas later taken up in urban setting-populism
○ Failure of a 3rd party

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