Chapter 17 - Business and Labor in the Industrial Era (1860-1900)

studied byStudied by 5 People
0.0(0)
get a hint
hint

George M Beard

1/49

Tags & Description

Studying Progress

New cards
50
Still learning
0
Almost done
0
Mastered
0
50 Terms
New cards

George M Beard

________, a neurologist who popularized the term neurasthenia, concluded- incorrectly- that women were "more nervous, immeasurably than men.

New cards
New cards

Andrew Carnegie

________, who created the largest steel company in the world, rose to wealth from boyhood poverty.

New cards
New cards

American industry

________ has the highest rate of workplace accidents and death in the world.

New cards
New cards

New York

Born in ________ in 1839, John D. Rockefeller moved as a child to Cleveland, Ohio.

New cards
New cards

Big Business

________, a term commonly used to refer to the giant corporations that emerged after the Civil War, was untamed and reckless.

New cards
New cards

Homestead

At the massive steel mill at ________, Pennsylvania, along the Monongahela River near Pittsburgh, the union had enjoyed friendly relations with Andrew Carnegies company until Henry Clay Frick became chief executive in 1889.

New cards
New cards

Alexander Graham Bell

In 1875, twenty-eight-year-old ________ began experimenting with the concept of a "speaking telegraph, "or talking through wires.

New cards
New cards

Scotland

Born in ________, the son of weavers, he (Andrew Carnegie) migrated with his family in 1848 to western Pennsylvania.

New cards
New cards

Edison

When ________ was twelve, he began working for the local railroad, selling newspapers, food, and candy to passengers.

New cards
New cards

Pittsburgh

In ________, thousands of striking workers burned thirty- nine buildings and destroyed more than 1, 000 railcars and locomotives.

New cards
New cards

Carnegie

________ dominated the steel industry, acquiring competitors or driving them out of business by cutting prices and taking their customers.

New cards
New cards

Louis Lingg

On November 10, 1887, ________ committed suicide in his cell.

New cards
New cards

1859

The first oil well in the United States began producing in ________ in Titusville, Pennsylvania, and led to the Pennsylvania oil rush of the 1860s.

New cards
New cards

capitalist democracy

In a(n) ________ like America, the tensions between equal political rights and unequal economic status produce inherent social instability.

New cards
New cards

1830s

The term middle class had first appeared in the ________ and had become commonplace by the 1870s, as more and more Americans came to view themselves as members of a distinct social class between the ragged and the rich.

New cards
New cards

Gompers

________ focused on concrete economic gains, such as higher wages, shorter hours, and better working conditions.

New cards
New cards

Homestead Act of 1862

In the ________, Congress provided free 160-acre (or even larger) homesteads to settlers in the West which created new markets for goods and services and spurred railroad construction.

New cards
New cards

West Virginia

He owned coal mines in ________, bought huge deposits of iron ore in Michigan and Wisconsin, and transported the ore in his own ships across the Great Lakes and then by rail to his steel mills in Pittsburgh.

New cards
New cards

Legal Tender Act of 1862

The ________ authorized the federal government to issue paper money " (greenbacks) "to help pay for the war.

New cards
New cards

Anarchists

________ believed that government- any government- was a device used by powerful capitalists to oppress and exploit the working poor.

New cards
New cards

Indiana

The charismatic Debs was a child of working- class immigrants who had quit school at age fourteen to work for a(n) ________ railroad.

New cards
New cards

California

In ________, the national railroad strike indirectly gave rise to a working- class political movement.

New cards
New cards

Railroads

________ became the first industry to contract with "investment banks" to raise capital by selling shares of stock to investors.

New cards
New cards

1789

Since ________, the federal government had imposed tariffs- taxes on imported goods - to raise revenue and to benefit American manufacturers by penalizing their foreign competitors.

New cards
New cards

Trains

________ and Time- The railroad network prompted the creation of national and international time zones and spurred the use of wristwatches, for the ________, that were scheduled to run on time.

New cards
New cards

Wall Street

Railroads were Americas first truly big business, the first beneficiary of the great financial market known as ________ in New York City.

New cards
New cards

transcontinental railroads

The ________ were the first of many investor- owned, publicly- traded corporations during the industrial era.

New cards
New cards

Illinois

It involved a dispute at Pullman, ________, a "model "industrial suburb of Chicago owned by the Pullman Palace Car Company, which made passenger train cars (called "Pullmans "or "sleeping cars)

New cards
New cards

Molly Maguires

In the early 1870s, violence erupted in the eastern Pennsylvania coalfields, when a secret Irish American group called the ________ took economic justice into their own hands.

New cards
New cards

Croatian immigrant

After the invention in 1887 of the alternating- current motor by a(n) ________ named Nikola Tesla, Westinghouse improved upon it, and the company began selling dynamos /electric motors.

New cards
New cards

CP crews

The ________ were mainly young Chinese workers lured to America by the California gold rush or by the railroad jobs.

New cards
New cards

Morrill Land Grant Act

The ________ of the same year transferred to each state 30, 000 acres of federal land for each member of Congress the state had.

New cards
New cards

NLU

The ________ was more interested in advocating for improved workplace conditions than in bargaining with employers about wages and hours.

New cards
New cards

Technological advances

________ created economies of scale, whereby larger business enterprises, including huge commercial farms, could afford expensive new machinery and large workforces that boosted their productivity.

New cards
New cards

Congress

In 1861, the republican dominate ________ enacted the Morrill Tariff which doubled tax rates on hundreds of imported items as a means of raising money for the war and rewarding businesses that supported the republican party.

New cards
New cards

Electricity

________ also spurred urban growth by improving lighting, facilitating the development of trolley and subway systems, and stimulating the creation of elevators.

New cards
New cards

Steel

________ until the mid 19th century could only be made from wrought iron- which was expensive- and only could be imported from Sweden, and manufactured in small quantities.

New cards
New cards

Samuel Gompers

________ served as president of the AFL from its founding until his death, in 1924, with only one years interruption.

New cards
New cards

Chicago

________ was a hotbed of labor unrest and a magnet for immigrants, especially German and Irish laborers, some of whom were socialists or anarchists who endorsed violence.

New cards
New cards

Great Railroad Strike

The ________ became one of the most spectacular incidents of widespread violence in American history and revealed how polarized the working poor and business elites had become.

New cards
New cards

Civil War

During the ________, when Scott became assistant secretary of war in charge of transportation, Carnegie went with him to Washington, D.C., and helped develop a military telegraph system.

New cards
New cards

mass production of clothing

The introduction of sewing machines for the ________ and linens opened new doors to women- if not usually pleasant ones to walk through.

New cards
New cards

mass production

Inventors, scientists, research laboratories, and business owners developed labor- saving machinery and ________ techniques (such as the use of interchangeable parts) that spurred dramatic advances in efficiency, productivity, and the size of industrial enterprises.

New cards
New cards

Morgan

________ was sent in 1857 to work in New York City for a new enterprise, J. Pierpont Morgan and Company.

New cards
New cards

General William T Sherman

The transcontinental railroads were, in the words of ________, the "work of giants..."

New cards
New cards

George Pullman

In 1897, ________ died of a heart attack, and the following year, the city of Chicago annexed the town of Pullman.

New cards
New cards

Standard Oil Trust

Instead of owning other companies outright, the ________ controlled more than thirty companies by having their stockholders transfer their shares "in trust "to Rockefeller and eight other trustees.

New cards
New cards

railroad boom

The ________ was the catalyst for Americas transition to an urban industrial economy.

New cards
New cards

George Westinghouse

________, the inventor of the railway air brake, developed the first alternating- current electric system in 1886 and set up the Westinghouse Electric Company to manufacture the equipment.

New cards
New cards

craft unions

The ________, representing skilled workers, generally opposed efforts to unite with industrial unionism.

New cards