II. Railroad building
A. By 1900, 192,556 miles of track; 35,000 in 1865
alone (more than all Europe combined)
1. Gov’t subsidized transcontinental
railroad building since unpopulated areas were
initially unprofitable
a. Railroad companies given 155.5 million acres along RR lines (checkerboard)
b. Gov’t received low rates for postal service and military traffic in
return.
2. Cities flourished where
lines were laid while bypassed cities became "ghost towns"
B. The Transcontinental Railroad (completed
in 1869)
1. Pacific Railway Act
(1862): Passed by Republican Congress during Civil War.
-- Connecting the pacific states seen as urgent to the security of the
republic
2. Union Pacific Railroad
appointed by Congress to build west from Omaha, Nebraska
a. Company granted 20 square miles for each mile of track constructed
b. Company also granted federal loans for each mile: $16,000 for flat land,.
$32,000 for
hilly country; $48,000 for mountainous country
c. Construction began in 1865
d. Irish "paddies" who fought in the Union armies worked at a
frantic pace.
e. Workers fended off attacks from hostile Indians; scores lost their lives
f. "Hell on wheels": tented towns sprang up at rail’s end; drinking, prostitution
g. Insiders of the Credit Mobilier construction company pocketed
$73 million
for some $50 million worth of work.
-- Bribed congressmen looked the other way
3. Central Pacific Railroad
pushed east from Sacramento over Sierra Nevada.
a. Led by the "Big Four"
i. Leland Stanford -- ex-governor of CA and future Senator
ii. Collis P. Huntington – v.p.; managed enterprise on day to day
basis.
b. CP ran a relatively clean operation compared to Union Pacific (Credit
Mobilier)
c. Gov’t provided same subsidies as to Union Pacific
d. 10,000 Chinese laborers, "coolies," worked as cheap, efficient
and docile labor
-- Hundreds lost their lives in premature explosions and other mishaps
e. Sierra Nevada became a major challenge as workers could only chip through
a few inches a day through rocky tunnels.
4. Railroad completed at
Promontory
Point, Utah on May 10, 1869.
a. Union Pacific built 1,086 miles of line
b. Central Pacific built 689 miles
5. Significance:
a. Linked the entire continent via railroad and by telegraph
b. Paved the way for incredible growth of the Great West.
c. Facilitated a burgeoning trade with the Orient
d. Seen by Americans at the time as a monumental achievement along with
the Declaration of Independence and the freeing of the slaves.
6. Other Transcontinental
lines
a. No subsequent RR received gov’t loans but all received generous land
grants.
b. Northern Pacific Railroad completed in 1883 (Lake Superior to Puget
Sound)
c. Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe RR completed in 1884
-- Connected those cities through the southwestern deserts to California.
d. Southern Pacific: New Orleans to San Francisco via Los Angeles (1884)
e. Great Northern Railroad: Duluth, Minn. to Seattle; completed
in 1893
i. Created by James G. Hill, probably the greatest of all the railroad
builder.
-- Believed prosperity of railroad depends on prosperity of area it serves
ii. Hill ran agricultural demonstration trains along his lines and imported
bulls from
England which he distributed to farmers.
C. Railroad Consolidation and Mechanization
1. Cornelius Vanderbilt
(1794-1877)
a. Popularized the steel rail; replaced the old iron tracks of the NY
Central RR
-- Steel safer and more economical since it could carry a heavier load.
b. Amassed a fortune of $100 million dollars
2. Jay Gould and Russell
Sage by 1880 controlled much of railroad traffic in West.
a. Gutted their railroads by stock watering and pocketing profits
rather than reinvest.
b. Gould had earlier tried to corner the gold market during Grant's presidency.
3. Significant improvements
in railroad building
a. Steel, standard gauge of track width, Westinghouse air brake,
b. Pullman Palace Cars afforded luxurious travel, introduced in 1860s.
D. Significance of America’s railroad network
1. Spurred the industrialization
of the post-Civil War years (especially steel)
2. Sprawling nation became
united physically.
3. Created enormous domestic
market for US raw materials and manufactured goods.
-- Probably the largest integrated market in the world.
4. Stimulated creation of
3 Western frontiers: mining, agriculture, and ranching
5. Railroad led to great
cityward movement of late 19th c.
-- Railways could feed huge numbers of people; supply raw materials and
markets
6. Facilitated large influx
of immigrants.
-- Advertised in Europe free travel to new farms in the American West.
7. Spurred investment from
abroad
8. Concept of time altered
with creation of distinct "time zones" from coast to coast.
9. Maker of millionaires;
a new railroad aristocracy emerged
10. Native Americans displaced and herded
into ever-shrinking reservations.
E. Railroad corruption by the "Robber Barons"
1. Jay Gould: Forced
prices of stocks to boom and bust on some of his lines.
2. stock watering: Railroad
stock promoters grossly inflated value of railroad stock.
-- Railroad managers forced to charge high rates and wage ruthless competition
to pay off the exaggerated financial obligations.
3. Railroad tycoons,
for a time, became the most powerful people in America.
a. Bribed judges and legislatures, employed effective lobbyists, and elected
their
own men to office.("Senatorial Roundhouse" cartoon)
b. Gave free passes to journalists and politicians.
4. Eventually ruled as an
oligarchy instead of cut-throat competition.
a. "Pools"
i. Formed defensive alliances to protect their profits.
ii. Competing firms agreed to divide the market, establish prices, place
profits in a
common fund, and pro-rate profits.
b. Some gave secret rebates or kickbacks to large corporations..
c. Slashed rates on competing lines but made up difference on other lines.
d. Hurt farmers with long-haul, short-haul practices
5. Cornelius Vanderbilt:
"Law! What do I care about the Law? Hain’t I got the power?"
-- Ruined opponents rather than sue them legally.
F. Government regulation of the "Robber Baron" railroad
tycoons
1. Initially, Americans
slow to react to the excesses of the railroad plutocracy.
a. Jeffersonian ideals hostile to gov’t interference with business.
b. Dedicated to free enterprise and to the principle that competition fuels
trade.
-- Believed anyone could become a millionaire; the "American dream"
c. Adam Smith: The Wealth of Nations (1776) – "bible"
of capitalism.
2. Supreme Court decisions
a. Depression of 1870s inspired farmers to protest against being forced
into bankruptcy by
unfair railroad policies.
-- Organized agrarian groups such as the Grange (Patrons of Husbandry)
pressured
many midwestern legislatures to regulate the railroad monopoly.
b. Slaughterhouse Cases, 1873 -- molded Court's interpretation of
14th Amendment for
decades.
i. Court ruled protection of "labor" was not a federal responsibility
under the 14th
Amendment but a state responsibility.
ii. Significance: Protected businesses from federal regulation if they
engaged only in
intrastate commerce (within a state).
c. Munn v. Illinois, (1877) -- (One of so-called farmer
"Granger Laws")
-- Decision: Public always has the right to regulate business operations
in which
the public has an interest; ruled against railroads
d. Wabash case, 1886
i. Significance: Supreme Court ruled that individual states had no power
to regulate interstate commerce; responsibility rested with
the federal gov’t.
-- In effect, overturned Munn v Illinois.
ii. Illinois law had prohibited short haul & long haul practices
iii. Stimulated push for Interstate Commerce Act of 1887
e. 1886, Court ruled a corporation was a "person" under the 14th Amendment.
i. Thus, extremely difficult for federal gov't to regulate corporations
especially since
Court justices and many gov't officials often sided with corporations.
ii. Railroad companies in particular hid behind the decision.
3. Interstate Commerce
Act passed in 1887 (despite Cleveland’s disapproval)
a. Set up Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) (most important provision)
to enforce and administer the new legislation
b. Prohibited rebates and pools and required railroads to publish their
rates openly.
c. Forbade unfair discrimination against shippers and outlawed charging
more for
short haul than long haul over the same line.
d. Positive result -- provided an orderly forum where competing business
interests
could resolve their conflicts in peaceful ways.
e. Yet, ICC didn’t effectively regulate the railroads; more of a panacea
to public. f. 1st
large-scale attempt by fed. to regulate business in the interest of society.
-- Precedent for future regulatory commissions in 20th century.
III. Industrialism and Mechanization
A. Civil War profiteering created huge fortunes
and a class of millionaires now eager to invest.
B. Natural resources fed industrial growth.
1. Mesabi Range deposits
in Minnesota-Lake Superior region yielded huge tracts of iron
ore for steel industry.
2. Unskilled labor, both
domestic and foreign, was now cheap and abundant.
C. Whitney’s interchangeable parts concept now perfected
by industry.
1. Cash register, stock
ticker, and typewriter facilitated business operations.
-- Women increasingly entered the workplace to run these machines.
2. Patents increased significantly
between 1860-1890
3. Urbanization spurred
by the refrigerator car, electric dynamo, and the electric railway.
D. Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone (1876)
1. Telephone network created
nation-wide within a few years.
2. Young women (usually
middle class) worked as operators.
-- Office positions still within "Cult of Domesticity" parameters
E. Thomas A. Edison
1. Electric light (most
famous), phonograph, mimeograph, Dictaphone, moving pictures.
-- "Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration"
2. Electricity became
another cornerstone of the industrial revolution
-- Cities
illuminated, electric railcars, etc.
IV. The Trust emerges -- destruction of competition
A. "Vertical integration" -- controlling
every aspect of the production process
1. Pioneered by Andrew
Carnegie: steel co. mined ore in Mesabi Range (leased from
Rockefellar), shipped ore to the Great Lakes, railroaded to steel factories
in Pittsburgh.
2. Goal is to improve efficiency
by making supplies more reliable, controlling the quality of the
product at all stages of production, and eliminate middlemen’s fees
3. Not as detrimental as
horizontal consolidation.
B. "Horizontal integration" -- Consolidating
with competitors to monopolize a given market.
1. John D. Rockefellar:
Pioneered
the "trust" in 1882 as a means of controlling his
competition through the Standard Oil Company.
2. Trust: Stockholders
in various smaller oil companies sold their stock and
authority to the board of directors of Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company.
a. Stockholders receive trust certificates and the board of trustees exercises
full control of
the business.
b. Trust consolidated operations of previously competing enterprises.
c. Standard Oil eventually cornered the world petroleum market.
d. Was worth about $900 million upon his retirement in 1897.
-- Incredible considering auto industry not born yet.
C. "Interlocking directorates" mastered by
J.
P. Morgan
1. Depression of 1890s drove
many struggling businessmen into Morgan’s arms.
2. Sought to consolidate
rival enterprises and ensure future harmony by placing officers of his
own banking syndicate on their various boards of directors.
3. Eventually, holding
companies, came to thwart anti-trust legislation
a. Bought controlling shares of stock in member companies instead of purchasing
companies outright.
b. While the "held" companies remained separate businesses on paper, in
reality,
the holding company controlled them.
c. Holding Companies made trusts unnecessary and permitted actual mergers.
D. Concentrtion of financial power enhanced economic
growth, paved the way for
large-scale mass production,
and stimulated new markets.
V. The Steel Industry emerges
A. Cornerstone of the 2nd American Industrial
Revolution
1. Held together skyscrapers,
coal scuttles, railroad tracks.
2. Typified "heavy industry"
which concentrated on making "capital goods"
rather than consumer goods.
3. By 1900, U.S. was producing
as much steel as Britain and Germany combined.
B. Bessemer process -1850s
1. Turned iron into steel.
2. Steel could now be readily
produced for locomotives, steel rails, and the heavy girders
used in building construction.
C. Andrew Carnegie
1. Brought to America from
Scotland as a boy by impoverished parents in 1848.
2. Disliked monopolistic
trusts
a. His organization was a partnership that involved about 40 "Pittsburgh
Millionaires" at one point.
b. Henry Clay Frick -- his general manager and partner
3. By 1890, Carnegie was
producing about 1/4 of the nation’s Bessemer steel
4. Eventually sold his
company to J. P. Morgan for over $400 million
5. Spent rest of life giving
money away to the public: libraries, pensions for
professors, etc. -- in all, about $350 million.
D. J. Pierpont Morgan
1. Owned a Wall Street banking
house which financed the reorganization of
railroads, insurance companies, and banks.
-- Reputation for integrity; did not believe "money power" was dangerous
unless
it was in the wrong hands.
2. In 1901, he launched
the enlarged United States Steel Corporation
a. Combination of Carnegie’s holdings and others, and stock watering.
b. Corporation capitalized at $1.4 billion making it America’s first
billion dollar corporation (greater than sum of entire nation in 1800!)
-- However, half of stock’s worth was water
c.
Elbert H. Gary, a co-leader of USX.
3. Charles Schwab
also important in shaping steel industry (Bethlehem Steel)
VI. The Petroleum industry and other trusts
A. First well in PA in 1859 started U.S. petroleum
industry overnight.
1. Oil would dwarf the wealth
generated by all the gold extracted in West.
2. Kerosene emerged as standard
for lamps, crippling the old whale-oil business.
B. John D. Rockefellar
1. Came from a modest background
and became a successful businessman at 19.
2. In 1870, organized
the Standard Oil Co. of Ohio.
-- By 1877, Rockefeller controlled 95% of oil refineries in U.S.
3. Pursued a policy of rule
or ruin; ruthless in his business tactics
-- Believed he was obeying law of nature -- survival of the fittest.
4. Standard Oil produced
a quality product at a cheap price which fueled
important economies home and abroad
a. Large-scale methods of production and distribution
b. Consolidation proved more profitable than ruinous price wars.
C. Gustavus F. Swift & Philip Armour
became kings of the meat industry
-- Enormous profits from
western herds
D. Andrew Mellon
1. Financier who became
one of America’s greatest venture capitalists
2. Expert ability to select,
back, and acquire shares of promising business
ventures such as Aluminum Co. of America, Gulf Oil Corporation, and
the Pittsburgh Coal Company.
VII. "nouveau riche" – arrogant class of "new rich" after Civil
War
A. Older American aristocracy of successful merchants
and professionals highly
resentful and concerned
about the change in the order of society
1. Patrician families losing
power and prestige in the face of the "new rich"
2. Economic liberty and
community involvement being overshadowed by
monopoly and political machines.
B. Antitrust crusaders generally led by the "best
men" -- genteel old-family do-gooders
who were conservative defenders
of their own vanishing influence.
-- Roosevelts, Wilson, Mugwumps
C. Despite plutocracy and deep class divisions,
the captains of industry provided material
progress.
D. Social Darwinism
1. Charles Darwin
-- Origin of the Species ("survival of the fittest" theory)
-- Although Darwin’s work was rooted in biology, others used his theory
as the foundation
for promoting the virtues of free-market capitalism.
2. Herbert Spencer
-- advocated idea of Social Darwinism
a. Applied Darwin’s theory of natural selection to human competition
b. Established sociology as a respected discipline in the U.S.
3. "Millionaires a product
of natural selection": William Graham Sumner --What Social
Classes Owe to Each Other
E. Some argued that Divine Providence was responsible
for winners and losers in society
1. God had granted wealth
as He had given grace for material and spiritual
salvation of the select few.
-- John D. Rockefeller: "The good Lord gave me my money"
2. Resembled "Divine Right
of Kings" in justifying power
3. Identify of interest
idea held that existing hierarchy was just and decreed by God.
4. Those who stayed poor
must be lazy and lacking in enterprise.
a. Many of the new rich had succeeded from modest beginnings (Carnegie)
b. Rev. Russell Conwell: "Acres of Diamonds" lectures
made him rich.
-- "There is not a poor person in the U.S. who was not made poor by his
own shortcomings."
F. The Gospel of Wealth -- justified uneven
distribution of wealth by industrialists
1. Andrew Carnegie:The
Gospel of Wealth synthesized prevailing attitudes of wealth
and survival of the fittest.
2. Wealth was God’s will
3. Stated money should be
give away for the public good but not to individuals in
want (Rockefeller gave away $550 million by his death at age 97).
4. Believed in the long
run extreme disparities of wealth were good for the "race," because
the wealthy added to civilization.
5. Believed alternative
to inequities of wealth was universal squalor.
6. Identity-of-interest
argument
G. By 1890, value of all property in U.S. estimated
at $65 billion; $25 billion of which
was represented in the assets
of corporations.
VIII. Government regulation of trusts
A. Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890
1. Created in response to
public demand for curbing excesses of trusts.
2. Provision: Forbade
combinations in restraint of trade, without any distinction
between "good" trusts and "bad" trusts.
3. Largely ineffective as
it had no significant enforcement mechanism.
a. First 7 of 8 decisions presented by attorney general were shot down
by Court.
-- U.S. v. E.C. Knight, Co. 1895 – Court ruled sugar refining was
manufacturing and
not trade or commerce!
b. More trusts formed in 1890s under President McKinley than during
any other like period.
c. Not until 1914 (Clayton Anti-Trust Act) was the Sherman Act given teeth.
4. Ironically, used by
corporations to curb labor unions or labor combinations
that were deemed to be restraining trade.
B. Public interests now eclipsing private enterprise
in political power due to such acts as
the Interstate Commerce
Act of 1887 and the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
-- Revolutionary in the
sense that public was shifting toward government protection
IX. The "New South"
A. The Changing South after the Civil War
1. Politics: for Southern
whites, Democratic party only viable political organization.
-- To ensure its control, each southern state passed legislation taking
voting rights away
from blacks (e.g., literacy tests, poll taxes, and "grandfather clauses.")
2. Social: White leadership
adopted Jim Crow laws that required racial separation of public
facilities.
-- Most political/economic power remained in hands of powerful white aristocracy.
3. "Redeemers" and "Bourbons":
Powerful
conservative oligarchy that controlled every
Southern state government after the end of Reconstruction.
-- Although at times similar to antebellum planter class, it also included
merchants,
industrialists, railroad developers, or financiers.
B. "New South" --Some gains made in textile
industry but by 1900, South still produced a
smaller % of nation’s manufactured goods than it had before the Civil War.
1. Henry W. Grady,
editor of the Atlanta Constitution, most famous of southerners who
urged the South to out-produce the North commercially and industrially.
2. Mill towns: Most visible
signs of Southern industrial expansion after Reconstruction.
a. Textile factories encouraged by Southern conservative governments, which
could offer
low taxes, a cheap labor supply, and an abundance of water power.
b. Mill towns controlled their workers’ lives. While providing community
and solidarity
among workers, mill towns prevented union organization.
C. The Tobacco Trust
1. Tobacco industry grew
dramatically after 1880 when machine-made cigarettes replaced
hitherto practice of rolling one’s own
2. James Buchanan Duke
& family: mass-produced slim cigarettes: Amer. Tobacco Co
D. Industrialism partially impaired by high railroad
rates traveling northward.
E. Agriculture still dominated; South remained rural,
industrialism slow to take hold
1. Plantation system degenerated
into a pattern of absentee land ownership among both with
and black sharecroppers.
2. Crop-lien system
was at the core of Southern agriculture -- Sharecropping
a. A farmer mortgaged his ungrown crop in return for use of land and to
acquire supplies
form the owner of a local store selling tools or seed.
b. Since merchants seldom had competitors, farmers paid inflated prices
for goods
purchased on credit as well as high interest.
c. Often, a farmers harvest was given away in its entirety to the merchant
but the farmers
still remained in debt.
d. Indebtedness tended to increase annually resulting in the eventual loss
of land for the
farmer.
e. This system of economic tyranny contributed in increase in cash crop
growth as the
were seen as a more profitable way of paying off debts.
F. The "Lost Cause" and "Redemption"
1. Southerners remained
proud of their defiance in defense of states’ rights during the
Civil War.
2. After Reconstruction
ended, "Redemption" resulted in Confederate memorials and
cemeteries commemorating the "Lost Cause."
3. Joel Chandler
Harris: Uncle Remus (1880)
a. Harris’ tales depicted antebellum slave society as a harmonious world.
b. Nostalgic tales popular and showed the role and power of the Southern
past.
X. Impact of the Second Industrial Revolution on America
A. Standard of living rose sharply as well-fed American
workers enjoyed more physical
comforts than any other
nation.
B. Urban centers mushroomed as factories increasingly
demanded more labor
C. American agriculture eclipsed by industrialism:
railroads, steel, oil, electricity
D. Free-enterprise eclipsed by monopoly
E. The work-place became regimented and impersonal
F. Women achieved social and economic independence
as careers in typing, stenography,
and switchboard operators
became available.
-- Marriages delayed, smaller
families resulted
G. Social stratification most pronounced in U.S.
history
1. By 1900, about 10% controlled
90% of the nation’s wealth.
2. Lower classes envious
and resentful of the nouveau riche
H. Foreign trade developed as high U.S. productivity
threatened to flood American market.
XI. Rise of the Labor Movement
A. Conditions for workers in the 2nd industrial
revolution were precarious
1. Low-skilled jobs make
workers expendable as number of workers abundant
a. Automation created short-term losses of jobs; better in long-run
b. Before mechanization, most manufacturing done by skilled craft workers
(such as shoemakers, saddle-makers, etc.); earliest unions were trade unions.
c. Working conditions often dismal and impersonal
d. Recourse minimal the face of the vast power of industrialists
i. Strikes often nullified by the use of "scab" workers
ii. Conservative federal courts often ruled in favor of corporations
iii. Corporations could also ask states to call in troops.
iv. Employers could lock-out rebellious workers & starve them into
submission.
v. Forced to many to sign "ironclad oaths" or "yellow dog contracts"
which were agreements not to join a labor union.
vi. Also blacklisted uncompliant workers.
e. Corporations sometimes owned a "company town" where high priced grocery
stores, easy credit, and sometimes rent deductions created a cycle debt.
f. Public grew tired of frequent strikes; often unsympathetic to the workers’
plight.
-- Strike seemed to many foreign and socialistic and thus, unpatriotic.
2. Labor’s goals of curency
reform, greenback currency, and opposition to national banks
alarmed conservatives for the rest of the century.
-- Yet, wages were perhaps the highest in the world.
B. Civil War boosted labor unions
1. Drain of human resources
put more value on labor
2. Mounting cost of living
created urgent incentive to unionization.
-- By 1872, several hundred thousand organized workers and 32 national
unions existed including crafts as bricklayers, typesetters, and shoemakers.
3. Collective bargaining
emerged as standard union practice.
C. National Labor Union organized in 1866
(led by William Sylvis)
1. Major boost to the union
movement.
-- Designed to bring together skilled craft unions into one large one
2. Lasted 6 years; attracted
about 600,000 workers inc. skilled & unskilled farmers
3. Focused on social
reform (such as abolition of the wage system) but also fought
for
goals such as 8-hr. work-day and arbitration of industrial disputes.
-- Succeeded in getting 8-hr day for gov’t workers but laws had no means
of enforcement
and provisions were not implemented.
4. Blacks formed their own
national labor union in 1869 when they were no longer welcome
in the NLU.
5. NLU killed by depression
of 1870s.
D. Molly Maguires (formed in 1875 by Irish
anthracite-coal miners in Pennsylvania)
1. Members were part of
an Irish American secret fraternal organization (Ancient
Order of Hibernians).
2. Mollies used intimidation,
arson, and violence to protest owners’ denial of their
right to unionize.
3. President of Reading
Railroad called in Pinkerton detective agency for help.
-- Mollies infiltrated and incriminting evidence was gathered.
4. Mollies destroyed and
twenty of its members hanged in 1877.
5. The Mollies became martyrs
for labor and a symbol for violence among conservatives.
E. Great Railroad Strike (1877)
1. Several railroads informed
workers wages to be cut by 10% for 2nd time since 1873.
2. First nationwide strike;
paralyzed railroads throughout the East and Midwest and idled
some 100,000 workers.
a. Later, farmers, coal miners, craft workers, and the unemployed joined
in.
b. Involved 14 states and ten railroads.
3. President Hayes sanctioned
use of federal troops in PA; set precedent for future federal
intervention.
-- Led to over 100 deaths and terrified propertied classes.
4. The strike inspired support
for the Greenback-Labor party in 1878 and Workingmen’s
parties in the 1880s.
F. Knights of Labor seized the torch of the
defunct NLU.
1. Background
a. Led by Terence Powderly – a moderate; not a radical
b. Founded in 1869 as a secret society (like the Masons and others)
-- Officially known as The Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor
c. Secrecy continued through to 1881 to forestall possible reprisals by
employers.
d. Used republican imagry associated with Lincoln that each man should
have a say in the
political and economic issues that affected him.
e. Much of leadership and membership was Irish.
2. Sought to include
all workers in "one big union" including blacks & women.
a. Excluded only liquor dealers, gamblers, lawyers, bankers, and stockbrokers.
b. Industrial unionism idea was ahead of its time (not seen until 1930s).
-- Most 19th c. unions were trade unions with skilled workers.
3. Campaigned for economic
and social reform
a. Producers’ cooperatives and codes for safety and health; end
to child labor.
i. Cooperative idea paralleled the Grange in the west.
ii. Sought to replace wage system with all workers owning factories.
b. Fought for an 8-hr workday through winning a number of strikes; higher
pay and equal
pay for women.
c. Government regulation of railroads; postal savings banks, gov’t paper
currency
d. Sought arbitration rather than industrial warfare.
i. Discouraged strikes and violence as a means for change
ii. Powderly’s ban on strikes would be ignored and lead to the Knight’s
demise.
e. Won major strike in 1885 against Gould’s struggling railroads.
-- Victory increased Knight’s membership to more than 700,000 in 1886.
4. Demise due to the Great
Upheaval (1886) – 1,400 strikes involving 500k workers.
a. To many, Knights a huge organization that could throw economy into chaos.
b. Involvement in a number of May Day strikes in 1886 resulted in 50% failure.
c.
Haymarket Square Bombing in Chicago
i. May 4, 1886, Chicago police advanced on a meeting called to protest
alleged
brutalities by the authorities in May Day strikes.
ii. Alleged German anarchists present who advocated a violent overthrow
of gov't
iii. A dynamite bomb was thrown in the crowd that killed 8 police; 60 officers
injured by
police fire; 7 or 8 civilians killed; 30-40 wounded
iv.Resulted in the first full-blown red scare in Chicago for 2 months.
v. Five anarchists sentenced to death and three others given stiff prison
sentences
although nobody could prove they had anything to do with the bombing.
vi. In 1892, Gov. John P. Altgeld, a German-born Democrat pardoned
the 3 survivors
after exhaustive study of the Haymarket case.
-- Defeated for reelection probably due to a conservative backlash.
d. The rise of Workingmen’s parties in various cities scared conservatives
who blacklisted
members through employers’ associations.
-- Employees had to sign "yellow dog" contracts or take "iron clad"
oaths.
e. Knights of Labor became mistakenly associated with anarchists.
-- 8-hr movement suffered and subsequent strikes met with many failures.
f. Inclusion of both skilled and unskilled workers proved a fatal handicap.
i. Unskilled labor could easily be replaced with "scabs."
ii. High-class craft unionists enjoyed a superior bargaining position.
-- Became frustrated with giving up their bargaining advantage due to the
failure of
unskilled labor strikes.
iii. Powerly’s cautious leadership squandered rank-and-file mobilization
by opposing
strikes and forbidding political action.
iv. Skilled craftsmen sought a union of exclusively skilled craft unions.
g. By 1890s, Knights of Labor had only 100,000 members left who ultimately
left to join
other protest groups.
F. American Federation of Labor (AFL)
1. Formed in 1886 under
the leadership of Samuel Gompers
2. Consisted of an association
of self-governing national unions with the AFL
unifying
overall strategy.
3. Gompers’ path fairly
conservative; bitter foe of socialism; non-political
a. Accepted existence of two conflicting classes: workers and employers.
b. Only wanted labor to win its fair share; better wages and hours, and
improved working
conditions ("bread and butter" issues)
c. Did, however, attempt to persuade members to vote for favorable candidates
4. Closed shop
-- all workers in a unionized industry had to belong to the union.
-- Provided necessary funds to ride out prolonged strikes.
5. Chief strategies of AFL:
walk-out and boycott
a. By 1900, about 500,000 members (critics called it the "labor trust")
b. Shortcomings: did not represent unskilled labor esp. women and blacks.
G. Major strikes in the 1890s
1. Homestead Strike
(1892) in Carnegie’s steel plant near Pittsburgh
a. Demonstrated a strong employer could break a union if it hired a
mercenary
police force and gained gov’t and court protection.
b. Frick & Carnegie announced 20% pay slash for steelworkers
c. Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers went on strike
and Frick
then locked them out.
d. Led to worker uprising – factory surrounded; scabs not allowed through
lines
e. Frick called in 300 Pinkerton detectives.
i. Armed strikers forced their assailants to surrender after 9 Pinkertons
and 7 workers
were killed and about 150 wounded.
ii. PA governor brought in 8,000 state militia and scabs replaced workers.
iii. In Sept. scores of workers indicted on 167 counts of murder, rioting,
and
conspiracy; jury eventually found the leaders innocent
f. Union was effectively broken.
2. Pullman Strike, 1894
a. Pullman Co. responded to the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 by building
a model
company town for his workers near the factory in Chicago.
b. Pullman Palace Car Company hit hard by the depression & cut wages
by 1/3 but
maintained rent prices in the company town.
c.
Eugene V. Debs helped to organize the American Railway Union
of about 150K
i. Workers went on strike and even overturned some Pullman cars
ii. Railway traffic from Chicago to Pacific Coast paralyzed.
d. Attorney General Richard Olney sent federal troops stating strikers
interfering with
transit of U.S. mail.
i. President Cleveland: "If it takes the entire army and navy to deliver
a postal card in
Chicago, that card will be delivered"
ii. Troops sent in over Governor Altgeld’s objections and violence spread
to several
states costing 34 lives.
iii. Strike crushed and 150,000 ARU destroyed.
e. Debs and his lieutenants sentenced to 6 mos. jail time for contempt
of court.
-- Debs used his time to read radical literature which laid a philosophical
foundation for his later leadership of the Socialist movement in U.S.
f. First time gov’t used an injunction to break a strike
i. The gov’t made striking, an activity not previously defined as illegal,
a crime
-- Labor cried "gov’t by injunction"
ii. Laborites held in contempt of court could be imprisoned w/o jury trial.
iii. Populists & other debtors concerned as Pullman episode proof of
an
alliance between big business and the courts.
3. Between 1881-1900, 23,000
strikes occurred involving 6.6 million workers.
a. Biggest weakness: only represented abut 3% of all working people.
b. Public finally began to accept workers’ right to organize, bargain collectively,
and strike.
-- Labor Day made a legal holiday by Congress in 1894.
H. Labor movement by the early 20th century
1. Lochner v.
New
York (1905) – Supreme Court overturned a New York law limiting
New York bakers to 60/hr weeks.
2. Danbury Hatters case,
1908 in CT had assessed more than $250K on striking
hatmakers who were striking; workers were to lose savings and homes.
a. Supreme Court had ruled trade union had violated Sherman Act by interfering
with interstate commerce.
3. Supreme Court in 1908
upheld use of broadest injunctions and did much to destroy
organized labor.
-- In 1910 membership had been reduced to 1.5 million, down from 2 million
in 1904
250k in 1897; 870k in 1900
4. AFL vigorously entered
national politics in 1908 and endorsed Democratic party
5. Clayton Anti-Trust Act,
1913—exempted unions from Sherman Antitrust provisions.
a. Hailed by Gompers as "the magna carta of labor."
b. By 1917 AFL membership reached 3 million
6. "Red Scare" after World
War I led to crackdowns on labor and the movement declined
significantly until Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal in the 1930s.
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