i. the age of uncertainty “who can tell the weird and ghastly story of the last quarter of the...
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I. The Age of Uncertainty
“Who can tell the weird and ghastly story of the last quarter of the nineteenth-century?” - John Swinton
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1861, Alexander frees the serfs (Russia)
1862, Emancipation Proclamation (U.S.)
1868, the Meiji restoration (Japan)
1876, the “Porfirato” (Mexico)
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I. The Age of Uncertainty, 1877 through 1898
A rural society suffering from extreme sectional polarization led by a weak federal government, moving through a 30 year boom and bust cycle out of which came corporate giants. These conditions provoked widespread utopian and radical movements, constantly thwarted by the nation’s rigid party system and racist, ethnic and political divisions.
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Post Civil War Westward Migration
• Stay on the same latitude• A middle class
phenomenon• Men went first to industrial and
extractive regions; families to agricultural areas
• Coincided with the boom and bust cycle
• Settlers moved over and over
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The Chinese Exclusion Act, 1882• Congressional
response to theWorkingmen’sParty ofCalifornia
• Prohibited most Chinese from immigrating to the United States
• Exceptions: wives of men already in the U.S.; teachers, students, and merchants
• Chinese-American population halved by 1920
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Chinatown, San Francisco, 1882. . . indicative of enclave America. 40 percent of the population of NYC spoke some other language besides English by 1910
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Yick Wo v. Hopkins (1886)• Yick Wo was denied a
permit to operate a laundry in San Francisco (while white operators received permits).
• U.S. Supreme Court declared that the application of a statute as well as the statute itself must not be discriminatory
• Declared City of San Francisco in violation of the 14th amendment
• Case later cited in Texas v. Hernandez (1954)
Yick Wo Elementary School, SF
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The Exodusters, African American migrants from the Mississippi Valley to Kansas
“Pap” Singleton
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Fall of corn prices in the late 19th century• 1867: 78 cents a bushel• 1873: 31 cents a bushel• 1889: 23 cents a bushel
Rise of wheat production in the far west• 1890: half the wheat in
the U.S.• 1910: 65 percent of the
wheat in the U.S.
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Texas cattle trails; a Texas longhorn posing for the camera; a piece of the XIT ranch
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Why farmers didn’t like the Gold Standard . . .
Imagine a world in 1880 with 1 farmer, 1 bushel of wheat to sell and 1 consumer with 1 dollar?
Q. How much is that bushel going to sell for?(A. 1 dollar)Suppose in 1881 the population goes up . . . Now there are 2 farmers and 2 bushels of wheat
being sold to 2 consumers.But, still only one dollar because the dollar is
based on the extant supply of gold!Q. How much do those two farmers get for their
wheat?A. Still one crummy buck, which the two farmers
have to divide among them!
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An alliance meeting in the 1880s
The Peoples Party, 1892• Calls for government warehouses to store
crops and loan money to farmers at fair rates
• Direct primaries• Progressive
incometax
• Direct election of senators
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The Dawes Act, 1887“Kill the Indian to save the man.”
• Privatization of reservation land– 1881 Indians held
155,000,000 acres– 1890 they held
104,000,000– 1900 they held
77,000,000
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The Big Boom of the mid- to late- 19th century
• 1880 to 1914: U.S. steel production goes up from 2 to 30 million tons
• 1860 to 1890: Half a million patents registered with the government (36,000 registered from 1790 to 1860)
• 1900: 20 million industrial workers (up from 4.3 million in 1860)
• 193,000 miles of railroad in 1900 (30,000 in 1860)
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The Big Boom of the mid- to late - 19th century
Innovations:• Telephone• Telegraph
• Camera • Mechanized farm
equipment• Otis safety elevator
• Mass produced steel• Wireless telegraphy
• Electric light bulb• The Typewriter
• The Corporation
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Immigration to the U.S., 1871-1900
1871-1880
1881-1890
1891-1900
1901-1910
From Europe 2,274,874 4,783,413 3,655,673 8,175,296
From Asia 123,803 65,380 71,236 243,567
From the Americas
404,044 425,967 38,972 361,888
From everywhere
2,814,793 5,292,259 3,794,259 8,832,666
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Jay Cooke’s Panic of 1873• Agreed to finance
and construct the Northern Pacific railroad
• Mortgaged Northern Pacific holdings to finance construction
• Couldn’t sell the bonds
• Huge section of the railroad system collapsed
• U.S. economy collapsed Jay Cooke
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U.S. Steel, 1901
• First billion dollar U.S. Corporation• 11 companies• 800 plants• Controlled 60 percent of all steel
output in the U.S.
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The Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890
•Outlawed “every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce.”
•More often used to attack unions at first
•Not seriously enforced until 1901
•Mergers continued unabated . . .
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Industrial accidents in the late-19th century
• 1880 to 1900:35,000 people died from industrial accidents, per year
• More than all fatalities during the Civil War
• 500,000 injuries per year
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Frederick Winslow Taylor, 1856-1915
• Pioneered the study of industrial tasks
• Developed methods of timing and measuring the efficiency of individual factory jobs
• Published Principles of Scientific Management in 1911
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Carnegie’s Gospel of Wealth
•set an example of modest, unostentatious living
•to consider all surplus revenues which come to him simply as trust funds for the community—
•the man of wealth thus becoming the mere agent and trustee for his poorer brethren
•bringing to their service his superior wisdom
•doing for them better than they would or could do for themselves.
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Malthus and social Darwinism
• Social Darwinism: “Survival of the Fittest”
• Malthus: Nature requires “corrections” to fix imbalance between population growth and food supply
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Henry George’s economic analysis
• Problem! As civilization advances, labor saving devices proliferate
• Industrial progress leads to overproduction, depressions
become endemic• Solution? THE SINGLE TAX! A tax
on unused land or speculated land
• The government has revenue for social needs!
• Extra land for agrarian settlement• Progress and Poverty
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The Knights of Labor• Organized
themselves around “assemblies” of workers
• Sought to challenge the wage system in favor of cooperatives
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Accident rates on railroadsBetween July 1888 and June 1889 the railroads
employed:
704,443 people
of these,
20,028 were injured
and 1,972 died
a 3 percent rate of injury and fatality Jimmy Rodgers, the Singing Brakeman
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The American Federation of Labor (AFL)
• Gompers advocates “pure and simple” trade unionism
• “Pure” because AFL stayed out of politics
• “Simple” because AFL organized only skilled workers
• 1 million members by 1901 . . .
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Bryan’s 1896 political program• A graduated Federal income tax
• Direct election of United States Senators
• Greater regulation of the railroads, telegraph, and
monopolies to protect consumers
• Lower tariffs to protect consumers
• Backing the dollar with silver as well as gold for a more flexible
currency
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William Jennings Bryan, “Cross of Gold” speech, 1896
Republican William McKinley
Tom Watson of the People’s Party
Election of 1896: McKinley beats Bryan, 51 to 46.7 %
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Frank L. Baum, Wizard of Oz, 1900• Dorothy = average
American citizen• Scarecrow =
farmer• Woodman =
factory worker• Lion = William
Jennings Bryan• Mark Hanna = The
wizard of OUNCE (aka .OZ)