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America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

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America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890. The Second Industrial Revolution. The Expanding Industrial Economy. Railroads and the National Market. From Competition to Monopoly. Andrew Carnegie. John Rockefeller . J.P. Morgan. Steel Production, 1880-1914. American Attitudes Toward the Robber Barons. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890
Page 2: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

The Second Industrial

Revolution

Page 3: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

The Expanding Industrial Economy

Page 4: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Railroads and the National Market

Page 5: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890
Page 6: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Andrew Carnegie

J.P. Morgan

John Rockefeller

Page 7: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Steel Production, 1880-1914

Page 8: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

American Attitudes Toward the Robber Barons

Page 9: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

The Haves vs. the Have-Nots

This was the cover of Matthew Hale Smith’s book about NYC. This illustrates the growing fear of rising poverty in the midst of growing wealth

Page 10: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

A View of Urban Poverty

Jacob A. Riis, author How the other Half Lives: Studies among the Tenements of New York (1890)

Page 11: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Gilded Age Politics

Page 12: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Political Corruption

Page 13: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Political Stalemate

How healthy was Gilded Age politics?

Page 14: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Gilded Age Society

Page 15: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

American Social Darwinism

William Graham Sumner

What a blessing to let the unreformed drunkard and his children die, and not increase them above all others…How wise to let those of weak digestion from gluttony die, and the temperate to live. What benevolence to let the lawless perish, and the prudent survive.

--The Christian Advocate(1879)

Page 16: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Debating Freedom in the Gilded Age

Horace White

The right of each man to labor as much or as little as he chooses , and to enjoy his own earnings, is the very foundation stone of….freedom.

Page 17: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

The Overwhelming Labor Question

Page 18: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

The Knights of Labor

Terrance Powderly

Page 19: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Henry GeorgeSo long as all the increased wealth which modern progress brings goes but to build up great fortunes, to increase luxury and make sharper the contrast between the House of Have and the House of Want, progress is not real and cannot be permanent.

--Henry George, Progress and Poverty

Page 20: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Edward Bellamy

Bellamy’s Utopia

Page 21: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

The Social Gospel

Walter Rauschenbusch

Page 22: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

Labor Unrest

1880-1900: more than 23,000 strikes (most in the industrial world)

Page 23: America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890

The Haymarket Riot, 1886