History- Unit 2
William Cody
"Buffalo Bill", professional buffalo hunter, started Wild West Show
What year was the first recorded strike?
1877
Interstate Commerce Act (ICC)
1887 law passed to regulate railroad and other interstate businesses
trust
A group of corporations run by a single board of directors
Jp Morgan
A highly successful banker who bought out Carnegie. With Carnegie's holdings and some others, he launched U.S Steel and made it the first billion dollar corporation.
George Pullman
CEO of a luxury freight car company, invented first railroad sleeping car
James Naismith
Canadian immigrant who invented basketball
1882 law that prohibited the immigration of Chinese laborers
Chinese Exclusion Act
first rollercoaster
Coney Island, 1884
Where did most immigrants arrive when they got to the U.S?
Ellie Island, located in New York Harbor
John D. Rockefeller
Established the Standard Oil Company, wealthiest american of all time
Joseph Pulitzer
Hungarian immigrant publisher of the Evening World in NYC, established the Pulitzer prizes
First legislation meant to regulate big business
ICC and Sherman Antitrust Act
Nikola Tesla
Immigrant who invented electrical system
Eugene Debs
Leader of the American Railway Union, he voted to aid workers in the Pullman strike. He was jailed for six months for disobeying a court order after the strike was over.
Thomas Edison
Major inventor with over 1,000 patents. Some inventions - light bulb, the phonograph, and the motion picture camera
Reasons behind the growth of industry in the U.S
More workers, population growth, rise of entrepreneurs, and natural resources
Most densely populated city with immigrants
NYC
Knights of Labor (1869)
Nationwide labor union that was open to all workers.
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Railroad tycoon during the Gilded Age; self-made multi-millionaire. One of the robber barons
different names given to powerful businessmen and there trusts and monopolies, robber barons was given by those who felt the increased prices were unfair to consumers, captains of industry by those who admired them for their achievements like steel and railroads and providing lots of jobs.
Robber Barons/Captains of Industry
Alexander Graham Bell
Scotland immigrant who invented the telephone in 1876
Andrew Carnegie
Scotland immigrant who led the expansion of the American Steel industry and became one of the richest in America
purifying iron to make strong , lightweight steel
bessemer process
negotiation of wages and other conditions of employment by an organized body of employees.
collective bargaining
communities in which residents rely upon one company for jobs, housing, and buying goods
company towns
businesses that are owned by many investors who buy shares of stock
corporations
cholera
deadly disease caused by contaminated water or food
people who build and manage businesses or enterprises in order to make a profit, often risking their own money or livelihoods
entrepreneurs
freedom to run a business with minimal government regulation
free enterprise
term coined by Mark Twain, depicting the U.S. as having a "rotten core covered with gold paint."; post reconstruction era
gilded age
in Chicago, a protest gained national attention for an 8 hr work day. Protestors gathered in Chicago's haymarket square. A bomb was thrown by a protestor, killing a policeman. Dozens of people were killed, 8 protesters were tried for murder and four were executed
haymarket riot
steel makers and miners strike at the Carnegie Steel Company
homestead strike
type of monopoly where a company buys out all of its competition. Ex. Rockefeller
horizontal integration
American Federation of Labor
loose organization of 100 unions of skilled workers
a mass killing perpetrated by anti-striker militia because of conflict between coal miners. 20 people died, 11 of them children
ludlow massacre
public systems that could carry large numbers of people fairly inexpensively
mass transit
complete control of a product or business by one person or group
monopoly
3 things the south was required to grow industrially after the war
natural resources, labor, and capital investment
Sherman Antitrust trust
outlawed monopolistic business
exclusive rights over an invention
patent
detectives hired by employers as private police force, often used to end strikes
pinkertons
Why wasn't the south desirable for skilled workers?
poorly educated, and nobody wanted to work for low wages
a tax on imported goods that raises the price of imports so people will buy domestic goods
protective tariff
factors that draws or attracts people to another location
pull factors
in Chicago, Pullman cut wages but refused to lower rents in the "company town", Eugene Debs had American Railway Union refuse to use Pullman cars, Debs thrown in jail after being sued, strike achieved nothing
pullman strike
Conspicious Consumerism
purchasing of goods and services for the purpose of impressing others
times when workers refuse to work until owners improve conditions
strikes
low-cost multifamily housing
tenements
an approach typical of traditional mass production in which a company controls all phases of a highly complex production process.
vertical integration
Frederick Law Olmsted
was the most prominent landscape architect of the time, developing parks in Philadelphia New York