US History Chapter 13
scabs
negative term for a worker called by an employer to replace striking laborers
cartel
loose association of businesses that make the same product
trust
a group of separate companies that are placed under the control of a single managing board
Bessemer process
a process for making steel more efficiently, patented in 1856
Samuel F.B. Morse
artist and inventor; developed telegraph and More code in 1844
monoply
complete control of a product or service
John D. Rockefeller
created standard oil and standard oil trust (barrels, refineries, pipe lines, and railroads)
social Darwinism
derived from Darwin's theory of natural selection, the belief that society should do as little as possible to interfere with people's pursuit of success
Henry Bessemer
developed a new process for making steel; received the first patent for the Bessemer process
Andrew Carneigie
first worked for Vanderbilt; built bridges out of stronger steel (railroad ties); sold steel to JP Morgan; used the method of vertical consolidation
robber barons
implies that the business leaders built their fortunes by stealing from the public; they drained the country of its natural resources and persuaded public officials to interpret laws in their favor
George Pullman
inventor; developed luxury sleeping cars (Pullman cars), maintained remarkable health and sanitation conditions, athletic programs, and a military band; a strict man
Thomas Edison
inventor; developed the light bulb, the phonograph, and hundreds of other inventions in the late 1800s and early 1900s
Alexander Graham Bell
inventor; developed the telephone in 1876; one of the founders of American Telephone and Telegraph
JP Morgan
investment banker; invested in Thomas Edison; created General Electric; built the Panama Canal (invested and provided steel for it)
labor unions
organization of workers formed to protect the interest of its members
collective bargaining
process in which workers negotiate as a group with employers
horizontal consolidation
process of bringing together many firms in the same business to form one large company
vertical consolidation
process of gaining control of the many different businesses that make up all phases of a product's development
mass production
production of goods in great amounts
yellow dog contracts
promised that workers would never join a union or participate in a strike
transcontinental railroad
railway extending from coast to coast
Cornelius Vanderbilt
started a shipping empire; invested everything into the railroad
captains of industry
suggests that the business leaders served their nation in a positive way (increasing the supply of goods, raising productivity, and expanding markets)
Henry Ford
transformed the auto invention into reality; developed the assembly line