After spending the last few weeks studying the theme People, Places, and Power through the lens of the topic Labor vs Big Business, we started to learn about the themes application in other topics. The past two days in class, different groups gave presentations on the topic that they had studied. Each group had a different topic and made a presentation, a survey, and a short video. All of these topics allowed a broad idea of the theme to be formed.
Imperialism: America
This topic was about how the United States took control of many Central and South American countries. They did this out of interests to boost patriotism and the economy and assert their power. The United States invaded Cuba to boost the economy by growing crops there and showcase their powerful navy by building naval bases.
Imperialism: Europe and Africa
Acting on the belief that they were superior, due to social Darwinism, European powers met with each other and laid claims to all of Africa. They were able to conquer Africa because of their technological superiority. They went in with the sole goal of helping themselves and their economies and did not care about the Africans, millions of whom died.
Native Americans and the West
The United States kicked Native Americans out of the West as settlers expanded west. They were motivated by the need for land to farm and forced the Native Americans to walk hundreds of miles to reservations where the U.S. tried to force their culture on them. These reservations had very poor land for farming and often did not even have enough water.
Immigration: Asia
It was very difficult for many Asian immigrants to enter the country as laws barred Asian laborers from going to United States, so many pretended to be wives or children of American citizens. The ones who did immigrate worked dangerous jobs at very low wages. White workers did not like that they worked for less and blamed them for their own difficulties and they discriminated against the immigrants with laws such as one that prevented them from going to white schools.
Immigration: Europe
Immigrants from Europe were subject to many difficulties, discrimination, and hatred. On Ellis Island, they faced grueling interrogations and health checkups and were deported if they did not meet standards. Once in the country, they lived in cramped tenements in ghettos and had difficulty finding work.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Friday, June 13, 2014
The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Poorer #3
For this part of the People, Places, and Power project, we worked in groups to create a presentation, photo essay, and survey. This presented both difficulties and benefits. One of those benefits was a better understanding of the topic, Labor Vs. Big Business. One thing the group did was narrow down the key terms which made me realize what the key details of the topic were and what was not important to the topic. I also understood some of the key terms better because other peoples' definitions did a better job at explaining them to me and their significance than the sources did. My group also categorized the key terms and enduring understandings into people, business, labor, and strikes. This method of organization helped to fit everything into people, places, and power. The group also refined both the wording and content of the enduring understandings which made them fit the theme even better as well. Narrowing them down to four made us decide what was actually important. Also, assigning a category and specific key terms to each enduring understanding helped increase my understanding of the topic. They put it together with relevant information and helped to reach the core of their meanings.
The process of making the photo essay was very interesting and educational. We had to work as a group to decide on the direction we would take with the photo essay and which images to use, which involved a decent amount of disagreements. However, this process of discussion led to a more refined and well thought out project and, overall, proved beneficial. Having to write very short captions to explain a lot of information also helped to refine our topic. For the photo essay, we used an app called Videolicious. This app had a lot of problems and limitations and I would not want to use it again for an assignment like this. One main issue was it only allowed the video to be 60 seconds long. This was far too short and led to a lot of important information being left out and the recording being almost un-understandably fast. We ended up having to make two videos, so it would not sound so rushed. Overall, the app had too many issues to use well and create a quality video.
The process of making the photo essay was very interesting and educational. We had to work as a group to decide on the direction we would take with the photo essay and which images to use, which involved a decent amount of disagreements. However, this process of discussion led to a more refined and well thought out project and, overall, proved beneficial. Having to write very short captions to explain a lot of information also helped to refine our topic. For the photo essay, we used an app called Videolicious. This app had a lot of problems and limitations and I would not want to use it again for an assignment like this. One main issue was it only allowed the video to be 60 seconds long. This was far too short and led to a lot of important information being left out and the recording being almost un-understandably fast. We ended up having to make two videos, so it would not sound so rushed. Overall, the app had too many issues to use well and create a quality video.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
The Rich Get Richer and The Poor Get Poorer #2
In the effort to deepen my understanding of the theme, “People, Places, and Power,” and the topic, “Labor vs. Big Business,” I completed an interactive activity on the topic. The interactive activity, about the Homestead Strike of 1892, can be found at: http://ftp.learner.org/courses/amerhistory/interactives/sources/E5/e1/event.php.
This activity provided many primary sources about the strike from the perspectives of the strikers, the company, and the press. From this activity I was able to gather more information my topic, additional evidence to back up my enduring understandings, and also develop another enduring understanding.
Key Terms
Transcontinental Railroad- railroad going from east to west coast, example of poor treatment of workers and corruption by company
Immigrant Workers- used as cheap form of labor by many corporations
Mass Production- production in large quantities
Andrew Carnegie- Powerful and wealthy industrialist who created US Steel Corporation
Robber Barons- term used to describe powerful industrialists implying they built fortune by stealing from public
Captains of Industry- term used to describe powerful industrialists implying they had positive effect on nation
John D Rockefeller- Powerful and wealthy industrialist who created Standard Oil Company
Social Darwinism- extended Darwin's natural selection to society and economic success, argued society and government should not interfere with business
Oligopoly- market structure which is dominated by only a few large profitable firms
Monopoly- complete control of a product or service by one company
Economics of Scale- as production increases, cost per item decreases
Vertical Consolidation- control of the many different businesses that make up all phases of a products development
Horizontal Consolidation- bringing together many firms in same business
The Sherman Antitrust Act- outlawed any combination of companies that restrained interstate trade or commerce
Union- organization of workers that gave them power in numbers
Strike- organized refusal to work by workers as form of protest, often turned violent during the period
Scab- worker brought in to break strike
Great Railroad Strike of 1877- strike over wage cuts of railroad workers that began series of violent labor strikes
Haymarket Riot- labor demonstration that turned deadly when bomb exploded at police that resulted in many deaths and wrongful punishments of falsely accused conspirators. Well known example of tension between police and protesters
Homestead Strike- strike against Homestead steel mill in Pennsylvania.
Enduring Understandings
Those with great economic power and those with great political power tend to have aligned interests:
- J.P. Morgan made sure his creation of US Steel Corporation was successful “by making sure Congress passed tariffs keeping out foreign steel” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 257).
- The Central Pacific Railroad “spent $200,000 in Washington on bribes to get 9 million acres of free land and $24 million in bonds” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 254).
- "Governor Pattison, being convinced that Sheriff McCleary is unable to restore order at Homestead, has ordered out the entire National Guard–8,500 men-all the available military force of the state, to Homestead for service. It is understood that the Governor's purpose in calling out the entire National Guard is to make sure that there will be no demonstration on the part of the locked-out men. He thinks that men will quietly submit before such an overwhelming force, while they might resist if one regiment was sent here" (New York Herald, July 11, 1892).
People in power have little regard for the wellbeing of the lower class:
- “The Union Pacific [Railroad] used twenty thousand workers- war veterans and Irish immigrants, who laid 5 miles of track a day and died by the hundreds in the heat, the cold, and the battles with Indians opposing the invasion of their territory” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 255).
- “One Italian man, told he was going to Connecticut to work on the railroad, was taken instead to sulfate mines in the south, where he and his fellows were watched over by armed guards in their barracks and in the mines, given only enough money to pay for their railroad fare and tools, and very little to eat” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 266).
- "The company would make no more agreements with the Amalgamated Association; it would itself determine the wages to be paid. In fact, he would not recognize the union at all. He would not treat with the employees collectively, as before. He would close the mills, and the men might consider themselves discharged. Thereafter they would have to apply for work individually, and the pay would be arranged with every worker separately" (Living My Life).
People will do anything and risk everything to be heard and protect their rights.
- Shows large force of strikers after defeating Pinkerton detectives, hired security brought in to stop the strikes. The violence of the incident and solidarity of strikers shows there determination to win the strike. (Cover of Harper's Weekly, July 16, 1892)
- Now the troubles down at Homestead were brought about this way,
When a grasping corporation had the audacity to say:
"You must all renounce your union and forswear your liberty
And we will give you a chance to live and die in slavery."
Now this sturdy band of workingmen started out at the break of day,
Determination in their faces which plainly meant to say:
"No one can come and take our homes for which we have toiled so long,
No one can come and take our places—no, here’s where we belong!" ("Song of Strike" by George Swetnam)
The people on the bottom of the power
structure in the struggle between laborers and big business were the factory
workers. Businesses only amassed there massive amounts of wealth at the expense
of their workers. These workers faced low wages and horrible working
conditions. If they spoke up, they were fired. Workers tried to form unions so
they could unite and have more power to fight the corporations than they did as
individuals. However, the companies did not want this to happen and many, such
as at the Homestead factory, refused to recognize the unions (Living My Life). To try and be heard and have their demands met, workers would go on strike. These strikes could become very violent such as the Homestead strike did where many were killed and both private mercenaries and the states entire national guard, 8,500 men, were brought in to stop it (New York Herald, July 11, 1892). These strikes were a display of solidarity for the strikers. They sang songs with lyrics like:
"Now, boys, we are out on
strike, you can help us if you like,
But you need not till I tell you what it's about.
They want to lower our wages, we think it is not right;
So for union's cause I want you all to shout.
But you need not till I tell you what it's about.
They want to lower our wages, we think it is not right;
So for union's cause I want you all to shout.
We will sing the
union's praise while our voices we can raise" ("The Homestead Strike")
While these strikes usually very large and well organized, they often reaped little reward because the corporations would break up the strikes or hire new workers rather than give in to the strikers demands and lower their profits. With little change occurring, the workers were horribly mistreated and powerless, so many workers suffered and remained in horrible conditions at the bottom of the power structure. They were victims of the power of the corporations.
Sunday, June 1, 2014
The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Poorer #1
Almost all historical events
have these three commonalities; they involve people, places, and power. Since
this theme is so frequently present in history, it can be used to study almost
any topic. This unit in history, is a project studying this theme on various
topics, mine being Labor vs. Big Business. This particular post is to define
the key terms of the readings on the topic and to develop some “enduring
understandings,” general statements taken from the topic that can apply to
anything.
Key Terms
Transcontinental Railroad- railroad going from east to west coast, example of poor
treatment of workers and corruption by company
Immigrant Workers-
used as cheap form of labor by many corporations
Mass Production-
production in large quantities
Andrew Carnegie-
Powerful and wealthy industrialist who created US Steel Corporation
Robber Barons-
term used to describe powerful industrialists implying they built fortune by
stealing from public
Captains of Industry-
term used to describe powerful industrialists implying they had positive effect
on nation
John D Rockefeller- Powerful
and wealthy industrialist who created Standard Oil Company
Social Darwinism- extended
Darwin's natural selection to society and economic success, argued society and
government should not interfere with business
Oligopoly- market
structure which is dominated by only a few large profitable firms
Monopoly-
complete control of a product or service by one company
Economics of Scale- as
production increases, cost per item decreases
Vertical Consolidation-
control of the many different businesses that make up all phases of a products
development
Horizontal Consolidation- bringing together many firms in same business
The Sherman Antitrust Act- outlawed any combination of companies that restrained
interstate trade or commerce
Union- organization of
workers that gave them power in numbers
Strike-
organized refusal to work by workers as form of protest
Scab- worker brought in
to break strike
Great Railroad Strike of 1877- strike over wage cuts of railroad workers that began
series of violent labor strikes
Haymarket Riot-
labor demonstration that turned deadly when bomb exploded at police that
resulted in many deaths and wrongful punishments of falsely accused
conspirators. Well known example of tension between police and protesters
Enduring Understandings
Those with great economic
power and those with great political power tend to have aligned interests:
- J.P. Morgan made sure his creation of US Steel Corporation was successful “by making sure Congress passed tariffs keeping out foreign steel” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 257).
- The Central Pacific Railroad “spent $200,000 in Washington on bribes to get 9 million acres of free land and $24 million in bonds” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 254).
People in power have little
regard for the wellbeing of the lower class:
- “The Union Pacific [Railroad] used twenty thousand workers- war veterans and Irish immigrants, who laid 5 miles of track a day and died by the hundreds in the heat, the cold, and the battles with Indians opposing the invasion of their territory” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 255).
- “One Italian man, told he was going to Connecticut to work on the railroad, was taken instead to sulfate mines in the south, where he and his fellows were watched over by armed guards in their barracks and in the mines, given only enough money to pay for their railroad fare and tools, and very little to eat” (Robber Barons and Rebels, 266).
The topic, “Labor vs. Big
Business: The Rise of Corporate America,” fits the theme, “People, Places, and
Power,” very well so far. For people, the topic mainly focuses on the wealthy industrialists,
such as Carnegie and Rockefeller, and the poor laborers. The industrialists had
the power of the lower class of America. They used their power in order to
increase their power even more and prevent others from gaining such power. This
power struggle led to many poor laborers revolting in places all over America,
including Haymarket, Chicago. These things all fit together to relate to the
theme nicely.
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