Tuesday, December 10, 2013

The Jungle Era

  Packingtown was the most vile slum in Chicago. It was dangerous for both those who worked there, and those who lived there. Packingtown was filled with disease, poorly built homes, and very dangerous working conditions. The worst part was the treatment of the people working in the industry. Sinclair explains how everything in Packingtown was made against the workers. He tells how the workers were used and discarded. Workers had no safety and many died easily. The only way to live and survive in Packingtown was taking your own safety in your own hands.
  The plant owners (meat packing plant owners) wanted nothing but work from workers and money from buyers. They didn't care if you died got sick or hurt. You packed the meat no matter what, and you bought the meat and got sick. Plant owners wanted low pay rates, hard work, and dedication. If you got sick you got sick and they threw you out an found another person to work. They wanted workers the could use and discard. Their main goal being make profits.
  When Sinclair says "there was no place in it where a man counted for anything against a dollar...", he means 
 

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Industrialism

     Industrialism was when the United States began to grow in its industry changing and improving  the economy rapildy. The U.S. began discovering new resources, larger workforces, new inventions, new land mass, new transportation editions, big buisnesses and the production of factories. Industrialism bettered the economy in many different ways, creating new jobs, raising the wealth of America, and bringing a dramtic rise in the standard of living for all Americans (Telephone, light bulb, refrigerator, etc.).
     Although the rise of industrialism betttered the over all economy and increased the amount of jobs in America, it did not however better the working conditions or benefits of a typical industrial worker. Life for any worker in Industrailized America was hard. Machines replaced skilled labor and work became monotonous. workers had to preform highly specific, repetitive tasks and took little to no pride in their work. Workign conditions were highly dangerous and unhealthy. Working with heavy machines lacking saftey devices caused very high percentages of injuries and workers breathed in dust, lint, and toxic fumes.
                                                                 3 outside sources-
     Henry George, a journalist in San Francisco, was puzzled by the existence of extreme wealth and extreme poverty side by side. He said at the beginning of the era it was expected that labor-saving inventions would reduce/lighten the toil and improve the conditions of laborers. It was thought that the enormous increase in the power of producing wealth would make the real poverty a thing of the past. However, he says from all parts of the civilized world come complaints of industrial depression; labor condemned to involuntary idleness. All the dull, deadening pain, all the keen, maddening anguish, that to great masses of men are involved in the "hard times," afflict the world to-day.
     David A. Wells, a scientist and economist, was one of the first Americans to notice how machines were taking peoples jobs. He says the individual no longer works as independently as formerly, but as a private in the ranks, obeying orders, keeping step, as it were, to the tap of the drum, and having nothing to say as to the plan of his work, of its final completion, or of ots ultimate use and distribution. He's saying that the people who work in the modern (modern at the time) factory are taught to do one thing and when there is no more of that kind of work to be done, they are helpless. It resulted that the individualism or independence of the producer in manufacturing was destroyed as well as their pride which workmen formely took in their work.
     Andrew Carnegie is the last outside source. The Scottish-born "King of Steel," was the biggest industrialist in the late 1800's. He says that before industrialization that America was a "community of toilers with an undeveloped continent before them, and destitute of the refinements and elegancies of life." He says "Contrasted with that of today, we might almsot conclude that we were upon another planet and subject to different primary conditions." The development of industry had led to an expansion of trade. "Altogether life has beccome vastly better worth living than it was a century ago."
   
     I think that industrialism has improved the way America is and was. If not for industrialism, the way America runs woulf not be the same. And we would not be a dominant country. If industrialism did not occur, Americas economy would not have boosted and America would not be the same today.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Mark Twain

     Mark Twain (a.k.a Samuel Clemens) was a famous author. He wrote 28 books. Some of which were "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer", and "Life in Mississippi". He was born as Samuel Clemons, from Jane and John Clemens, but became famous and known with the name Mark Twain. At 17, he became a river pilot which is where the name Mark Twain originated (Mark Twain means "safe to navigate).
      Mark Twain and Charles Warner  coauthored a novel about American politics and society called "The Gilded Age". Because of the novel, the era became known as the Gilded Age. Calling it this was like sounding off an alarm. Gilded means gold on the outside but cheap on the inside. A Gilded Age would appear clean and perfect, but if you are to look deeper, you would find corruption, poverty, crime, and great disparities in wealth between the rich and the poor, which was what Twain and Warner sought to uncover in America.
       This era was a time of great cultural activity. Industrialism and urbanization changed and altered the way Americans looked at themselves and their society. The changes gave rise to new values,new forms of entertainment, new art, new inventions, and a whole new lifestyle and era.




Sources ~ the book.
                 Google images.
                 

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Hiring Workers/dealing w/workers

  Hiring workers- Chinese peasants from the Canton Province began arriving on California's shores in 1850, being pushed by poverty and overpopulation from their homeland. In early 1865 the Central Pacific had work enough for 4,000 men. However, a contractor named Charles Crocker barely managed to hold onto 800 laborers at any given time. Most of the early railroad workers were Irish immigrants. Because railroad work was hard, and management was chaotic, high attrition rates occurred. Because of prejudice thoughts/beliefs, some Central Pacific officials believed that Irishmen were inclined to spend their wages on liquor, and that the Chinese were also unreliable. Yet, due to the shortage of willing workers, Crocker suggested that reconsideration be given to hiring Chinese.  
        When a group of Irish laborers agitated over wages, Crocker told Strobridge (a foreman) to recruit some Chinese in their place.  Instantly, the Irishmen abandoned their dispute, fearing the competition might make them lose their jobs. Sensing that fear of competition hoping it might motivate the men, Strobridge grudgingly agreed to hire 50 Chinese men as wagon-fillers. The Chinese work ethic impressed him so he hired more Chinese workers for more difficult tasks. Soon, labor recruiters were all over California, and Crocker hired companies to advertise the work in China. Several thousand Chinese men had signed on and the number rose to a high of 12,000 in 1868, comprising at least 80% of the Central Pacific workforce.  The Chinese workers were willing and well-behaved. Crocker and Strobridge made clear to the Irishmen that they could work alongside the Chinese crews or be replaced by them.
         The Chinese teams were organized into groups of 20 under one white foreman. Initially, Chinese employees received wages of $27 and then $30 a month, minus the cost of food and board. In contrast, Irishmen were paid $35 per month with board provided.



Managing workers- Chinese workers left their grading work and went back to their camp. Construction chief James Harvey Strobridge lit into the men, but this produced no effect. The workers demanded $40 a month instead of $35. They requested a reduction in hours. A workday on the open Sierra lasted from dawn till dusk. Chinese laborers wanted to work no more than 10 hours daily. They also asked for shorter shifts in the cramped, dangerous tunnels. Charles Crocker called in leaders of the movement and promised them he'd stop work entirely before considering a single one of their demands. The men took his message back to the camps, but still the workers refused to budge. Two days later, workers struck all along the line, and raised their wage demands to $45 a month

Friday, September 27, 2013

Gettysburg

        Robert E. Lee led his Army of Northern Virginia in its second invasion of the North-the Gettysburg Campaign. Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker and his Union Army of the Potomac moved in pursuit. However, was relieved of command three days before the battle. Maj. Gen. George Meade, the successor of Hooker, and his army traveled north-ward in order to keep him and his army between Lee and Washington D.C. When he learned about Meade being in Pennsylvania also, Lee concentrated and set his army in Gettysburg. On July 1st, 1863, west and north of the town, parts of the two armies collided.Union cavalry, under Brig. Gen. John Buford, slowed the advance of the Confederates until Union infantry, the Union 1st and 11th corps arrived. However, more Confederate reinforcements under generals A.P. Hill and Richard Ewell arrived. Ultimately, 30,000 Confederates defeated the 20,000 Yankees, who fell back to the hills south of Gettysburg--Cemetery Hill and Culp's Hill. On the second day of the battle, the Union defended a range of hills and ridges south of Gettysburg with about 90,000 soldiers while the Confederates essentially wrapped around the Union's position with about 70,000 soldiers. On July 2nd, Lee launched a heavy assault on the Unions left side and fierce fighting broke at Devil's Den, Little Round Top, the Wheatfield, the Peach Orchard and on Cemetery Ride. On the right, a full-scale of assaults on Culp's Hill and East Cemetery Hill. Although the Confederates were gaining land, the Union still held strong positions by the end of the day. On July 3rd, fighting continued on Culp's Hill and battles raged east and south. However, the main event was that of the assault of 12,000 Confederates against the center Union line on Cemetery Ridge (Pickett's Charge). The charge repulsed by Union fire, at great losses of the Confederate army.
         The Battle of Gettysburg is a very important historical event because it ended in as many as 51,000 soldiers on both the Union and the Confederates dying. Many of them were also either captured, missing or wounded in the three-day battle. But, four months after the battle, President Abraham Lincoln used the dedication ceremony for Gettysburg's Soldiers National Cemetery to honor the fallen Union soldiers. He also redefines the purpose of the war in his historic Gettysburg Address.

(Source: http://www.civilwar.org/battlefields/gettysburg.html?tab=facts)