The Industrial Economy: Crash Course US History #23 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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Episode 23: The Rise of the Industrial Economy
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Hi I’m John Green this is Crash Course U.S. History and today we’re going to discuss
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economics and how a generation of- Mr. Green, Mr. Green, is this going to be
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one of those boring ones no wars or generals who had cool last words or anything?
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Alright, Me From The Past, I will give you a smidge of Great Man history.
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But only a smidge.
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So today we’re gonna discuss American industrialization in the decades after the Civil War, during
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which time the U.S. went from having per capita about a third of Great Britain’s industrial
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output to becoming the richest and most industrialized nation on earth.
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Libertage Meh, you might want to hold off on that Libertage,
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Stan because this happened mostly thanks to the Not Particularly Awesome Civil War, which
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improved the finance system by forcing the introduction of a national currency and spurred
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industrialization by giving massive contracts to arms and clothing manufacturers.
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The Civil War also boosted the telegraph, which improved communication, and gave birth
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to the transcontinental railway via the Pacific Railway Act of 1862, all of which increased
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efficiency and productivity.
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So thanks, Civil War!
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Intro If you want to explain America’s economic
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growth in a nutshell chalk it up to G, D, and L: Gerard, Depardieu, and Lohan.
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No, Geography, Demography and Law.
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However, while we’re on the topic, when will Gerard, Depardieu, and Lindsay Lohan
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have a baby?
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Stan, can I see it?
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Yes.
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Yes.
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Geographically, the U.S. was a huge country with all the resources necessary for an industrial
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boom.
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Like, we had coal, and iron and, later, oil.
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Initially we had water to power our factories, later replaced by coal.
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And we had amber waves of grain to feed our growing population which leads to the Demography.
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America’s population grew from 40 million in 1870 to 76 million in 1900 and 1/3 of that
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growth was due to immigration.
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Which is good for economies.
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Many of these immigrants flooded the burgeoning cities, as America shifted from being an agrarian
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rural nation to being an industrial, urban one.
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Like, New York City became the center of commerce and finance and by 1898 it had a population
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of 3.4 million people.
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And the industrial heartland was in the Great Lakes region.
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Chicago became the second largest city by 1900, Cleveland became a leader in oil refining,
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and Pittsburgh was a center of iron and steel production.
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And even today, the great city of Pittsburgh still employs 53 Steelers.
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Last but not least was the Law.
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The Constitution and its commerce clause made the U.S. a single area of commerce – like
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a giant customs union.
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And, as we’ll see in a bit the Supreme Court interpreted the laws in a very business friendly
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way.
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Also, the American constitution protects patents, which encourag4B-es invention and innovation,
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or at least it used to.
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And despite what Ayn Rand would tell you, the American government played a role in American
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economic growth by putting up high tariffs, especially on steel, giving massive land grants
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to railroads and by putting Native Americans on reservations.
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Also, foreigners played an important role.
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They invested their capital and involved Americans in their economic scandals like the one that
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led to a depression in 1893.
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The U.S. was at the time was seen by Europeans as a developing economy; and investments in
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America offered much higher returns than those available in Europe.
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And the changes we’re talking about here were massive.
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In 1880, for the first time, a majority of the workforce worked in non-farming jobs.
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By 1890 2/3 of Americans worked for wages, rather than farming or owning their own businesses.
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And, by 1913 the United States produced 1/3 of the world’s total industrial output.
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NOW bring out the Libertage, Stan.
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Libertage Awesome.
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And even better, we now get to talk about the perennially underrated railroads.
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Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
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Although we tend to forget about them here in the U.S., because our passenger rail system
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sucks, railroads were one of the keys to America’s 19th century industrial success.
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Railroads increased commerce and integrated the American market, which allowed national
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brands to emerge, like Ivory Soap and A&P Grocery Stores.
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But railroads changed and improved our economy in less obvious ways, too: For instance, they
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gave us time zones, which were created by the major railroad companies to make shipping
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and passenger transport more standard.
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Also because he recognized the importance of telling time, a railroad agent named Richard
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Warren Sears turned a $50 dollar investment in watches into an enormous mail order empire,
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and railroads made it possible for him--and his eventual partner Roebuck--to ship watches,
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and then jewelry, and then pretty much everything, including unconstructed freaking houses throughout
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the country.
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Railroads were also the first modern corporations.
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These companies were large, they had many employees, they spanned the country.
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And that meant they needed to invent organizational methods, including the middle manager--supervisors
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to supervise supervisors.
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And for the first time, the owners of a company were not always day-to-day managers, because
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railroads were among the first publicly traded corporations.
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They needed a lot of capital to build tracks and stations, so they sold shares in
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the company in order to raise that money, which shares could then be bought and sold
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by the public.
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And that is how railroads created the first captains of industry, like Cornelius “They
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Named a University after Me” Vanderbilt and Andrew “Me Too” Carnegie (Mellon)
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and Leland “I Named a University After My Son” Stanford.
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The Railroad business was also emblematic of the partnership between the national government
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and industry.
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The Transcontinental Railroad, after all, wouldn’t have existed without Congressional
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legislation, federal land grants, and government sponsored bond issues.
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Thanks, Thought Bubble.
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Apparently it’s time for the Mystery Document.
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The rules here are simple.
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I guess the author of the Mystery Document and if I’m wrong, which I usually am, I
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get shocked.
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Alright.
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“The belief is common in America that the day is at hand when corporations far greater
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than the Erie – swaying such power as has never in the world’s history been trusted
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in the hands of mere private citizens, controlled by single men like Vanderbilt...– will ultimately
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succeed in directing government itself.
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Under the American form of society, there is now no authority capable of effective resistance.”
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Corporations directing government?
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That’s ridiculous.
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So grateful for federal ethanol subsidies brought to you by delicious Diet Dr. Pepper.
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Mmm I can taste all 23 of the chemicals.
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Anyway, Stan, I’m pretty sure that is noted muckraker Ida Tarbell.
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No!
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Henry Adams?
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HOW ARE THERE STILL ADAMSES IN AMERICAN HISTORY?
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That makes me worry we’ll never escape the Clintons.
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Anyway, it should’ve been Ida Tarbell.
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She has a great name.
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She was a great opponent of capitalism.
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Whatever.
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AH!
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Indeed industrial capitalists are considered both the greatest heroes and the greatest
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villains of the era, which is why they are known both as “captains of industry” and
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as “robber barons,” depending on whether we are mad at them.
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While they often came from humble origins, took risks and became very wealthy, their
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methods were frequently unscrupulous.
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I mean, they often drove competitors out of business, and generally cared very little
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for their workers.
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The first of the great robber barons and/or captains of industry was the aforementioned
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Cornelius Vanderbilt who rose from humble beginnings in Staten Island to make a fortune
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in transportation, through ferries and shipping, and then eventually through railroads, although
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he once referred to trains as “them things that go on land.”
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But the poster boy of the era was John D. Rockefeller who started out as a clerk for
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a Cleveland merchant and eventually became the richest man in the world.
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Ever.
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Yes, including Bill Gates.
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The key to Rockefeller’s success was ruthlessly buying up so many rivals that by the late
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1880s Standard Oil controlled 90% of the U.S. oil industry.
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Which lack of competition drove the price of gasoline up to like 12 cents a gallon,
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so if you had one of the 20 cars in the world then, you were mad.
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The period also saw innovation in terms of the way industries were organized.
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Many of the robber barons formed pools and trusts to control prices and limit the negative
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effects of competition.
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The problem with competition is that over time it reduces both prices and profit margins,
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which makes it difficult to become super rich.
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Vertical integration was another innovation – firms bought up all aspects of the production
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process – from raw materials to production to transport and distribution.
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Like, Philip Armour’s meat company bought its own rail cars to ship meat, for instance.
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It also bought things like conveyor belts and when he found out that animal parts could
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be used to make glue, he got into the glue-making business.
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It was Armour who once proclaimed to use “everything but the squeal.”
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Horizontal integration was when big firms bought up small ones.
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The best example of this was Rockefeller’s Standard Oil, which eventually became so big
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incidentally that the Supreme Court forced Standard Oil to be broken up into more than
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a dozen smaller oil companies.
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Which, by the way, overtime have slowly reunited to become the company known as Exxon-Mobil,
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so that worked out.
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U.S. Steel was put together by the era’s giant of finance, J.P. Morgan, who at his
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death left a fortune of only $68 million – not counting the art that became the backbone
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of the Metropolitan Museum of Art – leading Andrew Carnegie to remark in surprise, “And
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to think he was not a rich man.”[1] Speaking of people who weren’t rich, let
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us now praise the unsung heroes of industrialization: workers.
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Well, I guess you can’t really call them unsung because Woody Guthrie.
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Oh!
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Your guitar!
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And my computer!
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I never made that connection before.
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Anyway, then as now, the benefits of economic growth were shared...mmm shall we say...a
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smidge unevenly.
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Prices did drop due to industrial competition, which raised the standard of living for the
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average American worker.
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In fact, it was among the highest in the world.
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But due to a growing population, particularly of immigrant workers, there was job insecurity.
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And also booms and busts meant depressions in the 1870s and 1890s, which hit the working
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poor the hardest.
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Also, laborers commonly worked 60 hours per week with no pensions or injury compensation,
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and the U.S. had the highest rate of industrial injuries in the world: an average of over
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35,000 people per year died on the job.
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These conditions and the uncertainty of labor markets led to unions, which were mostly local
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but occasionally national.
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The first national union was the Knights of Labor, headed by Terence V. Powderly which
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grew from 9 members in 1870 to 728,000 by 1884.
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The Knights of Labor admitted unskilled workers, black workers, and women, but it was irreparably
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damaged by the Haymarket riot in 1886.
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During a strike against McCormick Harvesting Company, a policeman killed one of the strikers
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and in response there was a rally in Chicago’s Haymarket Square at which a bomb killed seven
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police officers.
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Then, firing upon the crowd, the police killed four people.
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Seven anarchists were eventually convicted of the bombing, and although Powderly denounced
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anarchism, the public still associated the Knights of Labor with violence.
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And by 1902, its membership had shrunk considerably--to 0.
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The banner of organized labor however was picked up by the American Federation of Labor
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under Samuel L. Gompers.
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Do all of these guys have great last names?
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They were more moderate than the anarchists and the socialist International Workers of
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the World, and focused on bread and butter issues like pay, hours, and safety.
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Founded in 1886, the same year as the Haymarket Riot, the AFL had about 250,000 members by
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1892, almost 10% of whom were iron and steel workers.
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And now we have to pause to briefly mention one of the most pernicious innovations of
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the era: Social Darwinism: a perversion of Darwin’s theory that would have made him
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throw up.
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Although to be fair, almost everything made him throw up.
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Social Darwinists argued that the theory of survival of the fittest should be applied
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to people and also that corporations were people.
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Ergo, big companies were big because they were fitter and we had nothing to fear from
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monopolies.
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This pseudoscience was used to argue that government shouldn’t regulate business or
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pass laws to help poor people.
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It assured the rich that the poor were poor because of some inherent evolutionary flaw,
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thus enabling tycoons to sleep at night.
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You know, on a big pile of money, surrounded by beautiful women.
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But, despite the apparent inborn unfitness of workers, unions continued to grow and fight
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for better conditions, sometimes violently.
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There was violence at the Homestead Steel Strike of 1892 and the Pullman Rail strike
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of 1894 when strikers were killed and a great deal of property was destroyed.
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To quote the historian Michael Lind: “In the late 1870s and early 1880s, the United
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States had five times as many unionized workers as Germany, at a time when the two nations
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had similar populations.”[2] Unions wanted the United States and its citizens
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to imagine freedom more broadly, arguing that without a more equal economic system, America
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was becoming less, not more, free, even as it became more prosperous.
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If you’re thinking that this free-wheeling age of fast growth, uneven gains in prosperity,
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and corporate heroes/villains resembles the early 21st century, you aren’t alone.
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And it’s worth remembering that it was only 150 years ago that modern corporations began
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to form and that American industry became the leading driver in the global economy.
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That’s a blink of an eye in world history terms, and the ideas and technologies of post
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Civil War America gave us the ideas that still define how we--all of us, not just Americans--think
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about opposites like success and failure, or wealth and poverty.
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It’s also when we people began to discuss the ways in which inequality could be the
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opposite of freedom.
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Thanks for watching.
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I’ll see you next week.
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Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller.
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Our script supervisor is Meredith Danko.
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The associate producer is Danica Johnson.
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The show is written by my high school history teacher, Raoul Meyer, Rosianna Halse Rojas,
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and myself.
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And our graphics team is Thought Café.
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Each week there’s a new caption for the Libertage.
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You can suggest captions in comments where you can also ask questions about today’s
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video that will be answered by our team of historians.
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Thanks for watching Crash Course.
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Make sure you’re subscribed.
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And as we say in my hometown, don’t forget to be awesome.
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Industrial Economy - ________________
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[1] Brands, American Colossus p 6.
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[2] Lind, Land of Promise 171