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Summary Social and political consequences of industrialization

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Social and political consequences of industrialization(lecture summary)

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  • July 4, 2022
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SOCIAL AND POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES OF INDUSTRIALIZATION.


From the 19th Century


By the year 1900, the impact of the industrial revolution was being felt in the

United States. Virtually every aspect of daily life had changed dramatically over

the past century. Owners of factories, natural resources (mostly oil) and trading

networks such as railways had made huge fortunes. People who were once

scattered across dozens of small rural farms now lived in cities and worked for

employers who, in many ways, viewed their employees as living parts of a

complex machine called a factory. Those who still lived in the countryside used

new machinery and chemicals to grow crops or livestock that would be transported

to distant markets. In the United States, 40% of the population lived in cities, up

from 6% in the 1800s. Over the next 20 years, most Americans would live in urban

areas.


Such radical transformations hardly went unnoticed. The reality of the industrial

revolution was reflected in the changes in government and politics, as well as in

the new civil society organizations that were established independently of the

government.


Social and political impact of the second phase of the industrial revolution: words

to know

,Anarchism: a social philosophy that supports voluntary associations between

people as a form of self-government, as opposed to central governments dominated

by a monarch or other central figure. Capitalism: A system of organizing the

economy of a society in which ownership of machinery and factories is private

rather than public.


Communism: A form of government in which everyone shares property, including

land and capital.


Union: A voluntary association of workers who band together to pressure their

employer for better wages, shorter hours, or other benefits.


Monopoly: A company large enough to control the price of a product

independently of competition.


Retirement: A monthly payment to employees who retire from a company after

reaching a certain age or after a certain number of years for that company.

Socialism: a political and economic system in which people control both

government and important elements of the economy, such as owning (or strictly

regulating) factories.

,Social assistance: Efforts to alleviate a range of problems that the poorest people

often face, such as unemployment, poverty and housing shortages.


Strike: Refusal to work by union members who seek to close a factory or other

facility as a means of putting pressure on the employer to grant higher wages or

other improvements in working conditions.


Strikebreakers: workers who take the place of striking workers. They are hired by

entrepreneurs in an attempt to defeat the attackers. Tariff: a tax on imports.


Society in the industrial age


In 1914, auto giant Henry Ford (1863-1947) made headlines when he started

paying workers $ 5 a day, roughly double what other manufacturers were paying at

the time. The average non-Ford worker earned less than $ 800 a year for a six-day

work week. (Ford partially paid its employees better so that they could afford to

buy the cars they made, bringing more sales and profits to Ford.) Calculated in

2003 dollars, a Ford employee in 1914 was earning about $ 28,000 a year, while he

was earning about $ 14,000 a year.


The life of a typical worker at the beginning of the twentieth century was difficult.

The wages were low, the working hours were long, and the working conditions

were brutal and often extremely dangerous. At 4:30 pm, the dangers of the

factories were dramatized. on March 25, 1911, when a fire broke out at the

, Triangle Shirtwaist Company on the top three floors of the Asch Building in New

York City. There five hundred employees, mainly Jewish immigrant women

between the ages of thirteen and twenty-three, sewed women's shirts. Fueled by all

the fabric, the fire quickly spread to all three floors of the factory. In fifteen

minutes 146 women had died. Many jumped to their deaths; others tried to slide

down elevator cables but lost their footing; many were burned alive. Firefighters

tried to rescue the women, but their ladders only reached the sixth floor, one floor

below the factory, and the women jumping from the windows tore through the fire

netting as they collapsed , attacking in groups of three or four held hands.


The second phase of the Industrial Revolution was characterized by a combination

of low wages for long hours (ten hours a day, six days a week) and precarious

working conditions. In addition, workers who have lost their jobs suddenly find

themselves without income. Paid vacation and health insurance were unknown.

When a person grew old and wanted to retire, it was necessary to have personal

savings to live on; Companies paid pensions without a pension. Also, the work was

unstable. When employers ran out of product orders, workers were told not to

come. No job, no pay. A sick worker was not paid for that day and could lose his

job to someone who could work. Many workers have gone weeks without work or

pay each year because their employer closed during a recession. Even for better-

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