As the industrial revolution progressed into the Gilded Age, life changed a lot for those in the marginalized populations. Working conditions worsened, women in the workforce increased, and wealthy people believed they were above everyone else. Wealth created huge problems for the marginalized populations due to their bad working conditions which included health risks, little pay, and long hours. The number of factories were increasing so fast that the manufacturers started to disregard their workers. During the Gilded Age, many rich people believed that they had superiority over poor people. Andrew Carnegie especially believed this. He believed that people should be wealthier than others and rich people are superior to poorer people and …show more content…
Carnegie believes that, because they are richer and have more money, they should have the highest of all things possible. For example, they should have the nicest clothing and the biggest house with the most extravagant furnishings. However, this did present problems when it came to the poorer people. Document 7 showed a cartoon. The characters in the cartoon were portraying two different things. The characters holding the structure up were workers and the characters on top of the boat were rich people. The rich people had comfort, they made money off the backs of the workers while the workers had to feel the weight of only getting $6 to $11 a week and still having to provide for their families. The workers were used for the benefit of the richer people who made money off the work the poor people did. Workers were seen less as people and more as worker bees. The author of the cartoon is most likely stating that wealthy people earned money on top of other …show more content…
During the Gilded Age, people went more for speed rather than quality. The Gilded age was a time all about moving into more factories and less farming. An sph.edu text says, “Working conditions were difficult and exposed employees to many risks and dangers, including cramped work areas with poor ventilation, trauma from machinery, toxic exposures to heavy metals, dust, and solvents.” Workers were constantly exposed to health risk situations due to their working environments. This was mainly because the factory owners cared more about the money they would make from creating factories at a faster rate than the health of their workers. They cared a lot about improving their economy rather than improving the environment that was there long before they ever came to America. Document 9 shows a photo of a factory. The environment around it looks awful. It looks trashy with the wood scraps scattered about and the air looks so polluted, you can’t even see very far into the distance. The area also looks so degraded. It’s clear that no one tried at all to sustain a healthy environment. The sawmill in the background looks like it’s putting out everything you wouldn’t want to breathe in. The sawmill is certainly having a very negative impact on the environment. Based on the outside looks of the sawmill, it can be inferred that the inside working conditions of the factory are just as
During the gilded age, America's economy was growing at a fast rate making plenty millionaires. New industries and businesses were formed during this age like steel and coal. Thus made people like Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, and Carnegie rich. But becoming the owner of an industry was actually a pretty easy life but made the lives of the poor harder with long work hours and low wages. This made the common poor people upset and their control of where they live.
During the Gilded Age many inventions were created. Trains were a booming industry that provided transportation and ways to get goods to other people. Factories were a huge part of the industrialization period because while yes they took away a lot of the labor jobs they also opened opportunities for women to work in the factories, one of the negative impacts that factories had on the U.S. was the child labor problems. Children would work in factories because they had small fingers that could get into the machines to repair them. One wrong move and the children could lose a hand.
Along these lines of what Carnegie accepts is that the best approach to utilize riches is for the rich man to, in his own lifetime, set up intuitions and foundations that won 't give offerings. However, it will assist those with peopling who truly are
During the gilded age multiple advancements occurred. The transcontinental railroad was created and led to western settlement as well as a better trade both quickly and efficiently. The Industrial revolution turned a farming way of live to a more technological way of life, and with this came vast migrations patterns to cities such as New York and Chicago.
In this text, he makes a valid argument about why the rich should administer their own wealth unto those with less fortune. He claims wealth has revolutionized the United States. Carnegie mentions how the Sioux chief's wigwam was similar in appearance when compared to the huts of those inferior to him, and then compares this to the differences in economic classes of the 1800s. Carnegie later states how the very definition of wealth has changed throughout the years, where the poorest farmer of the 1860s owns more luxuries than the landlord of just a few years prior. Carnegie includes these two facts because he not only wants to show how much society has progressed throughout the last few hundred years, but also wants to set up his
Although this assumption did not apply to all wealthy men, it did in fact apply to a man named George Pullman. George Pullman was an American engineer who designed and manufactured the Pullman sleeping car. Although his invention did lead to a boom in business opportunities, it did end in a “great depression”. During this time, Pullman laid off workers and cut their wages, all while refusing to lower their rent for the model homes they lived in. This unfortunate reality can be depicted/proven through the political cartoon entitled “The Condition of the Laboring Man at Pullman”.
In the Gilded Age, negative effects were passed on in the Industrial Revolution. Today in 2016, we recognize the struggles and conditions people had to face. Unfortunately, it still exists in the form of immigration, living conditions, and equal amount of pay. Immigrants came to America for freedom, opportunity, and a fresh start. Pay, labor and space availability affected many people because of the overcrowding.
Moreover, the article of “Wealth,” and the story about the life of a miner both emphasize on the poor. The fact that most are uneducated and comfortable living in their familiar setting is why the unfortunate have not progressed in the human race. Some may eventually rise up like Andrew Carnegie in his “rags to riches” story and some will stay where they are in a tedious workplace. In contrast, the miner in the story is hardworking; however, that quality does not get him anywhere in life.
In this text, he makes a valid argument as to why the rich should administer their own wealth unto those with less fortune. He begins his argument by explaining how wealth has revolutionized the United States. Carnegie mentions how the Sioux chief's wigwam was similar in appearance when compared to the huts of those inferior to him, and then compares this to the differences in economic classes of the 1800s. Carnegie later states how the very definition of wealth has changed throughout the years, where the poorest farmer of the 1860s owns more luxuries than the landlord of just a few years prior. Carnegie includes these two facts because he wants to show how much society has progressed throughout the last few hundred years.
Imagine working sixteen hours a day in an unsanitary, dangerous, place for a big business gaining two dollars. This is what laboring-class Americans had to go through during the Gilded age. Politically, the first largest American labor union was formed during the Gilded age and many other organizations formed as well as violent strikes. Socially, different ethnics joined together to share their thoughts and realize the evils of big business and of the federal government. Mentally, most we 're losing their personal life while some were financially stable and glad.
The Gilded Age was an era marked by major advances in technology, the forming of robber barons, and the dismal living conditions of masses of working poor. It was an era where the worker’s rights were put on the sidelines for the and industrial growth of the nation, to uphold the image of American exceptionality. This dismissal of the rights, and in some cases dignity, of the majority of the population I believe was a major driving force in the development of contemporary worker’s rights. Through the accounts of the lowest class of workers, immigrants, we will see the common issues faced by the largest percentage population of city dwelling people. People who were clearly in dire need of reform and who often turned to what was typically the only option, unions.
What the video reveal about the living conditions in the urban areas during the Gilded Age, was that most of the immigrants during this time lived in tenement housing. The housing that that the immigrants lived in, were homes that were in torn down, over-populated, unsanitary, lack of privacy, lack of light, and most importantly the quality of the air was terrible. The reason why I believe that the quality of the air is important is, because, the quality of the air will determine the rate disease will spread, as a result of the quality of the air, tuberculosis was common. The working condition during the Gilded Age were quite similar to the living condition, both were over-populated, and had terrible air quality.
Since the expansion of industrialism was happening so fast, lots of people faced very harsh working conditions. The Gilded Age is not over; it has just started to go into a new phase. Technological advancements are changing the labor force and even replacing the people behind it. More and more everyday technology is shifting from assisting people to do their job to
“In the struggle for survival, the fittest win out at the expense of their rivals because they succeed in adapting themselves best to their environment”. In the Gilded Ages the country, United States, was going through a lot in which people were poor and some seeking the opportunity to become rich. Many people started off with nothing when they came to this country and all had one dream and that was too become rich and successful. Many that accomplished this goal were risk takers and they took risks that not everyone took.
Farmers, workers, and local reformers organized the change in Gilded Age but fail to achieve substantive because the government respond with force to prevent labor difficulties. Most industrialists sought to crush the unions but were not satisfied. Plus, farmers, workers, and local reformers take advantage of the new technologies but it backfired them with falling prices for their produce. Many Americans reunite due to the labor contracts of freedom and the power in the workplace. For most workers, economic insecurity remained a basic fact of