| Answer Key for Teachers | Fasttrack
to America's Past
Section 6: The Gilded Age Page 6 - 11 and 6 - 12 Big Industry and Labor Unions |
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| The
Reading Selections:
The three selections on these pages give a variety of viewpoints about the big industries that grew in the Gilded Age, and the challenges this presented to working people. The views come from: - Andrew Carnegie, the Scottish immigrant who created a great fortune in the steel industry. - Ida Tarbell, a woman journalist who exposed crooked dealings in John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil trust. - Samuel Gompers, who formed the American Federation of Labor.
The Pictures:
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Group
Discussion:
Andrew Carnegie makes the argument
that big industry has been good for both rich and poor. The poor
of the Gilded Age, he says, enjoy things that the rich of previous times
could not afford.
Ida Tarbell points out that what
businessmen called fair competition often fell far short of fair.
She accuses oil millionaire John D. Rockefeller of using "force and fraud"
to build up the Standard Oil Company. His goal, she says, was the
creation of a monopoly.
Scroll down to continue.
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| Discussion,
continued:
Samuel Gompers makes a plea
for the workers of the Gilded Age factories. He agrees that the changes
brought by big industry are beneficial in many ways, but he argues that
workers are often cast adrift without mercy or concern. He
points out that "to the hungry man and woman and child our progress is
a hollow mockery."
There is an important point on which Andrew Carnegie and Samuel Gompers agree: big industry was improving life for everyone. Gompers, in fact, declares that "the entire civilized world are the beneficiaries." This belief set him apart from the most radical labor leaders of his day, who believed that capitalism and big industry should be overthrown. |
Discussion,
continued:
Gompers, however, says that workers
need to organize into strong labor unions to find protection from the disruptions
created by growing industry. He describes how the introduction
of more efficient machinery was throwing men and women out of work faster
than new industries were started. As a result of such changes, workers
suffered cold and hunger during periods of unemployment.
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