The low average wages in the years near 1873 show how the Panic of 1873 negatively affected workers. The purpose of Document 2 is a contract for workers to sign and agree to not join a labor union. The intended audience of Document 3 is the public that read the New York Times in 1877 and might be interested to learn about a strike that happened. The purpose of Document 4 is to show how the anarchists and socialists were ruining the public image of labor unions. The purpose of Document 5 is to tell the public who died during the Homestead Strike. The point of view in Document 6 is from the Supreme Court and their decision about interstate commerce. The intended audience of Document 7 are the people who are interested in helping workers and labor unions. Workers were going through tough times during the Gilded Age with low wages, long hours, and poor working conditions. The workers looked to strikes and labor unions to improve their position during the Gilded Age, but labor unions and strikes weren’t powerful enough to improve the worker’s status in society. Labor unions and strikes were not successful enough to improve the position of workers during the Gilded Age because of the combination of oppressive government laws like the Sherman Antitrust Act, the types of people correlated with labor unions like anarchists, the Panics of 1873 and
The low average wages in the years near 1873 show how the Panic of 1873 negatively affected workers. The purpose of Document 2 is a contract for workers to sign and agree to not join a labor union. The intended audience of Document 3 is the public that read the New York Times in 1877 and might be interested to learn about a strike that happened. The purpose of Document 4 is to show how the anarchists and socialists were ruining the public image of labor unions. The purpose of Document 5 is to tell the public who died during the Homestead Strike. The point of view in Document 6 is from the Supreme Court and their decision about interstate commerce. The intended audience of Document 7 are the people who are interested in helping workers and labor unions. Workers were going through tough times during the Gilded Age with low wages, long hours, and poor working conditions. The workers looked to strikes and labor unions to improve their position during the Gilded Age, but labor unions and strikes weren’t powerful enough to improve the worker’s status in society. Labor unions and strikes were not successful enough to improve the position of workers during the Gilded Age because of the combination of oppressive government laws like the Sherman Antitrust Act, the types of people correlated with labor unions like anarchists, the Panics of 1873 and