The Homestead Strike of 1892 By: Industrial Relations Homestead is located on the Monogahela River eight miles from Pittsburgh. In 1892 the town had a population of about 12‚000 people. In 1880 it had a population of about 600 people. The town evolved around the Carnegie mills. With out the steel mill the town would have little existence. The mill property covered 600 acres of the 600 acres 37 of that is covered with varies buildings. The mills facilities were lighted by electricity which
Premium Pinkerton National Detective Agency Strike action Andrew Carnegie
In 1877‚ Thomas Edison invented the phonograph (The Phonograph). It took the ribbon as the first invention with the ability to not only record sound‚ but play it back. Not long after‚ phonographs could play cylinder-shaped records and progressed to playing
Premium United States Sociology New York City
The role that the federal government played in the period surrounding the strike was mainly to help factory owners put an end on strikes. According to President Grover Cleveland‚ he believed that the Pullman strike was wasteful‚ disruptive and unlawful (Hewitt and Lawson‚ pg. 556). He thought that the Pullman trouble originated because neither the public nor the government had taken acceptable measures to control monopolies and corporations and had failed to “reasonably protect the rights of labor
Premium United States Soviet Union World War II
APUSH-4 2/13/13 The Empire Strikes Back The story of America is the story of white imperialism. After the Civil War Radical Republicans set out to punish and colonize southern states. The North wished to create a satellite region‚ isolated politically but raped for its Negro votes and economic value. Steamrolling through southern politics with the help of Negros‚ scallywags and carpetbaggers‚ Radical Republicans instigated drastic economic change‚ as well as a political revolution
Premium Southern United States Reconstruction era of the United States Democratic Party
The Railroad And Its Influence on Frontier Life The technological innovation of the railroad was a very impressive feat. Not one person can be credited with the invention‚ as it involved the discovery of iron and steel along with the steam engine (Railroad Invention and History). The Transcontinental Railroad is one of many inventions of the Gilded Age‚ including the telephone‚ electricity‚ light bulbs‚ and skyscrapers. Of course‚ all of these inventions were essential to the time period‚ however
Premium United States Industrial Revolution Rail transport
Numerous factors came in to play which built upon themselves to cause America to grow and move west‚ but the biggest factor was the transcontinental railroad. As the railroads were put in‚ lands improved‚ trade increased‚ cities grew and territories became states. With every passing decade‚ clear growth could be seen in all aspects of life. The railroad took seven years to build between two different companies‚ but it opened up endless opportunities and room for growth for the United States. Up until
Premium United States Industrial Revolution Rail transport
Railroads are the third key element of the transportation revolution in the United States as they were widely used from late 19th century up until the 1850s. People found many uses for them whether to move throughout the country‚ to commute to work or moved goods. Prior to the introduction of railroads‚ people in the States would use sail boats‚ horses‚ or even by foot to travel long distances from one point to another but everything changed in the late 19th century‚ when there were rapid series
Premium United States Industrial Revolution Steam engine
transcontinental railroad system in the 19th century affect development of the American industrial economy‚ and the social prosperity of the people and workers? This is the question that this essay will answer‚ diving deep into the effect of the railroads to the industrial economy and how that affected the social setting of the typical American life from the first trains to be built in the 1830s‚ and its life cycle until around the 1870s. Examining the extent to which railroads affected the industrial
Premium First Transcontinental Railroad Native Americans in the United States Rail transport
The Underground Railroad existed for nearly forty years and was at its peak during 1810 to 1850. It was “a secret network of people working together who dared to put themselves at risk for what they knew was right. It had no one leader‚ no official existence‚ and no formal organization. It had no engines‚ and no trains; it had stations‚ but no tracks. Its passengers traveled without tickets and its conductors blew no whistles”.[1] The Underground Railroad got its name when one slave by the
Premium Slavery in the United States Slavery
A railroad crossing is where a road crosses through a railroad where the trains can pass through. There are all sorts of signs that warn drivers that there is a railroadcrossing ahead‚ they can be on a post or on the road pavement. The warning signs thatare on the road and on the posts have an “X” and two “R” on the sides of the X. These signs tell you to slow down‚ listen‚ keep the look out‚ and be prepared to stop at a railroad crossing.There are three types of railroad crossing signs‚ which
Premium Road Traffic Walking