Industrialization
US HISTORY
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Monday, December 2, 2013
The Jungle
Skye Burket
1. Sinclair believes that the qualities people needed to have in order to succeed in working in the Packingtown’s was the ability to mind your own business and just do their work, without any distractions. People working in Packingtown’s generally had no loyalty or decency. The young man, Jurgis Redkus realized that to succeed in working at these Packingtown’s, the work didn’t matter it was all about who you knew and how you associated yourself with these people.
2. The Plant Owner’s main goal was to make as much money as they possibly could. It didn’t matter how they made that money, or who it hurt, they just did everything in their power to make lots of money.
3. When Sinclair says “...there was no place in it where a man counted for anything against a dollar…” he means that the workers didn’t matter to them at all because the money was more important than anything else.
Fortunately, the Meat Packing industry has changed a lot since the 1900’s due to how poor working conditions were, and how many people were injured or killed while working for these factories. The most common thing that happens are cuts from knives and other big machinery. Industries today are inspected almost daily to ensure that places are safe enough for workers, and also owners are a lot more careful and aware of the things that could happen while working for these industries.
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Ida Tarbell
1857-1944
Graduate of the Allegheny College- Ida Tarbell was the only women graduate of her class in 1880. Ida Tarbell was a very famous journalist from Erie County, Pennsylvania. Ida began her writing with biographies and after that her articles were mainly against big business', including the unfair practices of the Standard Oil company. Tarbell grew up with her father as an oilman, so she was pretty familiar with the oil business. This helped her as she looked into the Standard Oil Company and helped begin her best-known project, in which Ida looked into the Rockafellers' family oil monopoly and came across the realization that they were a very unfair business practice. All of Ida's discoveries were published into a book called The History of the Standard Oil Company in 1904. In 1911 when the U.S Supreme court was making a decision on breaking up the Standard Oil monopoly, Ida's findings and book helped contribute to the Supreme Court's decision and ending the monopoly. Ida Tarbell was one of the best journalists of the twentieth century and a very good investigative reporter. Ida Tarbell is now in the National Women's Hall of Fame, along with being honored by appearing on the U.S. postage stamp as part of the Women in Journalism stamp series. Women today can look up to people like Ida, who proved that regardless of her gender she could go to school, graduate, and go down in history as an outstanding journalist.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Life in the Camps
Life in the Camps
Skye Burket
Many camps during the Transcontinental Rail Road were known as Hell-on-wheel camps, as they were always moving and not ideal. Workers for these railroads only needed a place to sleep at night, because they would work from sun up till sun down. As the construction of the Rail Road grew workers would continuously be moving farther towards their Rail Road destination. Many people looked at these camps as the most undesirable and inconsistent locations in the country. Unexpected things happened at these camps, including large amounts of drinking, gambling, and murder occurred almost nightly. Few of these camps became permanent towns and grew in population and land. Although some places remained permanent and industrialized, others are completely gone or still there but they're "ghost towns".
http://rsirailroad.blogspot.com/2012/02/closer-look-railroad-camps.html
Group:
Friday, September 27, 2013
African Americans in the Civil War
African Americans in the Civil War:
Alec Martin
Towards the end of the war, African
Americans started fighting for the union. More than 200,000 blacks
fought for the Union, and 38,000 died, the majority of disease. They faced many
prejudices while in the army. The Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment was
the first military unit consisting of black soldiers.
This
created a lot of controversy. Many people questioned if blacks could fight in a
“White man’s war.” After this regime was created, thousands of other African
Americans joined in on the war. Beginning in October,
approximately 180,000 African-Americans served in the U.S. Army. The union
debatably could not have won if they did not recruit them. Many Blacks escaped
the plantations, over 500,000, and many enlisted in the union military, greatly
increasing the manpower.
The
increase in manpower helped the union win the war, later leading to the victory
of the union and the emancipation proclamation. That led to the 13th
amendment, which freed all slaves. They played a large role in obtaining their
own equality.
Sources:
·
The Fort Pillow Massacre
Battle of Fort Pillow
April 2, 1864
The battle of Fort Pillow was one
of the largest encounters between the Confederate Soldiers and the Black troops
during the Civil War. On April 2, 1864 at 4:30 A.M., the Confederates attacked
the Fort Pillow Fort, in which the Union used for protection of their supply
lines. Confederate General, Nathan Bedford Forrest sent 1500 men to assault the
fort that was manned by 295 white troops of the 13th Tennessee
Calvary and another 265 blacks men of the 11th U.S. colored
troops. The confederates and Union
troops continued to fight until 3:30 P.M., and then General Forrest finally
showed a flag of truce and demanded the surrender of the Fort. The commander of
the fort got killed in the massacre, so the Fort’s second in command, Major William
F. Bradford, had to make the decision. Forrest gave Major Bradford only 20
minutes to decide, and he refused the surrender. The Confederate soldiers then,
charged the Union soldiers and ran them off the bluff and down the river bank
of the Mississippi River. “The river was dyed with the blood of the slaughtered for 200 yards,”
Nathan Bedford Forrest stated after the battle. The Confederates came
out with only 14 killed and 86 wounded, while the Union troop lost 231, 100
soldiers were wounded and 226 were captured by the Confederates.
There was controversy after the
Battle of Fort Pillow, that Forrest and the confederate troops massacred the
Union troops in “cold blood” even after the Union troops surrendered. Also,
after the fight had ended, several of the wounded black soldiers were burned to
death or buried alive. The Battle of Fort Pillow will remain one of the largest
and most brutal war between Confederate and Black soldiers. Controversy over
the battle still continues today, due to the horrific outcome, and violence
towards the Black soldiers.
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