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David McCulloughA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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The Industrial Revolution in the United States took place between 1870 and 1914. During this time, the invention of new technology and machinery began to phase out labor traditionally done by hand—textile work, factory manufacturing, farm labor—and made that labor more efficient with various mechanized systems, often involving new machinery. The technological advances of this period led to the development of the assembly line and spurred the migration of people to cities to seek employment in new and emerging industries. While there were more employment opportunities, working conditions were harsh and unregulated; these conditions would eventually lead to the development of labor unions and government workplace regulations and laws. For the better part of 100 years—from the mid-18th to mid-19th century—American industry had transitioned from a largely agricultural society to an industrial society.
Before the Industrial Revolution, steel was expensive to produce. In the 1850s, Henry Bessemer began developing a process to rapidly convert iron into steel, reducing to minutes what had previously taken a full day. This process revolutionized steel production by decreasing cost and increasing scale and speed, leading to an unprecedented steel industry expansion. At the time of the flood in Johnstown, the American steel industry had begun to expand rapidly, thanks to the Industrial Revolution and the vast expanse of interconnected railroad networks.
This new machinery and technology were largely reliant on oil, coal, and steel, three industries that saw the making of innumerable millionaires almost overnight. Pennsylvania was famously one of the prime locations for the steel industry and was home to countless steel mills. Pittsburgh would become the most famous, but Johnstown was a burgeoning steel town in its own right. For this reason, Johnstown was not only the site of the Cambria Iron Company, an up-and-coming steel producer, but it also was becoming an attractive location for many wealthy industrialists to build summer homes. This led to the founding of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, which would prove so infamous for creating conditions that possibly caused, or at the very least, exacerbated, the horrific flood.
The Johnstown flood occurred in 1889, during the height of what is popularly known as America’s Gilded Age, a time of unprecedented prosperity in the America. In many ways, this era was also part of the increasing class divide between the wealthy and the poor, especially poor immigrant families who would arrive in America to find greater opportunities for themselves and their families. The Gilded Age resulted primarily from the Industrial Revolution, which created the previously unknown capability for economic growth thanks to new technology, rapidly expanding industrial processes that could produce with far greater efficiency, and the massive railroad network that crisscrossed the nation, allowing quick and easy travel from one end of the country to the other. Every major industry was represented among the wealthy of the Gilded Age, and the names of these “robber barons” are still recognized today: Rockefeller (oil), Carnegie (steel), Morgan (finance), Vanderbilt (railroads and water transport), Astor (real estate, fur), Frick (steel), Mellon (finance, oil).
However, the name did not reveal the truth regarding the widespread economic prosperity. The term originally came from a Mark Twain novel entitled The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today, a satire of American cultural and societal problems, using the imagery of “gilding,” a thin layer of gold used to cover up cheaper and less opulent material. The implication was that the public display of wealth and prosperity was little more than a façade covering up an ugly situation of moral decay and the suffering poor. The situation in Johnstown reflected this reality in more ways than one, with it being home to both the fabulously wealthy that had made their fortune in the recent booming industry and the greater masses of poor who made their way in the world by working for wages at the hands of their plutocrat overlords.
By David McCullough