Background
The U.S. History Crash Course video on The Industrial Economy provides background and context on economic changes related to industrialization that occurred in the United States following the Civil War.
Content Standards
NCSS.D1.2.9-12. Explain points of agreement and disagreement experts have about interpretations and applications of disciplinary concepts and ideas associated with a compelling question.
NCSS.D2.His.1.9-12. Evaluate how historical events and developments were shaped by unique circumstances of time and place as well as broader historical contexts.
NCSS.D2.His.2.9-12. Analyze change and continuity in historical eras.
NCSS.D2.His.3.9-12. Use questions generated about individuals and groups to assess how the significance of their actions changes over time and is shaped by the historical context.
NCSS.D2.His.4.9-12. Analyze complex and interacting factors that influenced the perspectives of people during different historical eras.
NCSS.D2.His.5.9-12. Analyze how historical contexts shaped and continue to shape people’s perspectives.
NCSS.D2.His.12.9-12. Use questions generated about multiple historical sources to pursue further inquiry and investigate additional sources.
NCSS.D2.His.14.9-12. Analyze multiple and complex causes and effects of events in the past.
NCSS.D2.His.15.9-12. Distinguish between long-term causes and triggering events in developing a historical argument.
NCSS.D2.His.16.9-12. Integrate evidence from multiple relevant historical sources and interpretations into a reasoned argument about the past.
Lesson Activities
Activity 1. Meet Some Real Robber BaronsThe above video from the Bill of Rights Institute provides historical context to understand why and how the early industrialists thrived. Use your class text or other classroom resources, or refer to either or both of the following interactive timelines available on the EDSITEment-reviewed website Learner.org:
Introduce your students to some individuals for whom the label "robber baron" is universally regarded as appropriate. Jim Fisk and Jay Gould clearly earned the title because they did not contribute to building something such as a railroad system. Instead, they destroyed such systems through clearly illegal actions and disregard for anyone else. Their actions hurt the economy of the United States. Read their story with—or to—the class from The Robber Barons, available on the PBS website, a link from the EDSITEment resource Internet Public Library. Now read with—or to—the class from The Panic of 1873, also on PBS. Ask students to explain why Jay Cooke deserves the title "robber baron."
Such behavior as Fisk's, Gould's, and Cooke's clearly fits the criteria for a robber baron. Tell the class that the label cannot always be applied with such assurance. What if an action is illegal but leads to a positive end? What if a legal action ends with many workers or consumers suffering?
Part of the students' job in Activity 2, below, will be to evaluate situations that are similarly ambiguous in the life histories of famous industrialists.
Activity 2. Robber Barons or Captains of Industry?Divide the class into four student groups (or eight, if you'd like each industrialist/financier to be researched by two groups). Assign one of the individuals below to each group. Distribute to the groups the chart "Robber Baron or Captain of Industry?" (PDF). Using the following resources and/or any other approved sources available in your classroom or online, each group should fill in the chart for their assigned individual.
Andrew Carnegie"It shall be the rule for the workman to be Partner with Capital, the man of affairs giving his business experience, the working man in the mill his mechanical skill, to the company, both owners of the shares and so far equally interested in the success of their joint efforts."
—Andrew Carnegie
"I have been insane on the subject of moneymaking all my life."
—Cornelius Vanderbilt
"You have undertaken to cheat me. I won't sue you, for the law is too slow. I'll ruin you."
—Cornelius Vanderbilt
When the groups are finished with their research, have each present its conclusions and supporting evidence to the class. Is each assigned figure a robber baron or captain of industry or something in-between? Which of the individuals' actions were those of a captain of industry? Of a robber baron?
Read with—or to—the class any or all of the following pieces, available on the EDSITEment resource History Matters, written by workingmen and published in newspapers or magazines during the heyday of the industrialists.
How do students believe their assigned industrialist would respond to these pieces? Either in groups or individually, have students write a hypothetical letter to the editor in response.
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