Growth of the Cities and Business

Cities grew up around factories. Many people moved to the city to live closer to the factory where they could find work. Cities also attracted people who ran shops, food stores, and other services needed by workers. Fewer people needed to farm because machines were doing much of the work. Cities became the business centers of the United States.

Top 10 Cities Ranked by Population from 1850-1910

1850

   1   New York city, NY *................    515,547
   2   Baltimore city, MD.................    169,054
   3   Boston city, MA *..................    136,881 
   4   Philadelphia city, PA *............    121,376  
   5   New Orleans city, LA *.............    116,375
   6   Cincinnati city, OH................    115,435 
   7   Brooklyn city, NY *................     96,838 
   8   St. Louis city, MO.................     77,860   
   9   Spring Garden district, PA *.......     58,894   
  10   Albany city, NY....................     50,763  

1870

   1 New York city, NY *................    942,292    
   2   Philadelphia city, PA..............    674,022     
   3   Brooklyn city, NY *................    396,099    
   4   St. Louis city, MO.................    310,864     
   5   Chicago city, IL...................    298,977     
   6   Baltimore city, MD.................    267,354    
   7   Boston city, MA *..................    250,526    
   8   Cincinnati city, OH................    216,239    
   9   New Orleans city, LA...............    191,418     
  10   San Francisco city, CA.............    149,473     

1890

    1   New York city, NY *................  1,515,301
   2   Chicago city, IL...................  1,099,850    
   3   Philadelphia city, PA..............  1,046,964   
   4   Brooklyn city, NY *................    806,343   
   5   St. Louis city, MO.................    451,770     
   6   Boston city, MA....................    448,477    
   7   Baltimore city, MD.................    434,439     
   8   San Francisco city, CA.............    298,997    
   9   Cincinnati city, OH................    296,908    
  10   Cleveland city, OH.................    261,353

 

1910
   1   New York city, NY *...... 4,766,883 
   2   Chicago city, IL......... 2,185,283
   3   Philadelphia city, PA.... 1,549,008
   4   St. Louis city, MO.......   687,029
   5   Boston city, MA..........   670,585
   6   Cleveland city, OH.......   560,663
   7   Baltimore city, MD.......   558,485
   8   Pittsburgh city, PA *....   533,905
   9   Detroit city, MI.........   465,766
  10   Buffalo city, NY.........   423,715

Information from the U.S. Census Bureau

  1850 1870 1890 1910
New York City 515547 942292 1515301 4766883
Baltimore 169054 267354 434439 558485
Boston 136881 250526 448477 670585
Philadelphia 121376 674022 1046964 1549008
New Orleans 116375 191418 242039 242039
Cincinnati 115435 216239 296908 363591
Brooklyn 96838 396099 806343 No data
St. Louis 77860 310864 451770 687029
Spring Garden 58894 No data No data No data
Albany 50763 69422 94923 100253
Chicago 29963 298977 1099850 2185283
San Francisco No data 149473 298997 416912
Cleveland 17034 92829 261353 560663
Pittsburgh 46601 86076 238617 533905
Detroit 21019 79577 205876 465766

  

Cities grew in areas:

Some city problems:

As businesses grew more money was needed to run them than 1 or 2 people could furnish. A new form of business was developed called a corporation. In the corporation people started the business would sell stocks.  A stock was part of the company. This raised money to run the company. People who buy the stock have some say in how the company is run. Stock owners get a share of the company's profits. Share is paid in dividends. Stockholders pick a group of people to run the business called the board of directors. The board of directors hire a president and managers to run the business. If the company does well the stockholders make money. If the company does badly the stockholders can lose all the money that they have put into the business. By 1900 the oil, steel, and meat industries were controlled by giant corporations.

Some corporations grew so large and powerful than they controlled entire industries. Some of these were the Standard Oil Company begun by  John D. Rockefeller;  and the steel industry started by  Andrew Carnegie. As owners grew richer workers became unhappy with the conditions in the factories and shops.

Many worked 15 to 16 hours a day, 6 or 7 days a week. These people earned only $30. or $40. a week. The workplaces were dangerous and hot.

Unions were formed to help the workers. A union is a group of workers who come together to help each other. In 1869 the first nationwide union was formed. It was called the Knights of Labor. This union was had secret membership until 1878. The Knights called many strikes. A strike is when a group of workers decide not to work until they get what they are asking for. The Knights lost most of their strikes. They were not strong enough against the large corporations. The only people who could not join a union were saloon keepers, gamblers, lawyers, and bankers.

In May of 1886 the Knights held a big rally at Haymarket Square in Chicago. About 3000 workers went to the meeting. When the meeting was breaking up a bomb was thrown into a group of policemen. Some of the policemen were killed. Seven people were arrested. Although none of  these were Knights, people still blamed the Knights. Membership in the Knights dropped.

 

In 1886 a stronger group led by Samuel Gompers was formed. They were called the American  Federation of  Labor. Only skilled workers could join. This group made some small gains for the workers.

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In 1893 the company that made the Pullman sleeping cars for the railroads fired 2/3rds of its workers and cut the pay of the other 1/3. The American Railway Union called a strike against the Pullman Company. The Federal government took action against the strikers since the trains carried the U.S. mail.. The government took the strike to court. The court said the union had no right to strike. Eugene V. Debs, the man who started the American Railway Union, was sent to prison because he did not obey the ruling of the court. The strike stopped without its leader.

In 1902 coal miners in Pennsylvania went on strike. President Roosevelt sent troops to help keep the mines open.

It was not until the 1930's when new laws were passed that workers began getting much of what they wanted.