Essay On The Gilded Age

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During the gilded age, African - Americans began to migrate to the North due to the available job opportunities in factories. Most were poor, uneducated and struggled in the Northern economy. Despite having all the rights of a citizen, there was still segregation. In the beginning the states passed the Jim Crow laws that made segregation legal, then the United States Supreme Court legalized the segregation on a national level. This took place in the Plessy V. Ferguson which stated that there could be separate but equal facilities among the races. The segregation against blacks was in almost all public settings such as schools, transportation, and restrooms. During the gilded age there were many new jobs for women to uptake that involved life outside of the home. …show more content…

The railroad needed people to make the tracks, carnegie needed workers for his steel plant, there where sweatshops, mines, and they were all followed by unions. Labor during this period had cause for concern not only were hours hard and pay low, but the jobs could be dangerous and detrimental to the workers health. Often there were labor strikes and they were often violent and chaotic, The coeur d'Alene miners strike even had concentration camp like situations. The dominant conflict in the gilded age was the overwhelming ignorance of the presidents in this period. Such as Ulysses Grant. He was a hero at the end of the civil war but was naive to the inner workings of washington and completely unprepared to take office. During his term he relied very heavily on insiders who were coherently stealing public money. Moreover his secretary of war sold land from an indian reservation and pocketed the money himself. Therefore the ignorance of presidents during the gilded age was the largest political

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