Workers In The Gilded Age Essay

662 Words2 Pages

American history between 1865 and 1900 is characterized as the Gilded Age. Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner coined this term; it means that this era, from the outside, appeared prosperous, but with a closer look, one could discover the corruption that lay beneath the thin layer of gold. This era was filled with urbanization, industrialization, and immigration; these three things gave the Gilded Age the appearance of being a prosperous time filled with progress. However, the American industrial worker, the bulwark of the age, did not prosper as much as one may have thought. American industrial workers faced extremely difficult lives, working very hard to receive little reward, and it did not take very long before they wanted reform. The industrial workers banded together, forming labor unions, in order to try to negotiate with their employers to have some of their demands met. Labor unions are generally thought of as having positive effects on workers, which certainly was true, but only to an extent. Labor unions also had some very negative effects on workers, specifically when their demands were not met, or when they were seen negatively by the government and the public. Immigration rates during the Gilded Age were extremely high, because the United States had great opportunities, especially in available jobs, which were greatly desirable to foreign people. Immigration generally had negative effects on American industrial workers. With large numbers of immigrants coming from foreign countries, there was a surplus of labor which caused unemployment and wages to remain low. Also, immigration had great effects on labor unions, generally negative as well, which would then in turn negatively affect the workers in that union. Last... ... middle of paper ... ...rican industrial workers is not quite as simple as studying the effects of labor unions. With labor unions, facts are facts, and analyzing those facts is a rather simple task; in studying immigration, however, there is great biased involved. American industrial workers did not like the immigrants, because they felt they were stealing their jobs and keeping their wages low. However, it is important to understand that racism most certainly plays a role in the workers’ dislike. American workers and unionists did not always necessarily hate immigrants because of their skill, or because they were “stealing” jobs; it was more the fact that the immigrants were different. Because of the “otherness” of immigrant workers, American workers’ disliked the immigrants even more in terms of working and jobs—the two aspects that were disliked about immigrants seemingly became one.

More about Workers In The Gilded Age Essay

Open Document