Corruption In The Gilded Age

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Remembered as an era characterized by economic growth and political corruption, the three decades following the Civil War has often been referred to as “The Gilded Age,” so called in part because of “humorists Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner’s novel The Gilded Age (1874)” (Rosenzweig 77) . The novel “satirized the politics and values of the post-Civil War boom years…” (Rosenzweig 77)1 where the greed and hypocrisy of the American society and the irrationality of ordinary American citizens believe that something magical would happen and lead them to riches. Magical because the economy was flourishing and what was once “too expensive” is now affordable—creating a new class titled the “new rich.” It did happen but only for a very short period …show more content…

The Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor “stood for the twin concepts of ‘republicanism’ and ‘producerism’ that linked the belief in government determined by the people with production determined by the workers” (Rosenzweig 95)1 above. In other words, they believed in the elimination of the wage systems and political corruption while restoring American citizen’s independence and republican values. Not only that, they also promoted equality by extending membership to “include women, immigrants, Mexican-Americans, and African-Americans, all previously shut out of the labor movement” (Rosenzweig 96)1 above. Even though the Knights of Labor extended their membership pool, Chinese immigrants were still left out and discriminated against. This is, in large part, due to the Chinese Exclusion Act. Passed by Congress in 1882, and renewed in 1892 with the Geary Act, the Chinese Exclusion Act was the first federal law implemented to prohibit all immigration of Chinese laborers. A notable strike under this organization is the Great Southwest railroad strike of 1886. This strike called for better wages and working conditions from the railroad company ran by Jay Gould. When the discussion with Jay Gould broke down in 1886, the Knights of Labor would call on the workers to strike again but this time it led to a bloody battle between the workers and the …show more content…

Employers and corporation were backed by the laws of the United States and based their ideas off of ideologies. One key ideology was the “free labor ideology.” This ideology referred to the difference between the Southern and Northern economies during the nineteenth century and how free labor was better than slave labor, i.e. factory work vs. farm work respectively. “Free labor ideology prepared industrialists to blame workers for their social standing and to see workers’ collective action as a threat to their core belief” (Beckert 177)2 above. Arguably, laws and injunctions helped employers and corporations the most by allowing employers to break up strikes and discriminate against their workers. “Workers struck Pullman on May 11, 1894. To support them, the American Railway Union, led by Eugene Debs, organized a nationwide boycott of the railroads…The strike was broken by court injunctions and federal troops sent by President Grover Cleveland. Debs went to prison for six months…” (Zinn/Arnove 235)

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