{"id":45401,"date":"2024-04-26T23:13:58","date_gmt":"2024-04-26T23:13:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/branding\/the-negative-influences-on-workers-at-the-gilded-age\/"},"modified":"2024-04-26T23:13:58","modified_gmt":"2024-04-26T23:13:58","slug":"the-negative-influences-on-workers-at-the-gilded-age","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sheilathewriter.com\/blog\/the-negative-influences-on-workers-at-the-gilded-age\/","title":{"rendered":"The Negative Influences on Workers at the Gilded Age"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The Negative Influences on Workers at the Gilded Age<\/p>\n<p>      The Gilded Age was an era of rapid economic growth and industrialized expansion. After the Civil War, there were significant developments in railroads, coal mining and modern steel factories in America. The rich accumulated massive wealth from these growing industries but the working class people received negative influences. The skilled workers lost their advantages, and the terrible working environments caused diseases among workers. Numerous children worked in dangerous factories to make livings. The laborers earned less than before while the rich made huge profits. In all, the Gilded Age was a terrible time for the treatment of workers. <\/p>\n<p>     First, the skilled workers lost their advantages due to the mechanization in industries. In 1885 Winslow Homer created the painting, the fog warning, in which a skilled fisherman who could catch fish with a few tools was left far behind of the main ship, and the smoke-like shades were approaching him like threatening fog. Through smoke-like shades, which symbolized the development of modern industries, Homer suggested that the skilled workers had lost their advantages at that age of industrialization. The reason was that there was a rise of mechanization in big industries in the Gilded Age and the machines replaced the skilled workers to complete the most technical works. The skilled workers had been \u201cstrong, even arrogant, in their indispensability.\u201d Their advantages were their skills that were crucial in factory operations such as steelmaking. However, their \u201csharp sense of independence disappeared in the later years,\u201d because each man \u201cwas training for the next higher job,\u201d also, \u201cusually capable of filling it.\u201d The mechanization made complex works so simple that \u201cno workman was irreplaceable.\u201d Consequently, it was unpractical for the skilled laborers to ask the factories for favored treatment such as higher wages or better working conditions since the factories did not have to meet their requirements to retain them and their skills. The managers were more willing to hire cheaper unskilled laborers such as foreign immigrants including \u201cSlovaks, Poles, Lithuanians, Russians, Croatians and the Roumanians,\u201d  because they could also complete work with machines but demanded less.<\/p>\n<p>     Second, the poor working conditions of laborers at the Gilded Age threatened workers\u2019 health and safety. An article published in 1894 \u201cIn the Depths of a Coal Mine\u201d documented the harsh working conditions of coal miners at the Gilded Age. The author described the factory as \u201chuge and hideous monster\u201d  where \u201ca might gnashing sound filled the ears,\u201d and \u201cthe dust lay deep on every motionless thing, and clouds of it made their air dark as from a violent tempest.\u201d These descriptions showed vivid images of one cacophonous dirty coal factory. Undoubtedly, there was no perfect sanitary, and noise control in this coal factory and the workers exposed in this dirty and noisy environment could get diseases physically and mentally. The conditions were similarly awful underground. The author wrote that the coal mine inside was \u201cinscrutable dark\u201d and a \u201csoundless place\u201d with \u201ca subtly strong odor of powder-smoke, oil, wet earth.\u201d  The workers underground were likely to catch lung diseases when they breathed such feculent air daily. The dangers for underground workers were more than their poor physical health because such a working environment might threaten their life safety as well. There were not thorough safety facilities in the coal mines at that time, and as the author suggested \u201csometimes their enemy becomes exasperated and stuffs out ten, twenty, thirty lives,\u201d the workers had little chance to escape when natural disasters like collapsing happened. <\/p>\n<p>     Third, child workers suffered from lousy factory environment, heavy workloads, and dangerous jobs. The author of \u201cIn the Depth of a Coal Mine\u201d wrote that these coal mine child workers in \u201cragged shirts\u201d \u201cbreathe this atmosphere until their lungs grow heavy and sick with it,\u201d and \u201chave this clamor in their ears until it is wonderful that they have any hoodlum valor remaining.\u201d All child laborers worked in this situation without any special care regarding their young age. They were \u201cslate-pickers\u201d and needed to \u201cgrabbed deftly at the pieces of slate\u201d to make sure the purity of the coal coming out. It was a hard job because as one picture in the article  showed that these children had to bend their heads down in order to pick the slates. Their immature backbones suffered from keeping this position for a long time, which increased the possibility of deformation of the spinal column. Apart from the heavy workloads, certain risky jobs could left child workers with permanent pain. For example, one photograph from Lewis Hine\u2019s collection in the 1880s, titled Boy Lost Arm Running Saw in Box Factory, showed a disabled boy with one arm left. The plain title might suggest that disabled child workers were prevalent at that time. <\/p>\n<p>     Last, the high concentration of wealth enlarged the gap between the rich and the working class. Andrew Carnegie wrote in Wealth that one of the problems of the Gilded Age was \u201cproper administration of wealth.\u201d  Most of the wealth created at the Gilded Age was in the hands of the rich. Working people, as the creators of the wealth, could only receive a tiny part of it. For example, the Carnegie Steel Company\u2019s net profits reached 4,000,000 dollars in 1894, but the same year the company had cut the wages in Homestead to half of the wages in 1892. Statistic revealed that the wage of rollers in homestead steel company was 12.15 dollars in 1982 and dropped to 6 dollars in 1894.  Meanwhile \u201cthe increased cost of living,\u201d made life harder for workers. <\/p>\n<p>     The Gilded Age was the symbol of progress and economic expansion in many people\u2019s minds. It was undeniable that the wealth and the technology advancement in this era paved the way for future development of America. However, the terrible treatment of the laborers at that time was a reminder to modern people. Behind the surface flourishment of the Gilded Age, there were skilled workers losing jobs and poor working conditions that were harmful to workers\u2019 health, and wide employment of child workers and the enlarged gap between the rich and the working-class. Reflecting the negative side of the Gilded Age is as important as learning from its developing side because it reminds people to solve similar laborer treatment problems in today\u2019s society and prevent them from happening again.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Negative Influences on Workers at the Gilded Age The Gilded Age was an era of rapid economic growth and<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-45401","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Negative Influences on Workers at the Gilded Age - sheilathewriter<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/sheilathewriter.com\/blog\/the-negative-influences-on-workers-at-the-gilded-age\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The Negative Influences on Workers at the Gilded Age - 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