Friday, May 26, 2023

Postbellum Economy (1865-1900)

 

This week's blog topic is the economic growth of two specific territories of post-Civil War America from 1865 to 1900. For this blog, I decided to compare the Southern agriculture economy to the Northern textile economy. While the directions called for two datasets, I was able to find three that would benefit my discussion.  The three datasets that I chose to validate my discussion are the U.S. Census of Manufactures, The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), and the Historical Statistics of the United States, 1789 – 1945.

Information found in these databases is as follows:

1.    The U.S. Census of Manufactures provides information about the analytic statistics for States and counties which includes:

a.    Principal industry in each county with a number of establishments, capital invested, cost of raw material, the number employed by sex, the annual cost of labor, and the annual value of products;

b.    Recapitulation by counties;

c.    Recapitulation by industry.[1]

2.    The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is an organization that prides itself on evaluating economic research to educate policymakers, business owners, and economic academics.[2]

3.    Historical Statistics of the United States, 1789 – 1945.[3]

These datasets provide valuable information on the economic situation in the United States during the post-Civil War, also known as Reconstruction.

In the wake of the Civil War, many things changed economically. For example, Southern workers' income decreased after the war due in part to losing its main source of labor after the Emancipation Proclamation. Prior to the war, Southern workers made more than the Midwest workers by roughly ten percent. After the war, Southern workers' pay dropped to seventy percent of that of Midwesterners. By 1900, Southerners' pay increased and was now fifty percent lower than that of Midwesterners.

            In the early years after the Civil War, the South sought to rebuild after the devastation that was left behind by the war. There were conflicts over how to create a new South while upholding the rights of African Americans that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments enabled.

            In an effort to "help" African Americans, sharecropping was introduced in the South. Initially seen as a positive, it was quickly recognized as a way to keep African Americans from doing more than living hand to mouth. The newly freed slaves were entitled to hand over much of their harvested crops to the landowner as rent for their lands. The sharecroppers were, however, allowed to sell their surplus crops for their personal benefit.

Regarding the South's relationship with the North, they were also behind the North in development. Part of the problem with the South's inability to rebuild and be on par with the North was partly due to the fact that the North was environmentally equipped to succeed in textiles. The South was never capable of having factories like the North due to its lack of coal and other natural resources the North had. The South was great at agriculture, but with the loss of "free" labor after the war, the South was not able to keep up.

In the North, industries expanded, and new ones emerged. The Second Industrial Revolution saw an increase in steel manufacturing, electrical power harnessing, and petroleum refining. In addition, the railroads expanded to remote parts of the country, which would create a national market economy. The industrial growth in the North changed the country.

With this change came a new class of rich industrialists and, as a byproduct, the growth of an affluent middle class. The "blue collar" class of workers is also created. Many of these workers were immigrants from other countries or migrant workers arriving in urban areas from the countryside.

Despite the upturn in prosperity, many in America suffered. The new class of blue-collar workers was not employed year-round. Many were employed only employed during certain times of the year. No matter how long one was employed, their wages were low. This led to the creation of labor unions that helped regulate worker opportunities.

            While urban workers were struggling, their contemporaries on farms also faced hard times. With the rise in better technology, production increased, and increased competition between farmers led to lagging food prices on cultivated goods. With increased competition, many left the farm and moved to the city to gain employment in factories. Despite the low wages paid to factory workers, it was seemingly better than those on the farm.

            Despite the harshness of urban America, the industrialists ruled the American economy. Now legendary names such as Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, and Carnegie carved America out of the raw materials that had been part of the ecosystem but were untouched because they had no means to harvest them. The Second Industrial Revolution enabled these men and their families to drag America to the world's economic forefront. Long before America was a leading military or political force, it was an economic leader in the late nineteenth century. America's money spoke volumes before its military might did. This strength would enable America to enter the twentieth century and become an international player.

Reference

Davis, Lance E., Jonathan RT Hughes, and Stanley Reiter. "Aspects of quantitative research in economic history." The Journal of Economic History 20, no. 4 (1960): 539-547.

Popp, Andrew, and Susanna Fellman. "Writing business history: Creating narratives." Business History 59, no. 8 (2017): 1242-1260.

Woodward, C. Vann. Origins of the New South 1877-1913. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1951.


[1] https://www.census.gov/library/publications/1865/dec/1860c.html

[2] https://www.nber.org/

[3] https://www.census.gov/library/publications/1949/compendia/hist_stats_1789-1945.html