The Industrialization of America no doubt was a leading factor that turned it into the super power it has become today. America was large enough, had enough supplies, and boosted its American innovators that the Industrialization of the country catapulted it into one of the most powerful nations in the world. This feat was very impressive considering how young the country was at the time and still is today. All of this, however, would not have been possible without the average American worker working the factories and making the goods. From the Civil War to the beginning of Americas imperialistic period, the worker faced hardship and adversity in their lives battling out working conditions or struggling to maintain a living with such unfair …show more content…
Instead of living on a farm and growing food for themselves people now lived in urban areas working for bosses who paid them at incredibly low wages. This exploitation of workers prompted them to send their entire family to work, even children under the age of 14, so that they would be able to support themselves. Some children even worked in jobs as dangerous are coal mines where child mortalities were all too common. What made this situation even worse was the discrimination in pay, Men got paid the most, next was women, after that was young boys, and behind them were young girls. Payments were very uneven in that fact that children got pain nearly a tenth of what men got, even though they all did similar jobs to each other. Another downfall to industrialization was the working conditions set forth in factories. Examples in history such as the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, where several hundred women burned to death after a fire broke out and the doors were locked, went to show that the conditions in factories during that time were more than unacceptable. Incidents such as these really united the workers against “evil” robber barons who apparently didn’t care for the worker’s life but just wanted money and