Domestic Concerns: Regulating Commerce
Domestic Concerns: Regulating Commerce
Sources
Railroad Regulation. The establishment of a transnational railroad system after the Civil War dramatically changed the nature of industry and, as a result, of government. Railroads reshaped regional alliances, stimulated businesses, and increasingly tied the country together in one national market. At the same time the structure of the railroad industry left customers vulnerable to unethical business practices, leading many to cali for government oversight of the railroads.
Unfair Pricing. Competition proved difficult to sustain in the railroad industry. Larger lines drove smaller ones out of business by undercutting their rates. Once a larger company had taken over a smaller company’s routes, it raised prices to finance other acquisitions. When a single railroad company controlied a route, the company could charge whatever it chose for transporting freight and passengers. These prices were not only inflated but often whimsical and unfair. Companies often discounted the rates for passenger seats and freight space just before a train left the station. The railroads also regularly gave free rail passes to legislators and politicians. Many feared the special treatment legislators enjoyed blinded them to corruption of the railroad industry.
The Interstate Commerce Act. Lack of regulation especially hurt farmers who relied on the railroad to carry their crops to urban markets. In 1867 they had banded together to found the Patrons of Husbandry, better known as the Grange, and in the 1870s they convinced five states to pass socalled Granger laws regulating railroad rates. The railroads affected by the laws challenged them in a case that went to the Supreme Court, which upheld the laws in Munn v. Illinois. In 1886, however, the court reversed itself, overturning the state laws by ruling in Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway v. Illinois that railroads were a form of interstate commerce and as such were subject to federal regulation only. In 1878 the House had passed a bill calling for such federal legislation, but it died in the Senate. After the Wabash decision, Congress—backed by President Grover Cleveland, who supported federal railroad regulation—passed one of the most important legislative measures of the era, the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887. This act created the first federal regulatory agency, a five-person Interstate Commerce Commission to oversee passenger and freight charges on any railroad that operated in more than one state. The commission was also authorized to hear public testimony on violations, to examine company records, and in general to oversee law enforcement as it applied to railroads. Many railroad companies welcomed federal oversight to stop cutthroat competition and to end rebates and discounts. While a series of Supreme Court cases in the late 1890s undercut the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission, it provided the basis for federal regulation of commerce in the twentieth century.
Morton Keller, Affairs of State: Public Life in Late Nineteenth Century America (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1977);
Page Smith, The Rise of Industrial America: A People’s History of the Post-Reconstruction Era (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1984).
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
For Dinkins, Honeymoon Is Over Before It Begins; New York Mayor-Elect Beset by Problems
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 12/10/1989; ; 700+ words
; For Mayor-elect David N. Dinkins, it is as if the campaign never ended. Reporters...new that's arisen." The federal probe involves Dinkins's 1985 transfer to his son, David Jr., of stock in Inner City Broadcasting Corp...
|
|
DINKINS MAKES HISTORY AS BLACK NYC MAYOR.(Main)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 11/8/1989; 700+ words
; ...Howard Kurtz Washington Post David N. Dinkins, the Harlem politician whose conciliatory...primary last September, said that "David deserves all the credit. He did...Monday, Giuliani declared that "David Dinkins does not have the integrity to...
|
|
Dinkins Is Elected N.Y. Mayor
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 11/8/1989; ; 700+ words
; David N. Dinkins, the Harlem politician whose conciliatory...primary last September, said that "David deserves all the credit. He did it because...On Monday, Giuliani declared that "David Dinkins does not have the integrity to be mayor...
|
|
Dinkins Dismisses Vote Patterns That Nearly Brought Defeat
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 11/9/1989; ; 700+ words
; Mayor-elect David N. Dinkins today shrugged off his surprisingly narrow margin of victory Tuesday...Jewish community that simply cannot be brushed aside about who David Dinkins really is and the people around him," said Brooklyn Assemblyman...
|
|
Dinkins's Lead Narrowing In New York Mayoral Race; Giuliani Gaining Ground Among Jewish Voters
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 10/25/1989; ; 700+ words
; ...conduct of campaign aides, Democrat David N. Dinkins has fumbled away a commanding lead...saw a recurrence of problems that David had in failing to file his taxes...I'm deeply concerned with David Dinkins's ties with people who are patently...
|
|
Dinkins Vows to Resist `Reactionary Republican'; Giuliani Hits New York Democratic `Machine'
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 9/14/1989; ; 700+ words
; David N. Dinkins, buoyed by a strong victory Tuesday...campaign," said Democratic consultant David Sawyer. "The decision-making process...that New York's ready for a change and David Dinkins is part of the old clubhouse, part of...
|
|
Dinkins restores $1.7 billion in cuts in New York City capital spending. (David N. Dinkins)
Magazine article from: The Bond Buyer; 4/24/1992; ; 700+ words
; New York City Mayor David N. Dinkins announced yesterday the restoration...spending strategy. In January, Mr. Dinkins proposed a $3.7 billion reduction...over $400 million, an aide to Mr. Dinkins said. Although Mr. Dinkins refused...
|
|
Dinkins' plan to seek mayor's seat baffles pols, some say it's
Newspaper article from: New York Amsterdam News; 2/8/1997; 700+ words
; ...Amsterdam News 02-08-1997 Dinkins' plan to seek mayor's seat...figure out what former Mayor David N. Dinkins has up his sleeves for wanting...Russell declared. Sen. David Paterson said that should Dinkins decide to run for mayor...
|
|
DINKINS OFFERS TO SEEK UNITY IN NEW YORK CITY.(Main)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 11/8/1989; 700+ words
; ...Press Mayor-elect David Dinkins today offered to bring...Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., a close Dinkins friend, said as fellow...is a season. It's David's season," he said...his walking shoes if Dinkins was elected. "New...
|
|
Dinkins Runs Low-Risk, Front-Runner Race; New York Democrat Attends Los Angeles Fund-Raiser, Brushes Off Rival Giuliani
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 10/8/1989; ; 700+ words
; ...expected to be working crowds in Brooklyn or the Bronx, David N. Dinkins is spending the weekend in California. The leisurely...Dinkins had all week. "I think it's quite clear that David Dinkins is going to be elected," Koch said. "I believe...
|
|
David Dinkins
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...Koch in New York's 1989 Democratic mayoral primary, David Dinkins (born 1917) went on in November to defeat Rudolph...City. Calm, elegant, deliberate, and dignified, David N. Dinkins overcame the suspicions of many white New Yorkers that...
|
|
Dinkins, David 1927–
Book article from: Contemporary Black Biography
David Dinkins 1927 – Mayor of New York City At a Glance … The...Gorgeous Mosaic ” Calm, elegant, deliberate, and dignified, David N. Dinkins overcame the suspicions of many white New Yorkers that he lacked leadership...
|
|
David N. Dinkins
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
David N. Dinkins 1927-, African-American political leader, b. Trenton, N.J. After graduating (1956) from Brooklyn Law School, he went into...
|
|
Brown, Lee P. 1937—
Book article from: Contemporary Black Biography
...of police, Brown became the first non-New Yorker in a quarter century to hold the post; he was chosen by Mayor David N. Dinkins for his effective community policing programs. While in Houston in the 1980s Brown transformed what was considered...
|
|
Edward Irving Koch
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...governor, and in 1989 he sought an unprecedented fourth term as mayor but was defeated in the Democratic primary by David N. Dinkins , who was then elected mayor. With William Rauch, Koch wrote Mayor (1984).
|