Learning Resource Type

Lesson Plan

Working in Birmingham's Iron Industry

Subject Area

Social Studies

Grade(s)

4

Overview

Students will use primary sources to gain a perspective of the living and working conditions in Birmingham in the late 1800s, especially as they relate to working in the iron industry. Students will explore the role of the iron industry with regard to the initial fast growth rate of Birmingham and how this growth was the result of location, transportation, and resources. 

This lesson was created as a part of the Alabama History Education Initiative, funded by a generous grant from the Malone Family Foundation in 2009.

Author Information: Kris White (Cohort 2: 2010-2011) Bear Exploration Center Elementary School Montgomery County School System Montgomery, AL

 

    Social Studies (2010) Grade(s): 4

    SS10.4.10

    Analyze social and educational changes during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries for their impact on Alabama.

    Unpacked Content

    UP:SS10.4.10

    Vocabulary

    • implementation
    • agriculture
    • "separate but not equal"
    • Populism
    • suffrage

    Knowledge

    Students know:
    • The social impact of the implementation of the Plessey v. Ferguson "separate but not equal" court decision and the birth of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) on Alabama.
    • The educational changes during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries impacted Alabama in several ways including the establishment of normal schools and land-grant colleges such as Huntsville Normal School (Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical [A&M] University), Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama (Auburn University), Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (Tuskegee University), Lincoln Normal School (Alabama State University).
    • The changing role of industry, trade, and agriculture in Alabama during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, including the rise of Populism.
    • The purposes and the effects of Jim Crow Laws.
    • Important Alabamians who made contributions in the fields of science, education, the arts, politics, and business during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries including Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver, Jesse Owens, Tallulah Bankhead, W.C. Handy, Helen Keller, Patti Ruffner Jacobs, and Julia Tutwiler.

    Skills

    Students are able to:
    • Identify social changes in Alabama including implementation of the Plessey versus Ferguson "separate but not equal" court decision, birth of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
    • Identify educational changes during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries for their impact on Alabama including the establishment of normal schools and land-grant colleges such as Huntsville Normal School (Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical [A&M] University), Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama (Auburn University), Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (Tuskegee University), Lincoln Normal School (Alabama State University).
    • Identify the cause and effect relationship between the development and changing role of industry, trade, and agriculture in Alabama during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, including the rise of Populism.
    • Interpret the Jim Crow laws.
    • Identify Alabamians who made contributions in the fields of science, education, the arts, politics, and business during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

    Understanding

    Students understand that:
    • Industry and agriculture in Alabama saw many changes during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
    • Social (racial) injustices occurred in Alabama during this time and these injustices impacted Alabama.
    • Many key Alabamians had an impact on the world of education.

    Primary Learning Objectives

    The students will be able to:

    • explain the development and changing role of the steel and iron industry in Alabama during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.  
    • analyze social and educational changes during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries for their impact on Alabama.

    Procedures/Activities

    Engagement/Motivation Activity:

    Before:


    Show the first three-and-a-half minutes of the Sloss Video: Like It Ain’t Never Passed – The video begins with an elderly gentleman reminiscing about ‘the old days’ at Sloss.

    During:

    Step 1- The teacher will use a document camera, computer, and projector to show the photos of making iron and of making steel and will use image-based questions (attached) to solicit observations and inferences about these photos. (Attached: Iron Industry and Sloss Images)

    Step 2- The teacher will show images of workers in a pig-iron furnace (with the title of the image covered up), and of workers going to lunch. The teacher will use image-based questions to solicit observations and inferences about the photos.

    Step 3- The teacher will show the photo of Sloss housing and will use image-based questions to solicit observations and inferences about this photo.

    Step 4- The teacher will ask the students:
    • How do these pictures help us get a better understanding of the working conditions for the people we see?
    • How do we know that the production of iron was important?
    • For what was iron used? (Try to tie this back to transportation.) If time permits, add the following to the class discussion:
    • This was said about Birmingham by Colonel James R. Powell, the first president of Elyton Land Co., in the late 1800s: ‘This magic little city of ours has no peer in the rapidity of its growth...its permanent mountains groaning to be delivered of their wealth...the El Dorado of iron masters.’
    o Discuss the meaning of this statement.
    Discuss the use of personification. (Definitions of key words are provided in the background/preparation section.)

    After:

    Step 5- The teacher will explain the footprint activity.

    Footprint activity: What was a day like in the life of an American pig-iron furnace worker in the late 1800s? Step back in time. Then use the Footprint Activity Sheet (attached) to create two footprints:

    1. On one footprint, draw five pictures that represent important or significant aspects of a person’s daily life.
    2. On the other footprint, use words to describe issues, events, and feelings that tell about this person’s life. These may be bulleted; they do not need to be written in complete sentences.
    3. The students will then complete this assessment activity and will share and display their footprints.

    Engagement/Motivation Activity:

    Before:


    Show the first three-and-a-half minutes of the Sloss Video: Like It Ain’t Never Passed – The video begins with an elderly gentleman reminiscing about ‘the old days’ at Sloss.

    During:

    Step 1- The teacher will use a document camera, computer, and projector to show the photos of making iron and of making steel and will use image-based questions (attached) to solicit observations and inferences about these photos. (Attached: Iron Industry and Sloss Images)

    Step 2- The teacher will show images of workers in a pig-iron furnace (with the title of the image covered up), and of workers going to lunch. The teacher will use image-based questions to solicit observations and inferences about the photos.

    Step 3- The teacher will show the photo of Sloss housing and will use image-based questions to solicit observations and inferences about this photo.

    Step 4- The teacher will ask the students:
    • How do these pictures help us get a better understanding of the working conditions for the people we see?
    • How do we know that the production of iron was important?
    • For what was iron used? (Try to tie this back to transportation.) If time permits, add the following to the class discussion:
    • This was said about Birmingham by Colonel James R. Powell, the first president of Elyton Land Co., in the late 1800s: ‘This magic little city of ours has no peer in the rapidity of its growth...its permanent mountains groaning to be delivered of their wealth...the El Dorado of iron masters.’
    o Discuss the meaning of this statement.
    Discuss the use of personification. (Definitions of key words are provided in the background/preparation section.)

    After:

    Step 5- The teacher will explain the footprint activity.

    Footprint activity: What was a day like in the life of an American pig-iron furnace worker in the late 1800s? Step back in time. Then use the Footprint Activity Sheet (attached) to create two footprints:

    1. On one footprint, draw five pictures that represent important or significant aspects of a person’s daily life.
    2. On the other footprint, use words to describe issues, events, and feelings that tell about this person’s life. These may be bulleted; they do not need to be written in complete sentences.
    3. The students will then complete this assessment activity and will share and display their footprints.

    Assessment Strategies

    Footprint activity: What was a day like in the life of an American pig-iron furnace worker in the late 1800s? Step back in time. Then use the Footprint Activity Sheet (attached) to create two footprints:
    1. On one footprint, draw five pictures that represent important or significant aspects of a person’s daily life.
    2. On the other footprint, use words to describe issues, events, and feelings that tell about this person’s life. These may be bulleted; they do not need to be written in complete sentences.

    (Scoring guidelines: Each picture is worth ten points and each word response is worth ten points. These may be displayed under the title ‘Walk a Mile in My Footsteps.’)

    Acceleration

    View videos or virtual tours online and have students write a paragraph of reflection – like telling how it made them feel. Videos or virtual tours to extend lessons:

    Title of Video: Virtual Tour of Sloss Furnaces

    Annotation: Good background information about Sloss, its founding, its relationship to Birmingham, and Sloss’ workers.

    Intervention

    Provide the student with a footprint activity sheet that shows a completed example of the assignment, including a picture and a written response.

    Approximate Duration

    Total Duration

    0 to 30 Minutes

    Background and Preparation

    Background/Preparation

    Background information for teacher:

    • The Sloss Story - Provides background information about Sloss, its founding, its relationship to Birmingham, and Sloss’ workers.
    • James Withers Sloss and Birmingham's "Great Iron Boom," 1871-1890 - Provides background information about the man who started Sloss Furnaces and about Birmingham being the railroad center. (Copy also attached as PDF file.)
    • The Encyclopedia of Alabama provides excellent articles about the Sloss Furnaces and Birmingham.
    • Suggested reading:

    Davis, Christopher. "The Role of the Elyton Land Company in Birmingham During the Depression of 1873 to 1879." Samford University, Copyright 2001. Web. 6 Jul 2010.

     The students should be able to define and use the following vocabulary words:

    • peer – people who are equal with regard to such aspects as age, education, or social class
    • wealth – the abundance of valuable resources or material possessions
    • El Dorado – Spanish for “the golden one”
    • personification – the attribution of human characteristics to inanimate objects

    Materials and Resources

    Materials and Resources

    Also attached as PDF documents:

    Technology Resources Needed

    • Computer with internet access
    • Digital projector
    ALSDE LOGO