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The Pig-Iron Experiment

The 1899 Bethlehem Steel demonstration in which Taylor raised Henry Noll's output from 47 to 47.5 tons per day through systematic redesign of his motions — the founding empirical case of scientific management and the clearest illustration of its human cost.
In 1899, Frederick Winslow Taylor stood at the edge of a railyard in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and watched Henry Noll load pig iron onto freight cars. Noll was strong, willing, and by conventional measures a good worker — he moved 47 tons per day. Taylor saw waste, not in the man but in the structure of his work. Through systematic analysis of Noll's movements — the reach, the grasp, the lift, the carry — Taylor eliminated unnecessary motions, pauses, and idiosyncratic rhythms, raising Noll's output to 47.5 tons. The half-ton gain sounds modest until multiplied across a workforce, a decade, an industrial economy desperate for productivity. The experiment became Taylor's signature demonstration and the founding case of scientific management — establishing both the method's genuine power and its reduction of the worker to a human machine.
The Pig-Iron Experiment
The Pig-Iron Experiment

In The You On AI Field Guide

The experiment illustrates Taylor's fundamental operation with unusual clarity. He

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