The Great Transformation,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The English Colonies in the Eighteenth Century,
Advertisements

1 Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved Fig 2.1 Chapter 2.
By D. Fisher Geometric Transformations. Reflection, Rotation, or Translation 1.
0 - 0.
Addition Facts
The Market Revolution, Women, & Work
Addition 1’s to 20.
Australia’s Geography & Culture
Week 1.
The Ferment of Reform and Culture,
C ALL TO F REEDOM HOLT HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON Beginnings to INDUSTRIAL GROWTH IN THE NORTH ( ) Section 1:The Industrial Revolution and.
Chapter Fourteen Forging the National Economy,
The South and the Slavery Controversy,
The Changing Workplace Ch. 8, Sect. 4 What problems were created for the emerging industrial workforce by changes in manufacturing in the 1800’s?
Chapter 14 Review. A term used to describe the refusal to work as a protest against specific conditions.
Regional Economies Create Differences
Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e
Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.
Copyright ©2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 12/e Chapter Ten: America’s Economic Revolution.
LESSON OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT
Industrial Revolution Review 1. Period from 18__ (end of the Civil War) to ______
North and South take different Paths
Transportation and Early Industrialization from
Transportation and Industry Revolution Factories Roads Railroads Canals Steamboats.
Chapter 12 The North. Essential Questions How did the Industrial Revolution transform the way goods were produced? How did new forms of transportation.
The Changing Workplace
North and South take Different Paths
Section 2-Early Industry Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 2: Early Industry  I can.
America’s Economic Revolution Chapter 10. Factors that allow Industrial Growth *Population *Transportation/communication *Technology *Business organization.
Essential Questions What is the significances of industrialization and urbanization on life in America during the mid- 1800s? How did the women’s rights.
Industrialization and Transportation
Antebellum America: North vs. South.
North and South take Different Paths
Some items borrowed from: Susan M. Pojer, Horace Greeley HS, Chappaqua, NY.
Warm Up  Please copy the following questions in your binder:  What do you see?  What time period is the top picture? Bottom picture?  What.
Chapter 1: A Portrait of Americans Social Science.
The Changing Workplace Ch. 8, Sect. 4 What problems were created for the emerging industrial workforce by changes in manufacturing in the 1800’s?
Agriculture and the National Economy Cotton Farming the West.
Industry and Transportation
■ Essential Question: – How did the development of regional economies & Clay’s American System led to a national market economy? ■ CPUSH Agenda for Unit.
The Changing Workplace Chapter 8-4.  Women work in homes  Cottage industry: goods produced at home  finished goods brought to manufacturer  Replaced.
Alan Brinkley, American History 14/e
Regional Economies Create Differences Chapter 7 Section 1 HW:Read Ch. 7, Sect. 2,
In the early Antebellum era ( ), the U.S. economy grew rapidly
■ Essential Question: – How did the development of regional economies & Clay’s American System led to a national market economy? ■ CPUSH Agenda for Unit.
Chapter 7, Section 3 Pages  Industrial Revolution – the birth of modern industry and the social changes that accompanied it  Occurred from.
Chapter 11:. Open up your books to page 382 Write down 5 things you think you will learn about in this chapter.
How the War of 1812 & Technological Progress Change the Country THE FIRST INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN THE U.S.
The Changing Workplace
14 Forging the National Economy
Antebellum America: North vs. South
The Market Revolution 1790’s-1850’s.
Ch.10 America’s Economic Revolution
Antebellum America: North vs. South
Alan Brinkley, American History 15/e
ANTEBELLUM “REVOLUTIONS”: and Changes in American Society
American Industrial Revolution
New Economy; Transportation Revolution
Aim: Did early industrialization have a positive or negative impact on the USA post-War of 1812? Essential Questions: Why were the first factories located.
Industrial Revolution
Extraordinary Economic Changes
Shoutout to Mr. Pell’s Class. Thanks for your support!
Forging The National Economy
Antebellum America: North vs. South
Women and Workers During the Market Revolution
Section 3 - The North’s People
President Madison video & Questions
The American Industrial Revolution
The First Industrial Revolution in the U.S.
The Industrial Revolution
Presentation transcript:

The Great Transformation, 1828-1840 Chapter Eleven The Great Transformation, 1828-1840

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 There was a dramatic increase in the number of periodicals published in the United States between 1825 and 1850 because of 1. the transportation revolution. 2. a sudden increase of literacy across the nation. 3. the need for more information about economic conditions in remote locations. 4. the vast population increase attributable to improving economic conditions. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 There was a dramatic increase in the number of periodicals published in the United States between 1825 and 1850 because of 1. the transportation revolution. Hint: The speed with which information could now move from one part of the country to another caused the increase in the number of newspapers and magazines. See page 310. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 The Allegheny Portage Railroad reflected 1. the failure of steam power to take hold in American transportation before the Civil War. 2. British control of the American transportation network. 3. Pennsylvania’s attempt to compete against New York’s Erie Canal. 4. the growing importance of remote interior regions in the South. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 The Allegheny Portage Railroad reflected 3. Pennsylvania’s attempt to compete against New York’s Erie Canal. Hint: See page 308 for the portage railroad and pages 309–310 for the successful use of steam power. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Underscoring the importance of canals to the developing transportation network, 1. slaves were employed even in the North to construct them. 2. nearly all states in the North and West invested money to build them. 3. railroad developers sometimes violently sabotaged them. 4. the Supreme Court declared laws regulating them unconstitutional. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Underscoring the importance of canals to the developing transportation network, 2. nearly all states in the North and West invested money to build them. Hint: See pages 307–309. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Prior to the emergence of the factory system of manufacture, 1. interchangeable parts generally did not exist. 2. craftsmen and their workers resided and socialized together. 3. owners’ wives helped manage their husbands’ business affairs. 4. All of these Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Prior to the emergence of the factory system of manufacture, 4. All of these Hint: Because a, b, and c are all true, this is the correct choice. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Perhaps the most distinctive characteristic of the famous Lowell mills was that they 1. manufactured gunpowder and munitions. 2. employed unmarried farm girls in large numbers. 3. were among the first mills to use electric power. 4. relied heavily on interchangeable parts. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Perhaps the most distinctive characteristic of the famous Lowell mills was that they 2. employed unmarried farm girls in large numbers. Hint: The mill owners provided dormitories and strict supervision for young, unmarried female workers, thereby assuring their parents that they would not go astray. See page 313. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 A group that suffered because of the new technology of interchangeable parts was 1. small farmers residing in the South. 2. young female workers in the Lowell textile mills. 3. skilled journeymen. 4. Irish immigrants. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 A group that suffered because of the new technology of interchangeable parts was 4. skilled journeymen. Hint: Interchangeable parts reduced the need for the skills and knowledge of the journeymen. See pages 312–316. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 The cult of domesticity most accurately describes 1. the lifestyles of factory women. 2. the responsibilities of farm wives. 3. the ideal of upper-class, nonworking women. 4. religious convictions of families in factory towns. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 The cult of domesticity most accurately describes 3. the ideal of upper-class, nonworking women. Hint: The members of this so-called new genteel class were, according to the cult of domesticity, called upon to devote themselves to their homes and families. See page 320. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Which of the following statements about immigrants in the period 1820– 1850 is accurate? 1. Most were Roman Catholic. 2. Their numbers decreased steadily in the period. 3. Most came from England. 4. They quickly blended in with American society. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Which of the following statements about immigrants in the period 1820– 1850 is accurate? 1. Most were Roman Catholic. Hint: The Irish were Catholics, as were many of the German immigrants. See pages 313–316. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Changes in urban America in the second quarter of the nineteenth century were a result of the development of 1. suburban housing tracts. 2. a labor system built around craftsmen, journeymen, and apprentices. 3. public transportation. 4. slums and tenements. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Changes in urban America in the second quarter of the nineteenth century were a result of the development of 4. slums and tenements. Hint: See page 316. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Slaves were protected from excessive physical abuse by their owners because 1. state legislatures passed laws prohibiting corporal punishment. 2. they were valuable investments. 3. the owning class feared the frequent slave insurrections that occurred. 4. the clergy denounced physical punishment as unChristian. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Berkin, Making America Chapter 11 Slaves were protected from excessive physical abuse by their owners because 2. they were valuable investments. Hint: See pages 325–327. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.