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Published byBerenice Ashlyn Cain Modified over 9 years ago
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Samuel Slater Established first factory in U.S. Pawtucket, R. I. in 1793 Textile mill supplied by greater supply of cotton
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Boston Manufacturing Co. in 1812 by Robert Lowell in Waltham MA Hired young, rural, and single women and provided boarding houses Workers were paid anywhere from $2.40 to $3.20 a week: extra income Machines were noisy and unsafe Laborers worked 12 hours, six days per week 1850
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Early Textile Loom
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Women usually worked 2-5 years and then left to marry By the 1830’s there was a drive to increase textile production As Lowell girls leave Irish immigrants and children were hired to work.
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Lowell Boarding Houses What was boardinghouse life like?
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Irish Immigrant Girls at Lowell
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Work is redefined Governed by the clock (bells) Monotonous routine Labor subject to the “iron law of wages” Work is steady; year long
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New England Textile Centers: 1830s
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New England Dominance in Textiles
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Changing Occupation Distributions: 1820 - 1860
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The gap between rich and poor was widening! American Revolution: 45% of all wealth in the top 10% of the population. 1845 Boston: top 4% owned over 65% of the wealth. 1860 Philadelphia: top 1% owned over 50% of the wealth. Economic opportunity located in the West US In 1845
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First Wave of Immigration: 1820 - 1860
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Single men and women Dug the Erie Canal Laid the rails of the new railroad network Cleared swamps for new cotton and rice plantations Were considered expendable
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In 1845, a blight afflicted the potato crop of Ireland As a result, millions of people starved, and were forced to eat the grass on their fields “Famine” Irish flee from the Potato Famine: 1.8 million Irish came to North America from 1845-1855 Flock to East coast cities such as New York, Boston, and Philadelphia, making the cities overcrowded Illiterate and unskilled
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Lived in ghettoes or ethnic neighborhoods such as the notorious ‘Five Points’ It was overcrowded, often two hundred immigrants would crowd into a single poorly built building The neighborhood had numerous bars where fighting was common; prostitution, gangs and gambling Violence and poor sewage systems Another political cartoon against the Irish
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From 1846 to 1854, over 1 million Germans came to Germans came to America for political reasons and economic reasons. ◦ Escape the failed Revolution of 1848 ◦ Economic Opportunity
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German Immigrants: ◦ Lutheran ◦ Catholic (Bavarians) ◦ Jewish Skilled workers ◦ Farmers ◦ Brewmasters ◦ Artisans Arrived in family units Adolphus Busch
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Moved to the Midwest: ◦ Cincinnati ◦ Chicago ◦ Milwaukee Educated Established German communities ◦ Newspapers ◦ Festivals ◦ Schools ◦ Businesses
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Kindergarten Foods: ◦ Cheeses ◦ Frankfurter (and other sausages) ◦ Wines ◦ New Biers Music Celebrations ◦ Oktoberfest ◦ Christmas ◦ Christmas Trees (“O Tannenbaum!”)
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Resistance to Immigration and immigrants ◦ Roman Catholic ◦ Alcoholism ◦ Domestic abuse and violence ◦ Crime, prostitution, and gambling ◦ Political corruption Stereotypes: Irish: “Bridgets” and “Paddies” Discrimination ◦ NINA (“No Irish Need Apply” ◦ Segregated
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Burning churches and schools Philadelphia Nativist riots in 1844 Burning a convent in Boston Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk published in 1836: ◦ debauchery in a convent ◦ Bestseller Baltimore riots of 1856 Rise of the “Know- Nothing” Party
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Know- Nothing Party: “The Supreme Order of the Star-Spangled Banner”—secret society Know- Nothing Party: “The Supreme Order of the Star-Spangled Banner”—secret society
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Strongest in the 1840s and 1850s Platform: ◦ Limit immigration from Catholic countries ◦ Ban Catholics from political office ◦ 21 year wait for citizenship ◦ English only ◦ Ban sale of alcohol ◦ Ban Catholic migration to the West Won electoral votes in the election of 1856 Disappear in 1860
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American Population Centers in 1820
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American Population Centers in 1860
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