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Published byElaine May Modified over 9 years ago
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Early 19c Industrialization in America: The Market Revolution
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ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What were the results of early 19c
industrialization in America?
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The Transportation Revolution
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East vs. West (recap) Henry Clay Internal improvements
Highway system and toll roads A National Road (Cumberland Rd) Opposition The American system
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Henry Clay
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Cumberland (National Road), 1811
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Conestoga Covered Wagons
Conestoga Trail, 1820s
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Take Five… What does “Clinton’s Big Ditch” refer to?
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Transportation Revolution
Canals Erie Canal Mainland Canal Railroads B & O
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Erie Canal System
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Erie Canal, 1820s Begun in 1817; completed in 1825
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Canals in Early America
DeWitt Clinton Results: New York becomes the most populated state (until WWII!!!!) PA Canal (not so lucky!!!!)
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Take Five… What problems are associated with early steam transportation?
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Transportation Revolution (recap)
Steamships Problems with navigating rivers James Watt Robert Fulton The Clermont Accidents
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Robert Fulton & the Steamboat
1807: The Clermont
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Principal Canals in 1840
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Did you know?????
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The “Iron Horse” Wins! (1830)
1830 13 miles of track built by Baltimore & Ohio RR By 1850 9000 mi. of RR track [1860 31,000 mi.]
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The Railroad Revolution, 1850s
Immigrant labor built the No. RRs. Slave labor built the So. RRs.
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The Industrial Revolution
Shift from self-sufficiency to a specialized interdependent economy Reasons for the industrial revolution High labor costs Inventors Oliver Evans, Eli Whitney, Peter Cooper Abundant natural resources Water, Coal, Lumber etc.
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Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin, 1791
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Eli Whitney’s Gun Factory Interchangeable Parts Rifle
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First prototype of the locomotive
Oliver Evans First automated flour mill First prototype of the locomotive
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John Deere & the Steel Plow (1837)
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Cyrus McCormick & the Mechanical Reaper: 1831
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Samuel F. B. Morse 1840 – Telegraph
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Cyrus Field & the Transatlantic Cable, 1858
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Elias Howe & Isaac Singer
1840s Sewing Machine
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The Industrial Revolution (con’t)
Entrepreneurs Piracy Samuel Slater, John and Arthur Schofield, Francis Cabot Lowell Capital Banks Protective tariffs
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Changes in the textile industry
Cottage industry Factories Emerging urban industrial working class British monopoly Mill towns Slater mills Lowell mills Lowell girls Child labor
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Samuel Slater (“Father of the Factory System”)
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The Lowell/Waltham System: First Dual-Purpose Textile Plant
Francis Cabot Lowell’s town
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Lowell in 1850
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Lowell Mill
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Early Textile Loom
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New England Textile Centers: 1830s
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New England Dominance in Textiles
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Starting for Lowell
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What was their typical “profile?”
Lowell Girls What was their typical “profile?”
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Lowell Boarding Houses What was boardinghouse life like?
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Lowell Mills Time Table
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Early “Union” Newsletter
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The Factory Girl’s Garland
February 20, 1845 issue.
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I’m a Factory Girl Filled with Wishes
I'm a factory girl Everyday filled with fear From breathing in the poison air Wishing for windows! I'm a factory girl Tired from the 13 hours of wok each day And we have such low pay Wishing for shorten work times! I'm a factory girl Never having enough time to eat Nor to rest my feet Wishing for more free time! I'm a factory girl Sick of all this harsh conditions Making me want to sign the petition! So do what I ask for because I am a factory girl And I'm hereby speaking for all the rest!
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Irish Immigrant Girls at Lowell
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The Early Union Movement
Workingman’s Party (1829) * Founded by Robert Dale Owen and others in New York City. Early unions were usually local, social, and weak. Commonwealth v. Hunt (1842)—ruling in favor of workers!! Worker political parties were ineffective until the post-Civil War period.
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Regional Specialization
EAST Industrial SOUTH Cotton & Slavery WEST The Nation’s “Breadbasket”
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American Population Centers in 1820
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American Population Centers in 1860
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National Origin of Immigrants: 1820 - 1860
Why now?
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