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AP Chapter 12
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Early trade dealt with home production and the barter system Skilled craftsmen's controlled the manufacturing of goods and apprenticeships Women were excluded from the skilled work Men were heads of the family and controlled everything Social order was based on rank and status
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1800-1840 rapid improvements in transportation across the U.S. National Road built in 1808 and connected Cumberland, MD and Vandalia, IL Erie Canal “Clinton’s Ditch” created by DeWitt Clinton connected NYC to the Great Lakes 364 miles long, cost $7 million and 3,000 Irish workers completed the canal in 1825
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First ship traveled at 4 mph's Towns along the canal became instant cities and grew in wealth $200 million was invested in canals from 1820 to 1840 Robert Fulton demonstrated the first steamboat in 1807 which transformed trade along the Mississippi, Missouri and Ohio Rivers
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RR’s drastically grew from 1830 to 1860 Gauges varied from place to place and slowed transportation 1850s consolidation increased trade Early transportation was dangerous New transportation increased growth and created a national identity
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Rapid improvements in transportation, commercialization, and industrialization led to the Market Revolution John Jacob Astor made a fortune in the fur trade and eventual real estate in NYC Francis Cabot Lowell made a fortune in the cotton mill Northerners dominated the ship building, banks, trade and financial services
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Goods made in home under the supervision of a merchant who put out the raw materials and then sold finished goods on the open markets Workers were paid on piece work basis and set the stages of larger factories Merchant capitalist now controlled the production of goods
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Farmers were now able to farm larger areas Improvements in transportation made it easier for goods to get to the market Regions began specializing in certain goods Farmers often moved onto different areas hoping to make it big John Deere’s cutting plow and Cyrus McCormick's reaper allowed farmers to plant and harvest crops faster
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Francis Lowell visited textile mills in England in 1810 and brought the model to Massachusetts Lowell and mechanic Paul Moody invented the power loom which made the manufacturing of cloth easier Lowell opened the worlds first integrated cotton mill in Waltham, MA
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Lowell, MA was built and the entire town relied on the integrated mills Most other mills were smaller and ran by a family that everybody worked American System of manufactures led to the rise of interchangeable parts or mass production Mass production lowered the value of goods
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Samuel Colt used interchangeable parts for his gun factory Isaac Singers sewing machine also used interchangeable parts Rise in production led to specialization in labor Garment industry rose in NYC and was dominated by women Factory workers adjusted to having to work by a clock
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People’s time was divided into work and leisure Boxing, horse racing, baseball and plays became popular Economy went from a barter to cash trade Rural women workers went on strike first to protest wage cuts and long hours Most early strikes were unsuccessful
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Society was divided into upper, middle and working class with social mobility 2 nd Great Awakening new evangelistic religious spirit emerged based on personal faith Middle Class families went from 7 to 5 kids by 1860 Family planning and surgical abortions occurred
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Popularized by Ralph Waldo Emerson which was a belief in romantic philosophical theory transcending ordinary life Henry David Thoreau pushed the implications of individualism Both ideas helped the middle class forge values and values for their social roles
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Technological changes greatly altered the north and the role of the family Improvements in transportation greatly impacted the economy Lowell Mills demonstrated the early stages of industrialization.
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