Title: Technology, Culture, and Everyday life
1Chapter 11
- Technology, Culture, and Everyday life
- 1840-1860
2Introduction
- In the 1840s and 1850s, most Americans believed
God had ordained that man should progress
(morally and materially) - The means to progress of both kinds was through
technology - Americans defined as the application of science
to improve the conveniences of life - We will look at the changes in the everyday life
of ordinary citizens brought about by the new
technology of the period of 1840-1860 - Also looking at the ways people responded to
those transformations
3Introduction (cont.)
- 1.) How did technology transform the daily lives
of middle-class Americans between 1840 and 1860? - 2.) How did American pastimes and entertainment
change between 1840 and 1860? - 3.) How did Americans express their
distinctiveness in their literature and art?
4Technology and Economic Growth
- Introduction
- Pre-Civil War decades were affected and
transformed American life by - The steam engine
- Cotton gin
- Reaper
- Sewing machine
- Telegraph
- This new technology increase productivity and
eased travel and communication - Also it brought down costs and prices
5Introduction (cont.)
- Most Americans between 1840 and 1860 enjoyed
improved standards of living - But the new technology hurt other Americans
- The cotton gin encouraged the expansion of the
plantation-slave economy - Sewing machines and new manufacturing techniques
rendered traditional crafts and the artisans who
practiced them obsolete
6Agricultural Advancement
- Between 1830 and 1860, settlers moved onto the
grasslands of IN, MI, and IL - John Deers steel-tipped plow was developed in
1837 - Used to break up the tough prairie soil
7Agricultural Advancement (cont.)
- Cyrus McCormick
- 1847
- Massed produced mechanical reapers
- Farmers could harvest grain 7 times faster than
before and use 1/2 the labor - Wheat became the dominate crop of the Midwest
8Agricultural Advancement (cont.)
- Americans quickly adopted these laborsaving
inventions - But they generally farmed wastefully
- Rapidly depleted the soil
- Then moved on to virgin land
- In the East some farmers introduced fertilizers
- Increased their yields so they could compete with
the new western fields - In the South farmers had little incentive to
invest in laborsaving machinery (used slaves)
9Technology and Industrial Progress
- Americans of the antebellum period readily
invested in new technology - Eli Whitney
- Interchangeable parts
- Greatly facilitated by improved machine tools
- Europeans called interchangeable parts American
System of Manufacturing
10Technology and Industrial Progress (cont.)
- Readiness to invest in innovations,
interchangeable parts, and better machine tools - Resulted in
- Rapid acceptance
- Mass production
- Use of the new inventions
- Samuel Colts revolving pistol
- Elias Howes sewing machine
- Samuel F. B. Morses telegraph
11The Railroad Boom
- By 1860, the United States had 30,000 miles of
track - More than the rest of the world combined.
- Most of the new rail lines linked the East and
Midwest. - Much of the produce of the Midwest was now
shipped via railroads radiating from Chicago
eastward.
12The Railroad Boom (cont.)
- Positives of the railroad growth
- simulated the settlement of the Midwest
- Growth of wheat farming
- Aided the development of cities, towns, and
industry - Several states barred funding of the railroads
- Encouraged a shift toward private investment
13The Railroad Boom (cont.)
- Railroad was Americas 1st big business
- Railroads pioneered new forms of financing in the
1850s - Sale of stock and other securities
- Many of the transactions were handled through
Wall Street - Made NY the nations leading capital market
14Rising Prosperity
- Technological improvements reduced the price of
commodities to consumers - Contributed to an average 25 rise in the real
income of American workers between 1840 and 1860 - The increased annual income of working families
also was attributable to the use of steam power - Allowed factories to operate in all seasons
- Offer work to more laborers
15Rising Prosperity (cont.)
- The growth of towns and cities that accompanied
industrialization opened new employment
opportunities for women and children - Often had to work to supplement the inadequate
wages of the husband/father - There was a steady stream of American to cities
- economic opportunities plus the comforts and
conveniences of urban life
16The Quality of Life
- Introduction
- Technological advances improved the quality of
life in the middle class - Now enjoyed luxuries formerly reserved for the
rich - These changes were slower to reach the poor
- Increasingly came to congregate in cramped urban
tenements
17Introduction (cont.)
- Medical knowledge lagged behind the strides made
in industry and agriculture - Many Americans looked to popular health fads for
the prevention and cure of illness
18Dwellings
- In the cities the typical dwellings of the period
were row houses - Middle class row houses became elaborate
- Poor were forced into crowded row houses that
were further subdivided by several families and
boarders
19Dwellings (cont.)
- Log cabins
- On the frontier
- Often times 1 room
- As the communities matured and prospered
- Log cabins were replaced by more comfortable
houses - Larger homes
20Dwellings (cont.)
- Upper class and middle classes favored ornate
home furnishings in the rococo style - rococo furniture
- Wealthy imported furniture from Europe
- Middle class bought mass-produced imitations from
new furniture manufacturing centers - Cincinnati
- Grand Rapids
21Conveniences and Inconveniences
- Industrialization and improved affected home
heating, cooking, and diet - By 1840s, coal-burning stoves were replacing
fireplaces for heating and cooking - These stoves were more convenient
- Made it possible to cook several dishes at once
- Coal burning contributed to fouling the urban
environment
22Conveniences and Inconveniences (cont.)
- Railroads brought fresh produce to city dwellers
- Only the rich could afford fruits out of season
- Home iceboxes were rare before 1860
- Most Americans still ate meat preserved by
salting rather than fresh meat
23Ice Boxes
24Conveniences and Inconveniences (cont.)
- By the 1840s and 1850s, cities such as New York
began to construct aqueducts, reservoirs, and
water works - Brought pure water to street hydrants
- The majority of houses were not yet hooked up to
the water main - Americans of the time bathed infrequently
- Few cities had sanitation departments
- Most people used outdoor privies (outhouses)
- American cities often stunk
25Disease and Health
- Transportation boom increased and widened the
risks of epidemics - Recurring epidemics of cholera, yellow fever, and
other diseases - The medical profession was held in low esteem
- Divided and uncertain about the causes and cures
of epidemic diseases
26Disease and Health (cont.)
- Anesthetics were developed in 1840s
- Crawford Long
- William T.G. Morton
- Allowed advances in the field of surgery
- Still failed to recognize the importance of
disinfection
27Popular Health Movements
- Neither public-health boards nor doctors seemed
able to prevent disease - Many Americans put their faith in various popular
therapies - Hydropathy
- Grahamite regimen
28Phrenology
- Most popular of the scientific fads of the
antebellum period - An accurate analysis of an individuals character
- Examining the contours of his skull
- Promised to teach the principles of life
- Give the individual control over his/her own fate
- Science was believed to be a tool to improve ones
life
29Democratic Pastimes
- Introduction
- New technology transformed leisure as well as
work between 1830-1860 - Imaginative entrepreneurs used new inventions and
advances in manufacturing to sell the kinds of
entertainment they believed the public wanted
30Newspapers
- James Gordon Bennett
- Publisher of New York Herald
- Used new techniques in paper making and printing
- Used the telegraph
- Build a mass circulation
31Newspapers (cont.)
- Realized you could make by building a mass
circulation - Slashed the price of the paper to a penny
- Used newspaper boys to sell hundreds of thousands
of copies daily - The number of weekly papers grew from 65 to 138
(between 1830 and 1840)
32Newspapers (cont.)
- The penny papers filled their columns with
human-interest stories of crime and sex - Bennetts New York Herald and Horace Greeleys
New York Tribune also pioneered in modern
financial and political reporting
33The Theater
- Antebellum theaters were filled with large, rowdy
audiences from all social classes - People liked romantic melodramas best
- William Shakespeares plays were performed the
most of any other dramatist
34Minstrel Shows
- Minstrel showsperformances of songs, dances, and
skits by white men in blackface - Minstrel shows became popular in the 1840s with
the white working-class audiences - Catered to and reinforced the prejudices of
whites - Depicted blacks as stupid, comical, musical, and
irresponsible
35P.T. Barnum
- Displays of curiosities
- Flair for publicity
- Development of the American Museum in New York
- The ultimate entrepreneur of popular
entertainment in the antebellum era
36The Quest for Nationality in Literature and Art
- Introduction
- Europeans in the early 19th century looked down
on American writing - Washington Irving
- Most successful American writing in early 1800s
- Rip Van Winkle
- The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
- Biography
37Introduction (cont.)
- American Renaissance
- After 1820
- a flowering of literature
- James Fenimore
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Walt Whitman
- Some sought to develop a new, unique American
literature
38Introduction (cont.)
- The painters of the Hudson River School and
Frederick Law Olmsted in his landscape design
also offered distinctively American visions
39Roots of the American Renaissance
- 1820s and 1830s
- 2 things transformed the writing of fiction in
the U.S.A. - The transportation revolution
- Opened a nationwide market for books
- Spread of the romantic movement
- Romanticism stressed feelings rather than
learning - Suited fiction well
40Roots of the American Renaissance (cont.)
- Women still were not admitted to most colleges
- Women could publish best-selling romantic novels
- Harriet Beecher Stowes Uncle Toms Cabin
41Cooper, Emerson, Thoreau, Fuller and Whitman
- James Fenimore Cooper
- The 1st of the new writers
- Introduced frontiersman Natty Bumppo
- Particularly American character
- Cooper's works
42Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Wrote mostly essays
- Transcendentalism
- American brand of romanticism
- Emerson' works
43Ralph Waldo Emerson (cont.)
- Emerson rejected the importance of education and
reason in seeking the truth - He contented that every individual is capable of
knowing God, truth, and beauty by following his
feelings - Young, democratic America had nothing to learn
from Europe - American could produce its own great literature
and art
44Henry David Thoreau
- Emersons disciple
- Not only expressed his radical insights but lived
them - He went to jail rather than pay taxes to support
what he considered the evil Mexican War - He defended the right to defy unjust govt.
policies in his essay Civil Disobedience (1849)
45Henry David Thoreau (cont.)
- Thoreau's works
- he seems to have wanted most to use words to
force his readers to rethink their own lives
46Margaret Fuller
- Emerson discipline
- Combined transcendentalism and feminism
- Women in the Nineteenth Century (1845)
47Walt Whitman
- Leaves of Grass
- Broke new ground in poetry
- lusty and bold
- Free verse
- Celebrated the American common man
- Whitman's works
48Hawthorne, Melville, and Poe
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- The Scarlet Letter
- Hawthorne works
49Herman Melville
- Moby Dick
- Melville's works
50Edgar Allen Poe
- Poe's works
- Poems and short stories
- The Raven
51Hawthorne, Melville, and Poe (cont.)
- They were more interesting in writing in
analyzing moral dilemmas and probing
psychological states - Shared an underlying pessimism about the human
condition - Explored questions of human nature
52Literature in the Marketplace
- Most 19th century U.S. authors hoped to gain
recognition and a living from their writings. - Poe sold short stories to popular magazines
- Emerson, Thoreau, Melville made by lecturing
for lyceums - Most lyceum speakers were men
53Literature in the Marketplace (cont.)
- Women could and did earn excellent livings by
turning out sentimental novels - Susan Warners The Wide, Wide World
- Neither the writers nor most of the female
readers who consumed the sentimental novels were
active feminists - Many of the works did illustrate the moral that
women could overcome trials and improve their
worlds.
54American Landscape Painting
- American artists sought to depict their native
land - Especially in its primitive grandeur before
pioneers deforested and plowed it
55American Landscape Painting (cont.)
- George Catlin
- Catlin exhibit
- Portrayed Indians as noble savages doomed by
the march of progress
56American Landscape Painting (cont.)
- Thomas Cole
- Painted allegorical scenes on themes of
importance to a young republic - Cole's works
57American Landscape Painting (cont.)
- Hudson River School
- Cole, Asher Durand, and Frederic Church
- Subordinated realism to emotional effect
- Reflected the romanticism of the period
- PBS Hudson River School
58American Landscape Painting (cont.)
- New Yorks Central Park
- Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Clavert
Vaux - Shared a romantic view of nature
- They aimed to refresh the souls of harried
urbanites by creating an idealized pastoral
landscape in the midst of the city - Central Park History
- Central Park map
59Conclusion
- Between 1840 and 1860, new technology changed the
lives of Americans - Advances in transportation and manufacturing
helped the following - improved the American diet
- made a greater variety of necessities and
luxuries available at lower prices - transformed leisure pursuits
- encouraged efforts to diffuse and popularize
culture
60Conclusion (cont.)
- Negative effects of technology
- Increased the gap between the lifestyles of the
reasonably affluent and the poor - Increased the gap between middle-class men and
women - Led to assaults on Americas beautiful natural
environment
61Conclusion (cont.)
- The despoliation troubled writers such as Thoreau
and artists such as the painters of the Hudson
River school - Hawthornes and Melvilles fiction showed that
material progress and political democracy did not
liberate man from the dark places in his own soul