Title: early 19c Industrialization in America
1Early 19c Industrialization in America The
Market Revolution
Chapter 14 EU How did industrialization affect
the American economy and social structure?
2The Transportation Revolution
3First Turnpike- 1790 Lancaster, PA
By 1832, nearly 2400 mi. of road connected most
major cities gt Westward expansion
4Cumberland (National Road), 1811-1852, 591 miles
5Erie Canal System
Effects of Shipping down from 100 to
5. Shipping days down from 20 to 6. Land Values
up, cities built. Immigrants flooded NW
40 wide, 4 deep
6Erie Canal, 1820s
Begun in 1817 completed in 1825
7Robert Fulton the Steamboat Fultons Folly
Made rivers 2-way arteries. By 1860 1000 ships
1807 The Clermont
8Principal Canals in 1840
9Clipper Ships
Fast, but small. Taken over by British
Teakettles
10The Iron Horse Wins! (1830)
More RR in North, than South. Served to
isolate the South. Could get from NY to
Chicago in 2 days (3 weeks by canal) Opposition
came from investors in canals. Dangerous, no
schedule, various gauges.
1830 ? 13 miles of track built by Baltimore
Ohio RRBy 1850 ? 9000 mi. of RR track 1860 ?
31,000 mi.
11TheRailroadRevolution,1850s
- Immigrant laborbuilt the No. RRs.
- Slave laborbuilt the So. RRs.
12New Inventions "Yankee Ingenuity"
13Resourcefulness Experimentation
- Americans were willing to try anything.
- They were first copiers, theninnovators.
1800 ? 41 patents were approved. 1860 ? 4,357
14Eli Whitneys Cotton Gin, 1791
Increased the demand for slave labor b/c could
harvest cotton more efficiently for a higher
profit
15Eli Whitneys Gun Factory
Interchangeable Parts Rifle (1798)
16John Deere the Steel Plow(1837)
Could cut through the thick prairie sod on the
Great Plains frontier
17Cyrus McCormick the Mechanical Reaper 1831
Makes the harvest much faster less
labor-intensive
18Samuel F. B. Morse
1840 Telegraph
19Elias Howe Isaac Singer
1840sSewing Machine
20The American Dream
- They all regarded material advance as the natural
fruit of American republicanism proof of the
countrys virtue and promise. - Europe stretches to the Alleghenies America
lies beyond. - Emerson
A German visitor in the 1840s, Friedrich List,
observed
Anything new is quickly introduced here,
including all of the latest inventions. There is
no clinging to old ways. The moment an American
hears the word invention, he pricks up his ears.
21The Northern Industrial "Juggernaut"
22Creating a Business-Friendly Climate
Supreme Court Rulings Fletcher v. Peck (1810)
upheld contracts (Georgia land contracts)
Dartmouth v. Woodward (1819) NH tried to revoke
land grant of Dartmouth College McCulloch
v. Maryland (1819) Federal over state laws
Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) Congressional power to
regulate commerce Charles Rivers Bridge
v. Warren Bridge (1837) rights to build a
bridge (states v federal) Taney Court J.
Marshall died in 1835
General Incorporation Law ? passed
in New York, 1848.
Laissez faire ? Govt is hands-off in economy.
23Distribution of Wealth
- During the American Revolution,45 of all wealth
in the top 10 ofthe population.
- 1845 Boston ? top 4 owned over 65 of the
wealth.
- 1860 Philadelphia ? top 1 owned over 50 of
the wealth.
- The gap between rich and poor was widening!
24New England Rules Supreme
- No large-scale farming due to soil
- Population labor force a market to sell
- from shipping
- Seaports easy trade
- Rivers to run factories
25Samuel Slater(Father of the Factory System)
Slaters Textile Mills
26The Lowell/Waltham SystemFirst Dual-Purpose
Textile Plant
Francis Cabot Lowells town - 1814
27Lowell Mill
The Lowell mills employed young, unmarried girls
from nearby farm families
28New England Dominance in Textiles
29Irish Immigrant Girls at Lowell
30Regional Specialization
EAST ? Industrial SOUTH ? Cotton Slavery WEST
? The Nations Breadbasket
31American Population Centers in 1820
32American Population Centers in 1860
33National Origin of Immigrants1820 - 1860
Why now?
1840s potato famine 2 million died. Stayed on
seacoast, too poor to move.
34Know-Nothing Party The Supreme Order of the
Star-Spangled Banner
Nativist party wanting immigration restrictions
and naturalization laws strengthened. Catholics
could not hold office, literacy tests to
vote. Became American Party
35Changing Occupation Distributions1820 - 1860
36Chapter 14 Assignment
- Due AT END OF CLASS!
- You may work with ONE person.
- Counts as a homework grade
- For the following assignment please focus on the
EFFECTS of the innovations and progress of the
time period relative to long-term effects and
SIGNIFICANCE.
37ACROSTIC
- Using the term market revolution create an
acrostic. - Each letter should represent a SIGNIFICANT idea
of EFFECT from the time period - Each letter should be a single word.
- Each word should reflect careful thought NOT M
mechanization (too easy!) - Each word should have a small picture next to it.
- Please complete the assignment on the paper
provided.