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The Industrial Revolution Section 1 – 362-365

The Industrial Revolution Section 1 – 362-365. By the mid 1700s the way that goods were produced in Great Britain began to change. People wanted manufactured goods b/c: They were cheaper. They were easier and quicker to get.

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The Industrial Revolution Section 1 – 362-365

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  1. The Industrial Revolution Section 1 – 362-365 • By the mid 1700s the way that goods were produced in Great Britain began to change. • People wanted manufactured goods b/c: • They were cheaper. • They were easier and quicker to get. • Machines replaced many artisans b/c they worked faster and for longer periods of time. • Because of the increased demand for goods the First Industrial Revolution was born. • The 1st I.R. = the rapid growth in the use of machines for manufacturing and production.

  2. The Industrial Revolution • Textile manufacturing was the first product to be affected by the I.R. • Two British inventions used to increase textile production were: • Spinning Jenny and the Water Frame = both were used to increase thread production. • The water frame became the primary method of textile production. • It required a power source, so merchants built water-powered mills to accommodate those machines.

  3. The Industrial Revolution • The British Parliament made it illegal for skilled mill mechanics or mill building plans to leave Great Britain. • They wanted to keep G.B. ahead of other countries in the I.R. • Samuel Slater – mill mechanic, disguised himself as a farmer and sailed for America in 1789. • He had memorized the designs for textile mill machines and built his first spinning mill in Pawtucket R.I. in the early 1790s. • His work set the standard that others would follow and soon textile mills began to sprout up all over New England.

  4. The Industrial Revolution • Slater’s Mill – Pawtucket R.I.

  5. Mass Production • In 1798 Eli Whitney created a new form of mass production using interchangeable parts. • With interchangeable parts, each part of a product is produced exactly the same so that a product can be built quicker. • This method of production would be used to mass produce firearms, thus making them cheaper and more readily available.

  6. Mass Production • American manufacturing grew slowly in the early 1800s until: • The Embargo Act of 1807 and the War of 1812. • These events prevented Americans from buying British goods. • American manufacturing then began to greatly expand in response to the increased need for domestic goods. • By the 1830s the I.R. was fully underway in the U.S. by the late 1830s, and the U.S.’ dependence on foreign good diminished. • As the I.R. progressed, many mills were built or converted to steam power. • The need to have mills located by swiftly moving rivers was no longer necessary.

  7. Factory Workers • Two “systems” developed in mass production/mills. • Rhode Island system: Samuel Slater’s approach in hiring entire families (including children) to work in the mill. Everyone would be assigned particular tasks and the mill’s costs could be kept low. • Lowell system: • Francis Cabot Lowell created a mill that created thread and wove it into cloth all under one roof. Slater’s mills only created thread. • Many young, unmarried women worked in Lowell’s New England mills = Lowell Girls.

  8. Factory Workers • Lowell mill work schedule • Lowell Girls “Offering” • A collection of poems, short stories, informative essays and other writings produced by the Lowell Mill’s female employees.

  9. Factory Workers • As factories became more common, so did: • Accidents b/c of dangerous machinery. • Longer work days. • Artisans and skilled workers having to compete with factory production = longer work days. • Artisans and skilled workers began forming trade unions = organizations with members of a particular trade. • The purpose of the unions was to improve working conditions, increase wages, and decrease hours. • When employers didn’t meet the unions demands, the union members would go on strike = a group of employees that refuses to work.

  10. The Transportation Revolution Section 2 – 366-371 • During the early 1800s the U.S. experienced a period of rapid growth and improvements in transportation = Transportation Revolution. • New inventions and the use of steam as a power source helped to create and continue the T.R. • Water travel was the first method of transportation to be affected by new technology. • In 1807, Robert Fulton successfully navigated his steamboat the Clermont up the Hudson River.

  11. The Transportation Revolution • By the 1840s, more than 500 steamboats were navigating the Mississippi River • They were flat-bottomed, shallow draft boats that were propelled by one or more large paddle wheels. • A trip from Pittsburgh to New Orleans took two weeks as opposed to the usual five weeks on a conventional sailing vessel.

  12. The Transportation Revolution • Steam powered locomotives became popular in the U.S. in the 1830s. • American inventor, Peter Cooper designed and built one of the earliest locomotives = Tom Thumb. • By 1840 there was 2,800 miles of track . • By 1860 = 30,000 miles

  13. Gibbons v. Ogden • Steamboats were quickly outfitted to carry manufactured goods as well as being used for human transportation. • The growth of this shipping industry led to the first Supreme Court ruling in interstate commerce (business and trade between states). • Thomas Gibbons held a federal license to operate his steamboats between NJ and NY. • He didn’t have a license to travel in NY waters. • Aaron Ogden had a NY state license and therefore had a monopoly on transportation in NY waters. • Ogden sued Gibbons for infringing on his business territory. • Ogden won and Gibbons appealed the case which eventually went to the Supreme Court.

  14. Gibbons v. Ogden • The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Gibbons b/c they said he had the right to operate in NY b/c his business crossed state lines. • The Court explained that federal law overruled state law b/c the Constitution gave only Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce. • Therefore, Gibbons’ federal license had priority over Ogden’s state license.

  15. Communication by Wire • Because of the industrial and transportation revolutions, there needed to be a faster way to communicate. • In 1832 Samuel Morse invented the telegraph, and the code that is known as Morse Code. • A telegraph operator would tap a key that would complete an electrical circuit. • The taps represented a series of dots and dashes that coincided with letters and numbers. • An operator on the other end of the line would write the dot/dash code down on paper and then translate it into understandable language.

  16. Communication by Wire • In 1844 Morse sent the first long distance message over wire. • The first message : “What hath God wrought?” was sent from the Capitol in Washington DC to Baltimore MD, a distance of about 40 miles. • By the 1850s, telegraph companies had strung thousands of miles of telegraph wire along rail lines. • Info. for the government, newspapers, businesses, and private citizens was sent over those wires. • In 1861 the first transcontinental line was completed.

  17. Agricultural Improvements • As industry, transportation, and communication grew, people moved further west and began to settle and farm the land they settled on. • The thick rich soil of the Midwest was difficult to plow with the iron-bladed plows of that time. • In 1837 John Deere a blacksmith, created a new steel plow. • The design and hardness of the steel helped Deere’s plow to be an immediate success. • By 1846 John Deere was selling 1,000 plows a year.

  18. Agricultural Improvements • In 1830 it took 20 hours to harvest an acre of wheat. • While John Deere was hard at work creating implements that broke the soil, Cyrus McCormick was developing a mechanical reaper that could harvest wheat much quicker than swinging a scythe. • By 1850, McCormick’s Chicago-based steam-powered factory was mass producing reapers. • Mechanical reapers could harvest an acre of wheat in one hour.

  19. Agricultural Improvements • John Deere 1918 and 1923 Tractors

  20. Agricultural Improvements • The 1963 John Deere 2010 Tractor = My family’s tractor when we had our farm. • The 2011 John Deere 9630 4wd, 530 hp Tractor = $250,000+

  21. Agricultural Improvements • McCormick Reapers and Combines

  22. Home Technology • Inventions that helped to make life at home easier also came about during the I.R. • In the early 1850s, Isaac Singer improved on an early mechanical sewing machine and created the predecessor to the sewing machine of today. • Sewing machines became a symbol of wealth. • Many women purchased sewing machines so that they could make a living by sewing clothing.

  23. Home Technology • By the 1830s the first forms of refrigeration became available. • Iceboxes are the predecessor to the modern refrigerator. • An insulated wooden box would hold a large block of ice in one section and food in the other sections. • Also available in the 1800s was the indoor water pump. • Now the kitchen sink could have a fresh water source piped directly to it instead of having to go outside with pails to get water at an outdoor pump.

  24. Home Technology • Ice Harvesting Tools and Operation

  25. Home Technology • The Ice House

  26. Southern Agriculture Section 3 – 372-376 • Southern agriculture originally consisted of three major products: • Tobacco, Rice, and Indigo • Starting around 1790, cotton also became one of the South’s cash crops. • As the demand for cotton increased, so did the demand for slave labor. • Unfortunately separating the cotton from its sticky seeds was difficult. A slave could only process about a pound of cotton each day. • In 1793 Eli Whitney developed the Cotton Gin = a hand-cranked mechanical device that separated the seeds from the cotton. A slave could then process 10x as much cotton each day • By 1820 cotton had transformed southern agriculture, and the southern economy boomed because of northern and European demand.

  27. Southern Agriculture • Whitney’s Cotton Gin

  28. The Cotton Boom • Whitney’s cotton gin caused farmers to search for more land to grow cotton instead of other traditional Southern crops. • These farmers settled in an area of the U.S. that is known as the Cotton Belt. • South Carolina to East Texas

  29. The Cotton Boom • Throughout the South there was a drive to improve crop production through scientific agriculture. • If crops, such as cotton are planted year after year in the same area, the crops tend to deplete the soil of nutrients. • In response, scientists encouraged farmers to rotate their crops so that the soil in a particular field would have a chance to renew its nutrients.

  30. The Cotton Boom • As the agricultural industry began to boom, the South became a global trading power. • To meet the demand, southern farmers revived the faltering slave trade, and slavery flourished. • Port cities such as Charleston, Savannah, and New Orleans grew to meet the overseas demand for Southern U.S. agricultural products.

  31. The Cotton Boom • As agriculture and cotton dominated the South’s economy, industry grew at a very slow rate. • Lumber mills and iron works were able to flourish b/c of a need for building materials and iron implements. • By 1860, the Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond, VA was a factory that became one of the largest producers of iron products.

  32. Southern Society • Only about 10% of Southern families lived on plantations and had 20+ slaves. Even still they: • Served as political leaders and had a huge amount of economic power. • The husband on a plantation was known as the planter and focused on raising and selling crops. • The wife managed the household, oversaw the children’s education and oversaw the household slaves. • These marriages were often arranged for business or political reasons.

  33. Southern Society • Most white southerners owned small farms and were called yeomen farmers. • They worked long days and tended to every aspect of the farm and home. They didn’t have slaves. • Some white people were very poor and survived by hunting, fishing, and living off the land. They didn’t own property that was suitable for farming.

  34. Slaves and Work Section 4 – 377-381 • On small farms, slaves worked at many different tasks. • On plantations, slaves usually worked on one specific task. • An overseer was a white person who oversaw the slaves’ day-to-day activities and carried out punishments. • A slave foreman was usually a slave that was given some authority to control slaves and worked with the overseer. • On most plantations, owners used the gang labor system = all slaves worked on the same task at the same time. • This work went from sunup to sundown, regardless of weather or sickness.

  35. Slaves and Work • Generally men, women, and children over the age of 10 did the same work. • In addition to field and farm work, some slaves worked as: • butlers, cooks, nurses, carpenters, and blacksmiths • Some plantation owners allowed their slaves to hire out their services during the very limited amount of free time that they had. • Some slaves earned enough money to buy freedom for themselves and the family.

  36. Slave Culture • Slaves had very difficult lives, still they tried to preserve the most important part of the existence which was the families. • Sometimes families would be separated during an auction, but often times they would remain intact.

  37. Slave Culture

  38. Slave Culture

  39. Slave Culture • Slave passed down family histories as well as African customs and traditions by telling folktales. • These folktales often taught a moral and lessons about how to live under slavery. • Folktales often had animal characters that would outsmart slave owners.

  40. Slave Culture • Religion played an important part in slave culture. • Many believed that according to the Bible God would eventually deliver them from slavery as he had the Jews from Egypt. • Slaves sang spirituals as a way of expressing their religious beliefs. • Spirituals are songs of sorrow that blend African and European traditions.

  41. Challenging Slavery • Slaves rebelled against the slave system on a daily basis by doing things such as: • Working slowly • Running Away • Harriet Tubman and the Underground R.R. • Intentionally breaking equipment • Feigning illness • Violent rebellions • Nat Turner’s Rebellion • In 1831, escaped slave Nat Turner led a violent uprising in which 60 white people and 100 slaves were killed. • Turner was captured and executed later that year. • Despite rebelling, slavery continued to grow in the American South

  42. Challenging Slavery

  43. Challenging Slavery

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