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The Industrial Revolution and Westward Expansion

Explore the Industrial Revolution's impact on the United States, focusing on early factories in Lowell, Massachusetts, and developments in transportation as settlers moved westward. Discover the Lowell Mills and the role of the Lowell Girls, as well as the daily life and challenges faced during this period. Learn about the growth of cities and the need for improved transportation to support the westward movement. Examine the establishment of new states and the improvements made to roads, including the construction of the National Road and the Erie Canal. Witness the rise of steamships and steamboats as revolutionary means of transportation.

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The Industrial Revolution and Westward Expansion

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  1. Chapter 11The Nation Grows and Prospers1790- 1825 Sections 1 &2 The Industrial Revolution Americans Move Westward

  2. Objectives • Identify the Industrial Revolution and its effects on the United States • Describe early factories with focus on Lowell, Massachusetts • Describe how settlers traveled west • Explain new developments in transportation

  3. I. The Industrial Revolution A. New Technology 1. Begins in Britain mid 1700s 2. New machines for textile industry 3. James Hargreaves invented Spinning jenny – could spin several threads at once 4. Water powered loom – Edmund Cartwright 5. Produced more cloth in a day than was possible before

  4. Spinning Jenny

  5. B. The Factory System 1. New inventions required new systems of production 2. Capitalist- a person who invests in a business in order to make a profit 3. Factory system- brought workers and machinery together in one place to produce goods

  6. Spinning Jenny Slater’s Mill

  7. II. A Revolution Crosses the Atlantic A. Slater Breaks the Law 1. British law forbid anyone to take plans for new machinery out of the country 2. 1789 Slater left Britain 3. Memorized the plans so he wouldn’t get caught with them B. The First American Mill 1. 1793 Slater built the first successful textile mill in the US powered by water 2. Pawtucket, Rhode Island

  8. Interchangeable Parts C. Interchangeable parts- all machine made parts are identical to each other 1. Eli Whitney 2. Earlier, everything made one at a time 3. Saves time and money 4. Idea spread rapidly

  9. III. Lowell, Massachusetts: A Model Factory Town A. Had to produce more goods because of the blockade of ports during War of 1812 B. The Lowell Mills 1. Francis Cabot Lowell 2. Combine spinning and weaving under one roof 3. Built a whole town of factories as a model of efficiency

  10. Lowell and Lowell Girls

  11. C. The Lowell Girls 1. Young women from nearby farms 2. Most sent wages home 3. Boarding houses 4. Rules 5. Independence The Lowell Girls

  12. IV. Daily Life During the Industrial Revolution A. Child Labor 1. As young as seven 2. Not seen as cruel because farm work was just as hard or harder 3. Child’s wages needed to support the family B. Long Hours 1. 12 hour days, 6 days a week 2. Conditions better than in Europe 3. As competition increases, owners grew less interested in welfare of workers

  13. C. Changes in Home Life 1. More family members left home to earn a living 2. Affected ideas about the role of women 3. Poor women had to work

  14. V. Growing Cities A. Many people left farms to work in factories B. Urbanization-movement of population from farms to cities 1. Steady but gradual process 2. Early cities were small but growing

  15. Pros and Cons of Urban Living C. Hazards 1. Dirt streets turned to mud in rain 2. No sewers, garbage in streets 3. Disease spread easily D. Attractions 1. Theaters, museums, circuses 2. Latest fashions, shopping

  16. Americans Move Westward

  17. VI. Traveling West A. “West” -referred to the lands between the Appalachians and the Mississippi River B. Population of some of 13 colonies declines as people move west C. Need to improve transportation to the west is obvious

  18. D. Western Routes 1. Great Wagon Road through Pennsylvania 2. Wilderness Road south and west by Daniel Boone’s route, led through Cumberland Gap 3. Flatboats down Ohio River 4. People from GA and SC followed routes to AL and MS 5. People from NE pushed into NW territory

  19. Flatboats

  20. E. New States 1792 Kentucky 1796 Tennessee 1803 Ohio 1812 Louisiana 1816 Indiana 1817 Mississippi 1818 Illinois 1819 Alabama New States Enter the Union

  21. A. Turnpikes and Corduroy Roads 1. Roads built by private companies 2. Turnpikes for tolls 3. Lancaster Turnpike the best of its time, linked Lancaster and Philadelphia 4.Corduroy roads of logs 5. Covered bridges lasted longer than plain wood VII. Improvements to Roads

  22. B. The National Road 1. 1806 Congress sets aside funds 2. Road to run from Cumberland, Maryland to Wheeling in western VA 3. Work begins 1811 and is completed in 1818 4. Road later extended as needed

  23. VIII. Steam Transport A. Fitch and Fulton 1. Fitch showed how a steam engine could power a boat (Constitutional Convention 1787) 2. Few people used his ferry service 3. Fulton launched a steamboat - the Clermonton the Hudson River 4. 300 mile trip in 62 hours - record

  24. What would be some of the advantages of the steamships? B. The Age of Steamboats 1. Revolutionized travel in the west 2. Gave farmers and merchants a cheap way to move goods 3. Dangerous at times as sparks can explode high pressure boilers

  25. IX. The Canal Boom A. Building the Erie Canal 1. Let farmers ship goods to port of New York 2. Links Great Lakes with Hudson River 3. DeWitt Clinton, governor of NY, instrumental in getting it built 4. “Clinton’s Ditch”

  26. This painting shows the "Seneca Chief," the flagship of a flotilla making the maiden voyage down the Erie Canal. The 363-mile-long, $7 million canal opened the shortest thoroughfare between the Atlantic Coast's factories and the natural bounty of the Great Lakes, helping to position New York City as America's leading metropolis. The Canal did not greatly affect business for stagecoach companies, which were faster, and not limited by road capacity or ice, but it did bankrupt the Conestoga wagon freight carriers. By 1841, however, the railroads had put stagecoach companies out of business. The Erie Canal still operates today. The Big Ditch

  27. Transcontinental Railroad

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