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APUSH . Weber. Agenda. Benchmark exam Market Revolution lecture (20 minutes) Explicating quotes from Voices of Freedom in groups (15 minutes) Individualism discussion (30 minutes) Reading for Friday debate (time permitting). The Factory System.
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APUSH Weber
Agenda • Benchmark exam • Market Revolution lecture (20 minutes) • Explicating quotes from Voices of Freedom in groups (15 minutes) • Individualism discussion (30 minutes) • Reading for Friday debate (time permitting)
The Factory System • Samuel Slater establishes first factory in 1790 • First large scale factories in 1814 in Waltham, Mass. Then Lowell, Mass. • Nature of work shifted from skilled artisan to that of factory worker. • Mass production of interchangeable parts assembled into standardized products. • New England textile mills relied primarily on female and child labor. • South lagged behind the North in terms of factory production.
Growth of Immigration • Economic expansion fueled demand for labor • German and Irish settled primarily in Northern cities. • Reasons for migration (push and pull factors) • Filled mainly low-wage unskilled jobs
Nativism • Racist reaction to immigration • Response to growing Catholic presence (Irish) • Nativists blamed immigrants for: • Urban crime • Political corruption • Alcohol abuse • Undercutting wages
Individualism • Freedom linked to availability of land (Manifest Destiny) • National myth and ideology surrounding the “West” • Transcendentalists responded to competitive materialists individualism of emergent capitalism with idea of self-realization through which individuals remake themselves and their own lives • Ralph Emerson (“Self-Reliance”)
The Second Great Awakening • Added religious element to celebration of individual self-improvement, self-reliance, and self-determination. • Charles Grandison Finney became a national celebrity for his preaching in upstate N.Y. • Democratized Christianity • Promoted doctrine of human free will • Used opportunities of market revolution to spread their message
Limits of Prosperity • Opportunities for the “self-made man” • Jacob Astor and Heratio Alger • Market revolution produced a new middle class. • Barred from schools and other public facilities most free African Americans and women were excluded from economic opportunities.
Cult of Domesticity • New definition of femininity emerged based on values of love, friendship, and mutual obligation • Virtue became personal moral quality • Women should find freedom fulfilling their duties in their sphere
Early Labor Movement • Some felt that the market revolution reduced their freedom • Economic swings widened gap between rich and poor • First workingman’s parties est. 1820s • Strikes were common by the 1830s • Wage-earners evoked “liberty” when calling for improvements in the workplace • Some described wage labor as slavery: “wage slaves”
Voices of Freedom • You picked a quote from Emerson’s “The American Scholar” and from Orestes Brownson’s “The Laboring Classes” to explicate. • Now, share with the class in discussion groups. • 1. How does Emerson define the freedom of what he calls “the single individual?” • 2. How does Brownson define economic freedom for workers? • 3. What does the contrast between these two documents suggest about the impact of the market revolution in America?
Individualism • What are some examples of individualism, the competitive me-first attitude, in modern society? • How do you think these things came about? Are they products of human nature or of social convention? • Do you think there are different kinds of individualism? If so, how would you classify them?
Emerson’s Individual • Focus quote: • “It is easy in the world to live after the world’s opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our own; but the great individual is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of solitude.”
Ch. 10 Politics • We will be debating whether the election of 1828 was a democratic revolution tomorrow. • Read ch. 10 in preparation and for Thursday’s test.