Before the War of 1812, clothes and other goods were made in people's homes, largely by women. Additionally, factories would create a product, such as a pattern for a shoe, and then send it to homes to be finished off. During the war, this changed – America closed the ports to everyone due to the Embargo Act of 1807, decreasing the exports and imports, which were a large part of America’s economy. With little choice, they started to produce goods domestically, which resulted in the growth of factories and the industrial revolution. American businesses created mills in the north, especially in Massachusetts.…
In 1860, the United States was primarily a land that contained small towns and farms. At the time, Americans had discovered that living on farms were more beneficial than factories, since the amount of land was immense, affordable, and labor was high-priced due to its insufficiency. However, in a matter of forty years, the nation had made an evolution and became the greatest industrial country in the world. Ever since the rapid increase production of raw materials, farm laborers had departed to work in factories and our population immensely developed from six million to over thirty million. Between the years from 1860 through 1900, many factors supported to promote the growth of America’s industry.…
The period of Reconstruction, Industrialization, and Urbanization held a vast amount of major turning points in US history. Of these I’ve selected a couple that I feel hold a high enough pre, during, and post era to be emphasized on within this paper.…
By the mid-1800’s more things were made by machines in factories. The conditions in the factory were very horrible. The average work day was 11.4 hours! Workers became so very exhausted, they didn't want to do what they have been doing any longer. These workers and children get severely hurt by these machines. Factories that these people worked in had no cooling or heating systems in them so the workers, so in the winter people began to get horribly cold. There were also no laws what so ever to control the workers, so nobody was really safe working at all. Also, children worked in factories. They worked long and hard because they had to work six days a week and 12 hours a day! People wanted to stop what was happening because it was not safe…
The rapid development of industrialization in the U.S. transformed the previous norm and patterns prior laborers were accustomed to under the agrarian system. New technological advances and the emergence of multiple factories revolutionized modern…
During the early 1890’s, in the state of Massachusetts, there was a steel factory. Over the years a great deal of material changed how the steel factory ran and also how the workers were working. The movement started and affected everything from industrial manufacturing processes to the daily life of the average working citizen. Industrialization is the procedure which a state goes from an agriculture based economy to an economy based in industrial developments, such as textile, mining, iron, steel and transport revolutions. When this happens a ton of things around a factory changes.…
The growth of cities also had a big part of the transformation of the United States in this time. Before this United States was mainly a farming country most people lived out in the country. But throughout the 19th century this changed and turned into a urban and rural living with more Industrial and Manufacturing Goods and less of a farming country. Many of these new industrial jobs were picked up by new immigrants coming from foreign countries.…
Introduction In the years that followed the end of the American Civil War, and more than a hundred years after the first industrial revolution which was centered around textiles, the economy of the United States grew considerably as the country entered in its second phase of Industrial Revolution. The visual map of the United States has therefor been transformed by unprecedented urbanization as more and more people started to emigrated from the countryside to the cities. Also the new territories recently acquired by the United States in the West part of the country allowed the United States to expand a growing supply of agriculture partly due to a larger labor immigrating from Europe. Moreover, new industries and method of productions arisen during…
The impact of mass production. Mass production changed the way Americans dressed, shopped, and ate. After the Civil War, handmade clothing quickly gave way to ready-to-wear clothes sold through retail outlets. But people did not have to live in large cities or even visit the stores themselves to buy what they needed.…
In 1825 there were just over 100,000 people living in New York City. Life for New Yorkers had been a steady, regular flow of every day life but the period between 1825 and 1860 was a time of truly unprecedented growth but a new era of modern lifestyle was about to emerge and take New York’s citizens by surprise. What used to be a very traditional way of life started becoming more modernised and by the end of the 1960s, the New York population had reason to that of one million people.…
Cities such as Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania doubled in size. People working at the factory used new technology that nobody had ever heard of. One invention was the sewing machine which sewed seams into a fabric. With this invention, factory workers could produce much more clothing in the same amount of time. Soon, the North was producing most of America’s manufactured goods.…
in the industrial revolution, cities grew more and more and attracted more workers. The cities…
New technology consisted of streetcars, elevators, and skyscrapers. All these aspects changed cities because they assisted in the development of skyscrapers. Thanks to steel and elevators, building could now support more than ten floors and workers wouldn’t hate walking up multiple flights of stairs because of the elevator. Streetcars also provided many more job opportunities for suburban livers because they now had a way to get into the city for their work without having to live in the city. This amazing technology has changed city-life for us and helped America grow into a country of skyscraping cities. The final thing that transformed and grew America was not a topic but a person, Theodore Roosevelt. He brought strength and leadership into the country and presidency. Roosevelt helped grow America because he preserved thousands of monumental acres of land, he enforced the meat-inspection-act saving us from contaminated meat today, and finally he busted up railroad trusts with the antitrust act. These three important effects made Roosevelt a remembered…
During the late nineteenth century, urban America was socially, politically, and economically both a “New Industrial Age” and a “Gilded Age” it was more economically, a “New Industrial Age” but it was more socially and politically a “Gilded Age”. With the help of technological advances a “New Industrial Age” emerged during a time of immigration, political corruption and social problems.…
The most important thing on a company’s mind is: what does the consumer want? The New Deal era is the era where this new urban consumer lifestyle is introduced. (HIST 222 lecture, 19 OCT 10) Everything was made to have the effect to “be easier on people”. This was the era when Henry Ford introduced the automobile, which is one of the most important things an American can own today. This is also the time when Hollywood movies came out, so every American was watching, hearing, and learning the same things. (HIST 222 lecture, 19 OCT 10) This, in my opinion, is the definition of American living today. During this time, overproduction started to creep up. The Americans that lived during this time do not really know what it is like to have a scarcity of many materials. There Americans always lived in an age of a thriving…