During the American Industrial Revolution that occurred in the 1800s, new technology and inventions were created, revolutionizing America. America's industrialization is referred to as a revolution because it's development of transportation, mass production, and immigration revolutionized America both economically and socially. Amid the 1800s, the US government encouraged the production of a transcontinental railroad by granting land to railroad companies. By 1869 a message could be sent from New York to San Francisco in 7 days. This transportation improvement allowed cattle to be sent from the West to meat packaging districts in the Midwest, then to the East for consumption without the meat going bad.…
The Cotton gin made it easier to get the seed out of the cotton itself. The Erie Canal made trade come in a lot easier than before. All of these things contributed to the economy being different in the North than the South. During the early 1800´s the Supreme court wanted to boost the Nationalism of the people.…
When the Transcontinental Railroad was under development it made distance and time seem shorter from east to west. The railroad changed the way we traded and bought things, it made it less stressful and more faster. Not only did it help businesses, but affected the population and placement of animals such as cattle and buffalo.…
Canals Boom canals made it easier to transport between farms and cities Erie Canal - best known canal of the era Railroads Further Ease Horses pulled the first trains Slater Opens First Textile Mill Samuel Slater - nation’s first water-powered textile mill Lowell Builds Fully Operational Mill Francis Cabot Lowell took secret information to build the mill Factory Work Changes Lives garment trade was primary manufacturing increased pace of work and divided labor into many small tasks reduced amount of skill and training required less pay Inventions Transform Industry and Agriculture New Methods of Production interchangeable parts - identical components that can be used in place of on another Eli Whitney introduced this to the US ^ Innovation Quickens Communication Samuel F.B. Morse invented the electric telegraph delivered messages instantly Agriculture Remains Strong US History 7.2 Sectional Differences The North Embraces Industry Why Industrialization Spread Tariff of 1816 Less Imports = more manufacturing Why the Northeast?…
A large variety of changes were happening for the United States. Between 1800 and 1825 the U.S. population doubled in size and public opinion was more important than ever. The United States was becoming more modern. New developments in industry, transportation, and communication began to unitize advanced industrial countries and the U.S. Trading was made easier with improved roadways. In the south, cotton became a profitable crop with the invention of Eli Whitney's cotton gin.…
Fostering industrial growth was one of the most important targets in the 1800s. In 1820, Henry Clay attempted to do so with his American System with protective tariffs, improvements, and a national bank. The most important and fastest way of this plan was the canal system. Canals such as the Erie Canal paid for construction tolls by connecting the Mississippi River to the Eastern seaboard. Robert Fulton got rid of the need of ground transportation with the invention of the steamboat. The steamboat proved how quick it could travel by traveling from Albany to New York City in 32 hours or so, making American waterways more effective. Industrial shipping began to increase over rivers and cities like St. Louis and Cincinnati grew in population. However, the most significant factor of transportation in the 1800’s was the invention of the railroad. It made land transportation faster, more effective, and less expensive. The North began to also industrialize. These improvements made the North and Midwest the centers of American industry.…
Several factors led to the rise of U.S. industrialization in the late 1800’s. New technologies like steam engines, railroads, and telegraphs made communication and transportation easier. The ability to source and transport materials across the country with ease turned many local businesses into national companies. Workplace innovations, such as the assembly-line method of production, allowed these companies to produce goods on a mass scale.…
Before the Industrial Revolution, cotton used to be sent overseas to be made into cloth in England using the machinery there, but now, America had to make their own materials. Factories were being built in locations all over the North so that America could make their own clothing. Factories were an invention which brought workers and machinery together in one place. The invention of factories attracted people looking for jobs such as immigrants from Ireland and escaped African American slaves from the South. As the North grew with the arrival of immigrants and African Americans, it became more urban.…
The First Industrial Revolution that began in England with the textile industry around the 1780s was a major turning point in history. Some years later, it spread primarily throughout the western world, including America, having replaced the labor of men to the more organized and easier work in factories for less time and better pay. The Transportation Revolution was a beneficial part in creating the real America of today as it made the US a large and independent economy with more and more jobs, while the developments of antebellum America led to increased industrialization, expansion and sectionalism.…
Until 1830 the products of the western region went southward and very little finished products made their way back west. The steamboat helped to send the finished products upriver and helped bind West and South together. This binding inspired the transportation revolution.…
The shift from an agricultural economy to one based on wages and exchanges of goods was known as The Market Revolution. The Market Revolution completely changed the northern and western economy between 1820 and 1860. After Eli Whitney designed the cotton gin and culminated assembling with compatible parts, the North encountered an assembling blast that proceeded well into the one century from now. Cyrus McCormick's mechanical cutter gatherer additionally reformed grain creation in the West. Inward upgrades, for example, the Erie Canal and the Cumberland Road, consolidated with new modes of transportation, for example, the steamboat and railroad, permitted merchandise and harvests to stream effortlessly and affordably between the farming West and assembling North. The development of assembling likewise produced the pay work framework.…
Industrialization grew in many ways during the 1800’s. “It was largely pioneered by the northeastern cities in the united states” (Lecture 11). Many factors made Industrialization in America possible, including Natural Resources, New Transportation Systems, Industrial and Mechanization. The Industrial Revolution began in England because it had the resources that were needed. It all started with cloth industry. Making cloth by hand for pants, shirts, socks, bedspreads and other domestic items always required lots of skill and time. But this domestic production system could not keep up with the growing demands of England’s growing population. Instead, a series of innovations shifted textile production to a new factory system. As a result of the Industrial Revolution,…
The Industrialization of American began in the early 1800’a when Samuel Slater brought new manufacturing technologies from Britain to the U.S. and founded the first U.S. Cotton Mill in Massachusetts. However, the period following the civil war changed the industry immensely, especially due to the creativity of American Inventors. Innovations in transportation such as the rail road, the size of the American market due to the use of an abundance of raw materials, and incredibly versatile inventors, such as Thomas Alva Edison, who made appealing new products available for good prices, were incredibly creative in their inventions, contributing to the efficiency of American Industrialization in the late 19th century. The invention of the railroad system made huge contributions to the rapid pace of American Industrialization in the late…
The Industrial Revolution is generally considered as a transition process from handcrafted manufacturing to factory production. Although scientists do not have a single view on the start of this movement, the “invention” theory seems to be the most powerful in explaining the causes of the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.…
The Industrial Revolution itself refers to affects from social, cultural and economic conditions. Throughout the years, changes have taken place in the home production to machine and factory and now modern technology. The Industrial Revolution (1820-1870) was of great importance to the economic development of the United States. In the late 18th century, Britain and Europe began the first Industrial Revolution. After sometime, the development centralized on the United States and Germany.…