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Essential QuestionEssential Question:–How did new inventions & improved
transportation help facilitate a national market economy in the 1840s?
Warm-Up Question:Warm-Up Question:–Find as many comparisons as Find as many comparisons as
possible between each grouping:possible between each grouping: –John Adams & John Quincy Adams–James Madison & Martin Van Buren–George Washington & James Monroe–Thomas Jefferson & Andrew Jackson
Take notes on the Harrison videoTake notes on the Harrison video
American Antebellum ChangesIn the 1830s & 1840s, territorial
& technological growth led to important changes in America:– Improved transportation – Rapid technological innovation– A growing nationalnational economy– Mass European immigration– Desire for transcontinental
expansion (“Manifest Destiny”)
A Revolution in TransportationIn 1816, Henry Clay’s American American
SystemSystem initiated federally funded “internal improvements”–The National RoadNational Road became the
1st federal transportation project–Thousands of private turnpikes
were built by entrepreneurs–Roads were useful but they did
not meet the demand for low-cost, over-land transportation
America's 1America's 1stst Turnpike: Turnpike: Lancaster, PA 1790Lancaster, PA 1790
America's 1America's 1stst Turnpike: Turnpike: Lancaster, PA 1790Lancaster, PA 1790
By 1832, nearly 2,400 miles of roads By 1832, nearly 2,400 miles of roads connected most major citiesconnected most major cities
By 1832, nearly 2,400 miles of roads By 1832, nearly 2,400 miles of roads connected most major citiesconnected most major cities
Principle Canals by 1840Steamboats & canals stimulated commercial agriculture by providing for the free-flow of
manufactured goods to the West
Steamboats & CanalsMississippi & Ohio Rivers helped
farmers get their goods to the East but there was no way to get manufactured goods to the West:–Fulton’s invention of steamboats
helped connect the West with Northern manufacturing
–State-directed canal projects cut shipping costs by 90% between the West & the North
Steamboats provided upstream shipping with reduce costs & increased speeds
Robert Fulton’ s SteamboatRobert Fulton’ s Steamboat
The ClermontThe Clermont
The Erie Canal (1825) provided the 1st link between East & West
The Erie Canal made New York City the commercial
capital of the U.S.
The RailroadFrom 1840 to 1860, the greatest
new transportation advance was the expansion of railroads –In 1840s, railroads began to
challenge canals’ dominance–Stimulated industrial &
commercial agricultural growth –Led to new forms of finance,
such as “preferred stock” & state & local gov’t subsidies
The Railroad Revolution,
1850sImmigrant
labor built railroads in the North
Slave labor built railroads in the South
The Expansion of Railroads by RegionRailroad Expansion by 1860
Transportation Revolution by
1840: Rivers, Roads, Rivers, Roads,
Canals, & Canals, & RailroadsRailroads
Jackson’s assault on the 2nd BUS in the 1830s, killed Clay’s “American System” but it did
not stop transportation improvements
The Industrial Revolution BoomsIn the 1840s, American industrial
production became more efficient:–Due to numerous industrial
innovations, growth of factories, & a demand for goods from farmers in West & South
–Led to an increased division of labor & urbanization in the North & an increase in staple-crop commercial farming
Rise of Commercial AgricultureThe antebellum era saw a boom
in specialized, staple-crop, “commercial” farming due to:–Lower transportation costs –New agricultural innovations like
McCormick’s mechanical reaper, Eli Whitney’s cotton gin, the steel plow, thresher, & cultivator
–The use of long-distance marketing & credit to sell crops
Ohio, NY, & PA specialized in wheat while the South grew tobacco, rice, & cotton
Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin, 1793Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin, 1793
Actually invented by a slave!
Actually invented by a slave!
Early IndustrialismIn 1815, 65% of all U.S. clothing
was made by women at home in the “putting out” system
By 1840, textile manufacturing grew, especially in New England, due to a series of new inventions–The most famous factory was
the Lowell Mill in Boston–Still, only 9% of Americans were
involved in manufacturing
Brought families extra income
“Cottage Industry”
Samuel Slater(“Father of the Factory
System”)
Samuel Slater(“Father of the Factory
System”)
Early Textile Loom
Early Textile Loom
Eli Whitney’s Other Critical InventionEli Whitney’s Other Critical Invention
Introduced Interchangeable Rifle PartsIntroduced Interchangeable Rifle Parts
(Two more critical inventions of the era that have little to do with the Market Revolution)
Samuel Morse’s Telegraph in 1840Samuel Morse’s Telegraph in 1840
Cyrus Field’s Transatlantic Cable, 1858
Cyrus Field’s Transatlantic Cable, 1858
The Lowell System:The 1st Dual-Purpose Textile Plant
The Lowell System:The 1st Dual-Purpose Textile Plant
Francis Cabot Lowell’s town - 1814Francis Cabot Lowell’s town - 1814
Lowell Boarding Houses
The Market RevolutionBy 1840, improved transportation
& innovation reduced time & cost to ship goods & allowed for a nationalnational market economy:
–U.S. developed a self-sustaining national economy of commercial farming & manufactured goods
–But, the U.S. economy was driven by regionalregional specialization
Northern industrySouthern cotton production
Western commercial farming
America in 1840The Antebellum SouthThe Antebellum SouthCotton production
divided society in the Deep South:–Large plantations
with lots of slaves made good money
–Poor yeoman (with few or no slaves) mixed commercial & subsistence farming
America in 1840The Antebellum WestThe Antebellum WestLand was cheapSettlers transformed
the West from wilderness to cash-producing farms:–Wheat & corn–Hogs & cattle
Better transportation made it easier for farmers to get their goods to market
America in 1840
The Antebellum NorthThe Antebellum NorthShifted from yeoman
to small commercial farming
Made manufactured goods for farmers in the West & South
Experienced rapid urbanization
American Population Centers in 1820
American Population Centers in 1820
American Population Centers in 1860
American Population Centers in 1860
The Market RevolutionNew innovations made work
easier & improved American industry & agriculture
However, the U.S. was not an “industrial society” in the 1840s –60% of the population were still
involved in farming–Most production was still done
traditionally in small workshops
Essential QuestionEssential Question:
–What problems developed as a result of American industrialism & immigration from 1840-1860?
RQ 12A (p. 382-395) RQ 12A (p. 382-395)
Mass Immigration BeginsFrom 1840 & 1860, 4 million Irish
& Germans immigrated to America Motivations for immigration:
–Most came for higher wages in northern industrial jobs
–The potato blight from 1845-1854 brought 1.5 million Irish immigrants
–Low fares on trans-Atlantic ships made access easier
Immigration to the US
1820-1860
Where did immigrants go?
Industrial workers
Farmers
Cotton farming & cattle
Gold miners
Mass Immigration BeginsImmigrants filled low-paying jobs
in northern cities or migrated into the West to become farmers
–This vast pool of cheap labor provided fuel for the U.S. Industrial Revolution in 1850s
–In the 1840s, factory labor began to shift from American women & children to immigrant men
In 1836, 4% of the Lowell Mill workers were foreign-born; By 1860 62% were foreign-born
Mass Immigration BeginsLow immigrant wages contributed
to urban slums where poverty, disease, & crime were common
This influx of immigration led to urban reform movements:–Provided police forces, sanitized
water, sewage disposal, & improved housing standards
–But the immigrant poor were largely unaffected by the results
Affluent city dwellers moved to America’s 1st suburbs
Anti-Immigrant ReactionImmigrant groups were met with
prejudice (esp the Irish Catholics) & tension in 1840s & 1850s
NativismNativism emerged among American-born citizens:–Suspicion of the new ethnic
neighborhoods & alien cultures–Led to bloody anti-Catholic riots,
charges of despotism, & anti-Irish propaganda
Nativist propaganda targeting German & Irish immigrants
Anti-Catholic “Native American” mob battling the state militia in Philadelphia in 1844
Conclusions In the 1830s & 1840s, the USA
was growing more democratic & economically self-sufficient:–Innovation & transportation
improvements connected regional specialization into a nation market economy
–This economic growth will stimulate a sense of “manifest destiny” into the West & sectional divisions between North & South