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Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had...

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Industrial Revolution Continues
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Page 1: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Industrial Revolution Continues

Page 2: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had

expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such as forests, water,

coal, iron, copper, silver, and gold, helped industry to manufacture a variety

of goods.

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Page 3: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

American industry experienced many ups and downs. The up

times are referred to as booms, and the down times as busts.

Very bad bust times are called depressions.

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Page 4: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

The Bessemer process was the first inexpensive industrial process for the mass-production

of steel from molten pig iron prior to the open hearth furnace. The process is named after its

inventor, Henry Bessemer, who took out a patent on the process in 1855. The process was

independently discovered in 1851 by William Kelly. The process had also been used outside of

Europe for hundreds of years, but not on an industrial scale. The key principle is removal of

impurities from the iron by oxidation with air being blown through the molten iron. The

oxidation also raises the temperature of the iron mass and keeps it molten.

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Page 5: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Andrew Carnegie was born November 25, 1835, in

Scotland. When Andrew Carnegie was 11 he emigrated to

western Pennsylvania. Starting from when he was 13, he

rose from a job as a bobbin boy to the top of the railroad

industry. Wanting a larger income, he left the railroad

business to go to the steel industry. Carnegie used the

Bessemer process to get control of steel production. He

also used the "cost-accounting" techniques of the railroad

industry. Working with Henry Bessemer, Carnegie took

every steel plant under his control. He bought the steel,

coal and coke mills, as well as the iron mines. Since he

controlled every aspect of the steel industry, he could have

the coal and coke made cheaply, the iron mined cheaply,

and sell the steel for a low per-unit cost. He became a

millionaire, and the richest person of his time. He died

August 11, 1919. 4

Page 6: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Born on February 11, 1847, in Milan, Ohio, Thomas Edison rose from humble

beginnings to work as an inventor of major technology. Setting up a lab in Menlo

Park, some of the products he developed included the telegraph, phonograph,

electric light bulb, alkaline storage batteries and Kinetograph

(a camera for motion pictures).

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Page 7: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, mechanical

engineer, physicist, and futurist best known for his contributions to the design of the

modern alternating current (AC) electrical supply system.

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Page 8: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Alexander Graham Bell was born on March 3, 1847, in Edinburgh, Scotland. His

education was largely received through numerous experiments in sound and the

furthering of his father’s work on Visible Speech for the deaf. Bell worked with

Thomas Watson on the design and patent of the first practical telephone. In all, Bell

held 18 patents in his name alone and 12 that he shared with collaborators.

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Page 9: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Christopher Latham Sholes was an American inventor who invented the first

practical typewriter in 1867 and the QWERTY keyboard still in use today. He was also

a newspaper publisher and Wisconsin politician.

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Page 10: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Isaac Merritt Singer was an American inventor, actor, and entrepreneur. He made

important improvements in the design of the sewing machine and was the founder

of the Singer Sewing Machine Company. Many had patented sewing machines

before Singer, but his success was based on the practicality of his machine, the ease

with which it could be adapted to home use, and its availability on an installment

payment basis.

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Page 11: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Granville T. Woods was an African-American inventor who held more than 50

patents. He is also the first American of African ancestry to be a mechanical and

electrical engineer after the Civil War. Self-taught, he concentrated most of his work

on trains and streetcars. One of his notable inventions was the Multiplex Telegraph,

a device that sent messages between train stations and moving trains. His work

assured a safer and better public transportation system for the cities of the United

States.

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Page 12: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

Margaret E. Knight was an American inventor. She has been called "the most famous

19th-century woman inventor". She was born in York, Maine to James Knight and

Hannah Teal. James Knight died when Margaret was a little girl. Knight went to

school until she was twelve and worked in a cotton mill between ages 12 through 56.

In 1868, while living in Springfield, Massachusetts, Knight invented a machine that

folded and glued paper to form the flat bottomed brown paper bags familiar to

shoppers today.

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Page 13: Industrial Revolution Continues. Throughout the 1800s, factory production in the United States had expanded. America’s wealth in natural resources, such.

John D. Rockefeller was an American tycoon, businessman, and philanthropist. He

was a co-founder of the Standard Oil Company, which dominated the oil industry.

Rockefeller revolutionized the petroleum industry. In 1870, he co-founded Standard

Oil Company and aggressively ran it until he officially retired in 1897.

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