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AMERICAN GROWTH AND PROGRESS . Population growth1800 = 5.5 million to 33 million by 186113 states to 33 states by 1861 Expansion of citiesFlow of Immigration ? 1830's to 1860'sWhy? Potato famine and European problemIrishGerman 48er'sHated by ?Nativists"3. Transformation of American Indus
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1. The Early Industrial and Transportation Revolution
3. Westward Movement Americans marched quickly toward west
very hard w/ disease & loneliness
Frontier people were individualistic, superstitious & ill-informed
Westward movement molded environment
tobacco exhausted land
“Kentucky blue grass” thrived
9. City growth
10. The March of the Millions High birthrate accounted for population growth
Population doubling every 25 years
Near 1850s, millions of Irish, German came
Beginning in 1830, immigration in the US soared
12. Hated because they were willing to work for lessHated because they were willing to work for less
13. Irish Immigration Irish Potato Famine 1845-1849
Main ports of entry – New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Boston
Irish were too poor to move inland and farm so they stayed in the cities
Boston did not particularly like the Irish – catholic, illiterate, poor
“No Irish need apply!”
Ancient Order of Hibernians
Benevolent society to help Irish
Spawned “Molly Maguires” (miners union)
Gradually improved and became active politically
NY’s Tammany Hall, Irish political machine Hated because they were willing to work for lessHated because they were willing to work for less
14. German Immigration Most Germans came due to crop failures
Germans better off than Irish, came west, many to Wisconsin
A few were political refugees from collapse of democratic revolutions in 1848
German contributions include Kentucky rifle, Christmas tree, kindergarten, and abolitionists
Some Americans were suspicious because they tried to preserve language, culture and lived in separate communities, and drank beer
18. Early Nativism American “nativists” feared 1840s & 1850s invasion of immigrants
Took jobs, grew Roman Catholicism
Catholics built their own schools, were #1 denomination by 1850
1849: Nativists form Order of the Star-Spangled Banner, developed into “Know-Nothing” party
Wanted immigration restrictions
Nativists occasionally violent, burned Boston convent (1834)
Philadelphia Irish fought back, 13 killed in several days of fighting (1844)
19. A shift from goods made by hand to factory and mass production
Technological innovations brought production from farmhouse to factories
Invented in Britain in 1750; smuggled to U.S.
Beginning of US Factory System
US slow to embrace factory system
Scarce labor
Little capital
Superiority of British factories
24. Population shift because of westward expansion
the West demanded transportation.
The Land Act of 1820, gave the West its wish by authorizing a buyer to purchase 80 acres of land at a minimum of $1.25 an acre in cash
Erie Canal started in 1817 and completed in 1825
NY Governor DeWitt Clinton built the Erie Canal
Connected New York City from Hudson River with the Great Lakes and the West
Clinton’s Big Ditch--------Other canals follow
Navigable rivers and the steamboat
the first steamboat on western waters was in 1811.
29. Highways Bad roads made transportation highly unreliable
The National Road begun in 1811 and completed by 1832
Connected Maryland to Illinois.
Built by US government
34. The Railroad Revolution,1850s 1850 to 1860, RR proved most significant development toward national economy
Americans demanded transcontinental railroad to California.
Completed by 1869. Faster, cheaper, more reliable than canals, defied terrain & weather.
1st RR in 1828; by 1860, 33,000 miles of track, most in North.
Obstacles eventually overcome: Pullman “sleeping palace” produced in 1859 Faster, cheaper, more reliable than canals, defied terrain & weather.
1st RR in 1828; by 1860, 33,000 miles of track, most in North.
Obstacles eventually overcome: Pullman “sleeping palace” produced in 1859
36. Pioneer Railroad Promoters 1800 to 1850: Roads, canals, navigable rivers with steamboats were the main modes of transportation.
1850 to 1860, RR proved most significant development toward national economy
Competition between Railroads and Canals
Obstacles
opposition from canal backers
danger of fire
poor brakes
difference in track gauge meant changing trains
38. Map rr
39. Effects of the Transportation Revolution 1860-61, Pony Express connected East-West
Telegraph instantly sent messages across US
Attraction of many large capital investments and encouraged risk taking in the US economy
People moved faster and country expanded
Unifying spirit among fellow country men
A need for a transcontinental railroad that connected east to west
41. Trails
44. The Lowell Mills Americans beat the British at their own game, made better factories
Francis C Lowell (a British “traitor”) came over here to build British factories met up with Boston mechanic, Paul Moody
Together they improved the mill and invented a power loom that revolutionized textile manufacturing
45. Young New England farm girls
Supervised on and off the job
Worked 6 days a week, 13 hours a day
Escorted to church on Sunday
46. Women & the Economy 1850: 10% of white women working for pay outside home
Vast majority of working women were single
Left paying jobs upon marriage
“Cult of domesticity”
Cultural idea that glorifies homemaker
Empowers married women
Increased power & independence of women in home led to decline in family size
47. Workers & Wage Slaves With industrial revolution, large impersonal factories surrounded by slums full of “wage slaves” developed
Long hours, low wages, unsanitary conditions, lack of heat, etc.
Labor unions illegal
1820: 1/2 of industrial workers were children under 10
48. Workers & Wage Slaves 1820s & 1830s: right to vote for laborers
Loyalty to Democratic party led to improved conditions
Fought for 10-hour day, higher wages, better conditions
1830s & 1840s: Dozens of strikes for higher wages or 10-hour day
1837 depression hurt union membership
Commonwealth v. Hunt
Supreme Court ruled unions not illegal conspiracies as long as they were peaceful
54. Whitney Ends the Fiber Famine Cotton gin invented in 1793
50 times more effective than hand picking
Raising cotton more profitable
South needs slavery more than ever for “King Cotton”
61. Eli Whitney also invents principle of interchangeable parts, used in muskets for army.
1850: principle widely adopted, led to mass production, & gave North large industrial plants, military superiority over South.
Eli Whitney also invents principle of interchangeable parts, used in muskets for army.
1850: principle widely adopted, led to mass production, & gave North large industrial plants, military superiority over South.