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Chapter 19, Section 1 The Second Industrial Revolution. Second Industrial Revolution. The first industrial revolution started in America in the early 1800s The first major industry was in the New England states producing textiles (cloth) It brought workers to cities to work in factories
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Second Industrial Revolution • The first industrial revolution started in America in the early 1800s • The first major industry was in the New England states producing textiles (cloth) • It brought workers to cities to work in factories • Technological advances led to the second industrial revolution in the late 1800s • By the mid-1890s the US was the world’s industrial leader
Bessemer Process • Who? – Henry Bessemer invented it and Andrew Carnegie dominated the steel industry using it • What? – a way to manufacture steel quickly and cheaply by blasting hot air through melted iron to quickly remove the impurities • When? – mid-1850s • Where? – US (particularly PA) • Why important? – • Story of US: Carnegie
Factors Affecting Industrial Growth • Greater ability to use natural resources • A growing population and rising immigration created large work force and more consumers of goods • Inventions and innovations (like the Bessemer process and the assembly line) increased production • Increasing business investment (capital from business people and the sale of stock) • Govt. policies that assisted businesses (such as protective tariffs and providing land grants to railroad companies)
Impact of Railroads on Society and the Economy • Manufacturers sent products to market faster • Cities where rail lines crossed grew rapidly • Spurred western growth and development • Employed large numbers of people in the railroad industry • Sleeping cars improved passenger service • Refrigerated cars increased the nation’s food supply
Production of Oil • In the 1850s chemists invented a way to convert crude oil into kerosene, which was then used in cooking, heating, and lighting • Edwin Drake proved it was possible to drill for oil underground in Titusville, PA
Patents • Patent – a document that gives inventors exclusive rights to make or sell inventions (or sell use of them) for a set amount of time • Patents allow inventors to protect their inventions from being manufactured by others so they alone can profit off of their ideas POTATO MASHER PATENT DRAWING
Thomas Edison • Who? – inventor who was interested in the uses of electricity • What? – had over 1,000 patents including the electric light bulb, phonograph, and motion picture projector • When? – late 1800s • Where? – research lab in Menlo Park, NJ • Why important? –
Henry Ford • Who? – businessman who produced cars • What? – first to use the assembly line in manufacturing when producing the Model T car (1908) • When? – early 1900s • Where? – Detroit, MI • Why important? –
Wright Brothers • Who? – brothers Orville and Wilbur who were inventors • What? – built a light-weight airplane with a small gas engine that made the first piloted flight • When? – 1903 • Where? – Kitty Hawk, NC • Why important? –
Alexander Graham Bell • Communication over distances improved with Bell’s invention of the telephone • Previously they relied on the telegraph • Telegraph carried only written messages and required trained people to operate it • Anyone could use the telephone
Other Inventions Important in the Late 1800s • Sewing machine – Elias Howe and Isaac Singer • Typewriter – Christopher Sholes (of Milwaukee) • Air-brake for trains – George Westinghouse (allowed trains to have more cars to ship more goods and made them safer) • Power system to send electricity across many miles – George Westinghouse