1 / 24

Transportation Revolution

Transportation Revolution. United States I. After 1815, Dramatic improvements in transportation Roads Steamboats Canals Railroads Create interregional linkages, previously not in existance. Condition in 1815. Rural nation—highly fragmented

kuniko
Download Presentation

Transportation Revolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Transportation Revolution United States I

  2. After 1815, Dramatic improvements in transportation • Roads • Steamboats • Canals • Railroads • Create interregional linkages, previously not in existance

  3. Condition in 1815 • Rural nation—highly fragmented • Transportation ranged from primitive to non-existent • West of Appalachians—almost totally undeveloped

  4. Western transportation • Most settlers lived near shores of Ohio/Mississippi River System • Float products down river—from Pittsburgh about 30 days • At New Orleans—shipped to Eastern ports • Boats then torn apart for lumber and boatsmen walked home on Natchez Trace

  5. Upstream Transport • Difficult and Expensive • Poling up river—15 miles per day • Results • Limited goods • Expensive prices

  6. East-West • Natural flow • Hauling goods over mountains expensive

  7. Roads • National Road • Baltimore to Wheeling, Virginia by 1818 • Lancaster Turnpike • Linked Philadelphia, Lancaster and Pittsburgh • New York • Major road from Albany to Lake Erie by 1812 • By 1821—4,000 miles of road

  8. Problems with roads • Expensive • Especially for bulky items • Oats example • Hard to maintain • Often not linked together • Privately owned • No common plan

  9. Steamboats • Key to western development • John Fitch and Robert Fulton • Clermont 1807 • Flatbottom boat development • 1st riverboat by 1815 • Booms • New Orleans as major port • Massive flow of good—up and down river • Freight charges reduced • Interior opened to development

  10. Dangers of Steamboats • Very unsafe • Short life span of boats • Boiler explosions • Fires • High loss of life

  11. Canals • Steamboats conquer western rivers • N-S flow to Gulf of Mexico • Still looking for effective way to reach eastern seaboard • Canal was option • Engineering • Costs • New York looked promising • Good geography—Lake Ontario Shoreline

  12. Erie Canal • DeWitt Clinton—key figure • Believed possible—only 570 foot rise • Convinces NYS legislature to build 364 mile canal • Longest to this point 28 miles • Begun in 1819 Finished 1825 • Most was handdug through forest lands • New immigrant labor

  13. Success • Immediate success • Dramatically lowers transportation costs • $100 to $15 per ton • Cuts travel time to 8 days • Urban Development • Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse • Agricultural Development

  14. Canal Boom • Encouraged other states to develop comparable projects • Set off 20 year canal boom • Some effective, other much less so • Pennsylvania Canal—Pittsburgh and Philadelphia • Combined canal and railroad tracking • Most went bust because of overbuilding

  15. Railroads • First railroads connected cities to rivers and canals • B & O Railroad linked Baltimore to the rivers of the west • Approx. 3,000 miles built between 1820 and 1840 • Did not constitute a national or regional network • Not until 1850’s did this emerge

  16. Impact • Threatened to make other forms of transportation obsolete. • New York Central vs. Erie Canal • Speed and low overall cost • Ability to go almost anywhere • Geography not a serious barrier.

  17. Overall impact • Reduced time and money it took to move heavy goods • Overall costs of moving goods dropped 95% between 1815 and 1860. • Improvements in speed • Allowed for a national market to emerge • Self-sustaining domestic markets • Facilitates foreign trade

More Related