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Chapter 8 The Emergence of a Market Economy, 1815-1850. The Industrial Revolution. Transportation and the Market Revolution. The Market Revolution- new efficiency spurs market with surplus New Roads- necessary to provide trade
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Transportation and the Market Revolution • The Market Revolution- new efficiency spurs market with surplus • New Roads- necessary to provide trade • Water Transportation- steam ships and large waterways became the norm. • Demand for safe passage of goods and people changed technology.
Transportation and the Market Revolution, continued • Railroads- start in port towns • Less expensive to build and maintain than canals. • Spur settlements at rest stops. • Ocean Transportation- clipper ships transform shipping to continents. • The Role of Government • Need for funds created investors, state govts, and federal government using stocks
A Communications Revolution • Telegraph System- telegraph invented by Samuel Morse. • Connected D.C to Baltimore • American Technology • Telegraph, sewing machine, and rubber help transform the country. • Charles Goodyear and rubber for seals and gaskets
Agriculture and the National Economy • Cotton- • Eli Whitney’s cotton gin transform labor. • More efficient to remove seeds. • Old South states perfect climate • Expansion of Slavery • Cotton creates a boom in the South. • 1790-1860- 835,000 slaves sold • Farming the West • Overproduction in the East drained soil. • Cheap land West and panic of 1819 cause farmers to move west to start over.
The Industrial Revolution • Early Textile Manufactures • The Lowell System-near rivers and 1 roof • One stop for weaving process using nature and the rivers to churn the machines. • targeted young women as employees because they were cheaper to hire and had limited employment options; town of Lowell was founded in 1821 by a group of entrepreneurs • mills centralized all aspects of cloth production and employed more than 5,000 young women • workers lived in company-owned boardinghouses under close supervision; women were required to join the church • women worked there to earn spending money and gain unprecedented, though still limited, personal freedom of living away from parents and domestic tasks; contributed to the company newspaper, the Lowell Offering. • Industrialization and Cities
Popular Culture • Urban Recreation- boxing • Taverns and saloons meet business need • The Performing Arts • Opera houses, music halls take off • Mostly men attended
Immigration • The Irish- 1845 potato famine • Half moved to Nyork • Worked hardest jobs • The Germans- mostly craftsmen • Settled in rural areas and farmers, shops • The British, Scandinavians, and Chinese • Farmers and Midwest for Scand.navians • Chinese flocked to California • Nativism- natives that resented newcomers • Know-Nothings- American party that pledges to not vote Catholic.
Organized Labor • Early Unions • 1812- 12%worked wages • 1860-40 % worked wages • Labor Politics • Called for unions to protect artisans. • Commonwealth v Hunt- Mass. Stated forming a union is not illegal.Workers could strike • National Trades Union-1834 to organize local trade into national
The Rise of Professions • Teaching- • Fastest growing job, stepping stone for men • Horace Mann of Mass. Promote free public ed • Law, Medicine, and Engineering • Little formal training for law and medicine • Engineers after Civil War become largest profession • Women’s Work • Only profession nursing. • Middle class did social work
This concludes the Lecture PowerPoint presentation for Chapter 8 The Emergence of a Market Economy, 1815-1850 Please visit the Student Site for more resources: http://wwnorton.com/college/history/america10/