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Boundless Lecture Slides. Available on the Boundless Teaching Platform. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com. Using Boundless Presentations. Boundless Teaching Platform

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Boundless Lecture Slides

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  1. Boundless Lecture Slides Available on the Boundless Teaching Platform Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  2. Using Boundless Presentations Boundless Teaching Platform Boundless empowers educators to engage their students with affordable, customizable textbooks and intuitive teaching tools. The free Boundless Teaching Platform gives educators the ability to customize textbooks in more than 20 subjects that align to hundreds of popular titles. Get started by using high quality Boundless books, or make switching to our platform easier by building from Boundless content pre-organized to match the assigned textbook. This platform gives educators the tools they need to assign readings and assessments, monitor student activity, and lead their classes with pre-made teaching resources. Get started now at: • The Appendix The appendix is for you to use to add depth and breadth to your lectures. You can simply drag and drop slides from the appendix into the main presentation to make for a richer lecture experience. http://boundless.com/teaching-platform • Free to edit, share, and copy Feel free to edit, share, and make as many copies of the Boundless presentations as you like. We encourage you to take these presentations and make them your own. If you have any questions or problems please email: educators@boundless.com Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  3. About Boundless • Boundless is an innovative technology company making education more affordable and accessible for students everywhere. The company creates the world’s best open educational content in 20+ subjects that align to more than 1,000 popular college textbooks. Boundless integrates learning technology into all its premium books to help students study more efficiently at a fraction of the cost of traditional textbooks. The company also empowers educators to engage their students more effectively through customizable books and intuitive teaching tools as part of the Boundless Teaching Platform. More than 2 million learners access Boundless free and premium content each month across the company’s wide distribution platforms, including its website, iOS apps, Kindle books, and iBooks. To get started learning or teaching with Boundless, visit boundless.com. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  4. The Market Revolution The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 A Market Society The Industrial Revolution Limited Prosperity ] Conclusion: An Industrializing Economy The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  5. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 > The Market Revolution The Market Revolution • The Market Revolution • Transportation: Roads, Canals, and Railroads • Factories, Working Women, and Wage Labor • The Growth of the Cotton Industry • A Communications Revolution Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com www.boundless.com/u-s-history/textbooks/boundless-u-s-history-textbook/the-market-revolution-1815-1840-13/the-market-revolution-108/

  6. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 > A Market Society A Market Society • A Market Society • Commercial Farmers • The Growth of Cities • The Beginnings of the Labor Movement • The Development of Holidays Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com www.boundless.com/u-s-history/textbooks/boundless-u-s-history-textbook/the-market-revolution-1815-1840-13/a-market-society-109/

  7. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 > The Industrial Revolution The Industrial Revolution • The Industrial Revolution • Industrialization and the Environment Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com www.boundless.com/u-s-history/textbooks/boundless-u-s-history-textbook/the-market-revolution-1815-1840-13/the-industrial-revolution-110/

  8. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 > Limited Prosperity Limited Prosperity • The Limits of Prosperity • Race and Opportunity Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com www.boundless.com/u-s-history/textbooks/boundless-u-s-history-textbook/the-market-revolution-1815-1840-13/limited-prosperity-111/

  9. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 > Conclusion: An Industrializing Economy Conclusion: An Industrializing Economy • Conclusion: An Industrializing Economy Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com www.boundless.com/u-s-history/textbooks/boundless-u-s-history-textbook/the-market-revolution-1815-1840-13/conclusion-an-industrializing-economy-1516/

  10. Appendix Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  11. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Key terms • American SystemA set of manufacturing methods that evolved in the nineteenth century, characterized by a system for making interchangeable parts and a high degree of mechanization that results in a more efficient use of labor compared to hand methods. • Anthracite coalA form of carbonized ancient plants; the hardest and cleanest-burning of all similar material. • artisanalMade by a skilled worker, such as a specialty item. • Baltimore and Ohio RailroadOne of the oldest rail lines in the United States and the first common carrier rail line. • Baltimore and Ohio RailroadOne of the oldest rail lines in the United States and the first common carrier rail line. • boom and bustA pattern of high prices in a given market or in the entire economy followed by ruinously low prices, falling production, and bankruptcies by producers. • boom-and-bust cycleA business pattern in which the expansions are rapid and the contractions are steep and severe. • choleraAny of several acute infectious diseases of humans and domestic animals, caused by the Vibrio cholerae bacterium through ingestion of contaminated water or food, usually marked by severe gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, and dehydration. • cotton ginA machine that quickly and easily separates cotton fibers from their seeds, a job that otherwise must be performed painstakingly by hand. • cotton ginA machine that quickly and easily separates cotton fibers from their seeds, a job that otherwise must be performed painstakingly by hand. • cotton ginA machine that quickly and easily separates cotton fibers from their seeds, a job that otherwise must be performed painstakingly by hand. • DeskillingThe process by which skilled labor within an industry or economy is eliminated by the introduction of technologies operated by semiskilled or unskilled workers. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  12. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 • Dred Scott v. SandfordA ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that people of African descent brought into the United States and held as slaves (or their descendants, whether or not they were slaves) were not protected by the Constitution and were not U.S. citizens. • Electrical TelegraphA type of communication that uses electrical signals, usually conveyed via telecommunication lines or radio. • Eli WhitneyAn American inventor best known for inventing the cotton gin. • Eli WhitneyAn American inventor best known for inventing the cotton gin. • Erie CanalThe 363 mile-long canal from the Great Lake of the same name to the Hudson River in New York. • Erie CanalThe 363 mile-long canal from the Great Lake of the same name to the Hudson River. • Industrial RevolutionThe major technological, socioeconomic, and cultural change in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century resulting from the replacement of an economy based on manual labor with one dominated by industry and machine manufacture. • Industrial RevolutionThe major technological, socioeconomic, and cultural change in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries resulting from the replacement of an economy based on manual labor by one dominated by industry and machine manufacture. • Market Revolution(1793–1909) A drastic change in the manual labor system originating in the South of the United States (and soon moving to the North) and later spreading to the entire world. • Mechanics' Union of Trade AssociationsA now-defunct American trade union founded in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1827. • National RoadThe first major improved highway in the United States to be built by the federal government. • Panic of 1837A financial crisis or market correction in the United States built on a speculative fever. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  13. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 • Panic of 1837A financial crisis or market correction in the United States built on a speculative fever. • sectionalismLoyalty to the interests of one's own region, rather than to the country as a whole; often a precursor to separatism. • steam powerPower derived from water heated into water vapor that is usually converted to motive power by a reciprocating engine or turbine. • steel plowA tool (or machine) used in farming for initial cultivation of soil in preparation for sowing seed or planting. • Subsistence farmingA type of agricultural practice based on self-sufficiency, which focuses on growing enough food to feed the growers and their families. • The EighthA former U.S. holiday, in place from 1828 to 1861, that celebrated the U.S. victory in the Battle of New Orleans. • trade unionAn organization whose members have the same job or skill that acts collectively to address common issues. • transcendentalismA movement of writers and philosophers in New England in the nineteenth century who were loosely bound together by an adherence to an idealistic system of thought based on the belief in the essential supremacy of insight over logic and experience for the revelation of the deepest truths. • wage laborThe socioeconomic relationship between a worker and an employer, in which the worker sells his or her labor under a formal or informal employment contract. • wage laborThe socioeconomic relationship between a worker and an employer, in which the worker sells his labor under a formal or informal employment contract. • Wage laborThe socioeconomic relationship between a worker and an employer, in which the worker sells his or her labor under a formal or informal employment contract. • Waltham-Lowell SystemA labor and production model employed in the United States, particularly in New England, during the early years of the American textile industry in the early nineteenth century. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  14. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 • water powerAny source of energy derived from running or falling water; originally obtained from a waterwheel immersed in a stream; modern hydroelectric power is obtained from turbines fed from reservoirs. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  15. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 "Free Trade" Image of an old advertisement from Sutton & Co., with the words "Free Trade" across the front. American society became increasingly subject to broad market forces in the early nineteenth century. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Free trade."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Free_trade.jpgView on Boundless.com

  16. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 George Washington's "Thanksgiving Proclamation," 1795 George Washington issued the first proclamations of Thanksgiving in 1789 and 1795. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wiki Commons."800px-George_Washington27s_Thanksgiving_Proclamation2C_1795.png."Public domainhttps://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:George_Washington's_Thanksgiving_Proclamation,_1795.pngView on Boundless.com

  17. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Profile of the grand Erie Canal This is an 1832 profile of the Erie Canal, connecting New York City to the Western Interior of the U.S. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikimedia.Public domainhttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/da/1832_Erie_Canal.jpgView on Boundless.com

  18. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Daguerreotype of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at the corner of 8th and Market Streets, 1840 Philadelphia was the largest metropolitan center in the United States in the early 1800s. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Philadelphia 8th & Market 1840."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Philadelphia_8th_&_Market_1840.jpgView on Boundless.com

  19. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Constitution of the Factory Girls Association in Lowell, Massachusetts, 1836 This is the constitution of the Labor Reform Association of Lowell's female textile workers, drafted in 1836. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."FGA Constitution."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:FGA_Constitution.jpgView on Boundless.com

  20. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Celebration of completion of the Transcontinental Railroad on May 10, 1869 Railroads came to play a major role in westward expansion in the late nineteenth century. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."69workmen."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:69workmen.jpgView on Boundless.com

  21. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 A cotton gin on display at the Eli Whitney Museum The invention of the cotton gin revolutionized the textile industry in the early nineteenth century and transformed the economy of the South. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Cotton gin EWM 2007."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cotton_gin_EWM_2007.jpgView on Boundless.com

  22. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Slave market in Atlanta, Georgia, 1864 This image depicts the site of a slave market in Atlanta in 1864. The cotton industry in the South was fully dependent on the institution of slavery. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Slave Market-Atlanta Georgia 1864."CC BY-SAhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Slave_Market-Atlanta_Georgia_1864.jpgView on Boundless.com

  23. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Southern cotton plantation The invention of the cotton gin revolutionized the cotton industry in the South and increased economic dependence on slave labor. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."CottonNegrosSouth."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CottonNegrosSouth.jpgView on Boundless.com

  24. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Henry David Thoreau, 1856 Thoreau's writings celebrated nature and a simple life and provided a critique of urban and industrial values. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Henry David Thoreau."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Henry_David_Thoreau.jpgView on Boundless.com

  25. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Whig cartoon showing the effects of unemployment This U.S. Whig poster illustrates unemployment in 1837 through the lens of an American family, whose patriarch sits forlornly at a table while rent collectors enter the door. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Panic1837 crop."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Panic1837_crop.jpgView on Boundless.com

  26. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Dred Scott portrait by Louis Schultze Dred Scott (1795–1858), plaintiff in the infamous Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) case at the Supreme Court of the United States. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."DredScott."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:DredScott.jpgView on Boundless.com

  27. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Five Points by George Catlin Five Points (1827), by George Catlin, depicts the infamous Five Points neighborhood of New York City, so called because it was centered at the intersection of five streets. Five Points was home to a mix of recent immigrants, freed slaves, and other members of the working class. This image of the Five Points district captures the turbulence of the time. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Open Stax."CNX_History_09_00_EarlyNY.jpg."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:E6zma7IF@2/IntroductionView on Boundless.com

  28. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Anthracite coal breaker and power house buildings, New Mexico, ca. 1935 Coal tends to release large quantities of carbon as it is burned to make electricity. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Coal plant, Madrid c. 1935."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Coal_plant,_Madrid_c._1935.jpgView on Boundless.com

  29. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Wheat Wheat production in the West greatly increased with the invention of the mechanical reaper, patented in 1834. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Public Domain Images."Public domain image - free picture of wheat plant."Public domainhttp://www.public-domain-image.com/plants/plant-seeds/wheat-seeds/slides/wheat-plant.htmlView on Boundless.com

  30. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 "Lowell Mill Girls," ca. 1870 Two women factory workers known as "Lowell Mill Girls." Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."2 Young Women."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:2_Young_Women.jpgView on Boundless.com

  31. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Highways of the United States, ca. 1825 Turnpikes, canals, and rail lines drastically changed America's landscape, beginning in the 1800s. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikimedia.Public domainhttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/Highways_USA_1825.pngView on Boundless.com

  32. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Locktender's House on the Illinois and Michigan Canal Lock No. 8 and Locktender's House, Illinois and Michigan Canal just west of Aux Sable Creek, near Morris, Illinois. The Illinois and Michigan Canal was an important canal in the nineteenth century, but was rendered obsolete when new railroads replaced it. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."SR Locktender house AuSable Aqueduct."CC BY-SAhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SR_Locktender_house_AuSable_Aqueduct.jpgView on Boundless.com

  33. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 The New York Herald Penny Press, 1861 The penny press revolutionized journalism in the 1830s. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Picture of the New York Herald Penny Press."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Picture_of_the_New_York_Herald_Penny_Press.jpgView on Boundless.com

  34. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Steam engine design, 1801 This is the original steam engine design patented by Oliver Evans. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."LOC Evans Steam Engine."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:LOC_Evans_Steam_Engine.jpgView on Boundless.com

  35. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Hand bill from the New York City Board of Health, 1832 The cholera outbreak of 1832 was related to overcrowding and unsanitary conditions that attended the Industrial Revolution. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Cholera 395.1."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cholera_395.1.jpgView on Boundless.com

  36. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Eli Whitney on U.S. postage issue of 1940 Eli Whitney's crucial contributions to the Market Revolution created a lasting legacy. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Eli Whitney 1940 Issue-1c."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Eli_Whitney_1940_Issue-1c.jpgView on Boundless.com

  37. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikispaces.Public domainhttp://tuckahoe.wikispaces.com/177.+The+steamboat+was+invented+by+who?Robert+Fulton.View on Boundless.com

  38. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 "To the Mechanics and Working-Men of the Fifth Ward" This promotional tract issued by the Mechanics' Union of Trade Associations condemns working conditions in Philadelphia. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."Mechanics essay."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mechanics_essay.jpgView on Boundless.com

  39. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 New York City shirtwaist workers on strike, taking a lunch break Women in the garment industry were among the earliest labor activists in the United States. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."NY shirtwaist workers strikers having lunch."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:NY_shirtwaist_workers_strikers_having_lunch.jpgView on Boundless.com

  40. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 The Commissioners' Plan of 1811 provisional map A drawing of the plans for New York City's grid system, adopted in 1811. Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com Wikipedia."NYC-GRID-1811."Public domainhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:NYC-GRID-1811.pngView on Boundless.com

  41. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 Attribution • Wikipedia."cotton gin."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/cotton%20gin • Wiktionary."Industrial Revolution."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Industrial_Revolution • Wikipedia."Market Revolution."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market%20Revolution • OpenStax CNX."Introduction: Industrial Transformation in the North."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:E6zma7IF@2/Introduction • Wikipedia."Market Revolution."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_Revolution • Wikipedia."Cotton gin."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cotton_gin%23Effects_of_the_cotton_gin_in_the_United_States • Wikipedia."cotton gin."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/cotton%20gin • Wikipedia."Eli Whitney."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eli%20Whitney • Open Stax."The Economics of Cotton."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:P8WUy7Y9@3/The-Economics-of-Cotton • Wikipedia."Yeoman."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeoman%23United_States • Wikipedia."Subsistence farming."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsistence%20farming • Wikipedia."cotton gin."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/cotton%20gin • Wikipedia."Agricultural history of the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_history_of_the_United_States • Wikipedia."Agricultural history of the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_history_of_the_United_States%23Cotton • Wikipedia."steel plow."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/steel%20plow • Wikipedia."Market Revolution."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_Revolution • Wikipedia."History of Philadelphia."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Philadelphia%23Industrial_growth Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  42. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 • OpenStax CNX."The Tyranny and Triumph of the Majority."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:c2gW-AvW@3/The-Tyranny-and-Triumph-of-the • Wikipedia."History of New York City."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_New_York_City%23Federal_and_early_America:_1784.E2.80.931854 • Wikipedia."History of New York City (1784-1854)."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_New_York_City_(1784-1854) • Wikipedia."Panic of 1837."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panic%20of%201837 • Wikipedia."History of the United States (1789–1849)."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_United_States_(1789%E2%80%931849) • Wikipedia."Economic history of the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_history_of_the_United_States%23Urbanization • Wikipedia."History of Baltimore."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Baltimore%2319th_century • Wikipedia."History of Boston."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Boston%23Economic_and_population_growth • Wikipedia."Croton Aqueduct."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croton_Aqueduct%23Background • Wikipedia."Baltimore and Ohio Railroad."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltimore%20and%20Ohio%20Railroad • Wikipedia."History of Philadelphia."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Philadelphia%23Industrial_growth • Wiktionary."Erie Canal."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Erie_Canal • OpenStax CNX."Competing Visions."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:8bDdDII4@3/Competing-Visions-Federalists- • OpenStax CNX."A New Social Order."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:euQVBZwc@3/A-New-Social-Order-Class-Divis • Wikipedia."Electrical telegraph."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_telegraph%23Morse_telegraphs • Wikipedia."Penny press."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penny_press • Wikipedia."Electrical Telegraph."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical%20Telegraph • OpenStax CNX."A Vibrant Capitalist Republic."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:kiblHz21@3/A-Vibrant-Capitalist-Republic • Wikipedia."Illinois and Michigan Canal."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illinois_and_Michigan_Canal Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

  43. The Market Revolution: 1815–1840 • Wikipedia."Steamboat."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamboat%23Impact_on_American_Economy • Wikipedia."National Road."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National%20Road • Wikipedia."History of rail transport in the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_rail_transport_in_the_United_States%23Beginnings • Wikipedia."Baltimore and Ohio Railroad."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltimore%20and%20Ohio%20Railroad • Wiktionary."Erie Canal."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Erie_Canal • Wikipedia."History of turnpikes and canals in the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_turnpikes_and_canals_in_the_United_States%23Toll_roads • Wikipedia."Transportation in the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_in_the_United_States%23History • Wikipedia."History of turnpikes and canals in the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_turnpikes_and_canals_in_the_United_States%23Political_differences • Wikipedia."Erie Canal."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erie_Canal • Wikipedia."Erie Canal."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erie_Canal%23Impact • Open Stax."The Westward Spirit."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:ZPUeiRRT@3/The-Westward-Spirit • WIKIPEDIA."African-American history."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_history%23Introduction_of_slavery • Wikipedia."Mason-Dixon line."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mason-Dixon%20line • WIKIPEDIA."Slavery in the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_the_United_States%231790_to_1850 • Wikipedia."Dred Scott v. Sandford."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dred%20Scott%20v.%20Sandford • Open Stax."The Dred Scott Decision and Sectional Strife."CC BY 3.0http://cnx.org/contents/p7ovuIkl@3.22:rEj7lU_5@3/The-Dred-Scott-Decision-and-Se • Wikipedia."Pollution."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollution • Wikipedia."Anthracite."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthracite • Wikipedia."Water supply and sanitation in the United States."CC BY-SA 3.0http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_supply_and_sanitation_in_the_United_States%23History Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at www.boundless.com

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