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Emergence of America

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Emergence of America s Market Economy Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: The New Nation by Joy Hakim Images as cited. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emergence of America


1
Emergence of Americas Market Economy
Presentation created by Robert Martinez Primary
Content Source The New Nation by Joy
Hakim Images as cited.
2
  • Back in colonial times. Americans raised most
    of the food they ate and made most of what they
    wore. They spun their own yarn, wove their own
    cloth, and stitched their own clothes.

http//www.old-picture.com/europe/thumbnails/Spinn
ing-Spinner-th.jpg
3
  • They dipped candles and built tables and
    chairs. Wealthy colonists who wanted fancy
    dishes, fine cloth, elegant furniture, or
    handsome books sent to England for them.

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.jpg
4
  • Most manufactured goods were made in England,
    raw materials came from the colonies.

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nd/Flow_Blue_Heron_Chamber_Pitcher_Bowl_Set04.JPG
5
  • It was a system that worked well. America
    provided lumber, pitch, tobacco, cotton, and
    grains. England took those raw materials and
    turned them into usable products that could be
    sold around the world.

Drying Tobacco Leaves
http//www.flickr.com/photos/johnnyray/3561358674/
6
  • During the American Revolution the system
    stopped. Suddenly there was no place to send raw
    materials and no supply of fine goods. What did
    the colonists do? They used their heads.

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7
  • They looked for new markets for their raw
    materials. Their ships sailed to faraway places
    to Spain, to China, to India, to Turkey.

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9.jpg
8
  • After the war the new United States began
    trading with England again. But American society
    was changing. We were now a democracy with a
    strong and growing middle class.

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32/
9
  • It wasnt only the very rich who wanted to buy
    things. Ordinary people wanted them, too. In
    England something was happening that could make
    that possible. That something was an industrial
    revolution.

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10
  • An industrial revolution was a new system of
    organizing work, based on new ideas in science
    and technology and business. Things once made at
    home were being made faster, and sometimes
    better, in factories.

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87/
11
  • Tasks were divided in new ways. People began
    working in teams, and that was much more
    productive than working alone. It was machinery
    that made it all possible. Americans wanted some
    of those machines.

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55/
12
  • The English werent about to share their new
    knowledge. They wanted to keep the Industrial
    Revolution in England. They wouldnt let anyone
    who worked in a cotton factory leave England.

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13
  • Samuel Slater, a young apprentice in a cotton
    factory in England had a remarkable memory. He
    memorized the way the machines were built. Then
    he ran off to London.

http//www.uh.edu/engines/samslater.jpg
14
  • In London he pretended to be a farm worker. He
    didnt tell anyone he had worked in a cotton
    mill. It was 1790 when he sailed for America. He
    brought the key to the Industrial Revolution with
    him.

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pg
15
  • Slater built a small factory next to a
    waterfall in the Blackstone River at Pawtucket,
    Rhode Island. Waterpower turned the machines that
    spun cotton fibers into yarn.

http//www.ou.edu/class/arch4443/185820and20All
20That/Old20slater20mill.jpg
16
  • Soon there were spinning mills besides many
    New England streams. Now that factories could
    turn cotton into yarn- quickly and easily- you
    can see there would be a great demand for raw
    cotton.

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d/slater.jpg
17
  • Anyone who could grow cotton would make a lot
    of money. Cotton grew very well in the southern
    states.

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18
  • The cotton that grew in the coastal region was
    easy to use. It was called long-staple cotton
    and it had seeds that fell right off the cotton
    bolls. But the tidewater coastal lands were in
    poor shape. There wasnt much good land left.


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19
  • People didnt practice scientific farming.
    They often destroyed land by growing the same
    crops year after year. Then, when the land was no
    longer productive, they moved on.

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73/
20
  • Short-staple cotton was the only cotton that
    would grow inland. However, short-staple cotton
    has lots of dark seeds, and those seeds stick to
    the cotton bolls.

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20and20fibre.jpg
21
  • You cant spin cotton that is full of black
    seeds. It took a worker all day to remove the
    seeds from just one pound of cotton. If only
    there were an easy way to get rid of those seeds

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pg
22
  • Eli Whitney heard all about that problem when
    he came to Savannah, Georgia, to take a job as a
    teacher. Whitney had just graduated from Yale
    College. It took him very little time to come up
    with a simple machine that removed seeds from
    cotton.

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pg
23
  • He called it a cotton engine the name was
    soon shortened to cotton gin. Instead of taking
    all day to remove seeds from a pound of cotton, a
    worker with a cotton gin could clean 50 pounds of
    cotton in a day, and clean it better than he ever
    could by hand.

http//www.ferdinando.org.uk/images/cotton20seed
20and20fibre.jpg
24
  • The invention of the cotton gin, in 1793, did
    something that no one expected. It encouraged
    slavery.

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25
  • If you could grow a lot of cotton you could
    get rich. So Southerners looked for land to grow
    cotton and workers to plant and harvest it.
    Slaves became a valuable part of their operation.

http//www.uh.edu/engines/pickingcottonca1907.jpg
26
  • Whitney didnt mean it, but his invention
    helped turn the American South into a slave
    empire. It made the South into a land of cotton.
    It kept it rural.

http//barney.gonzaga.edu/jleahy/cotton.jpg
27
  • At the same time, the North was becoming urban
    and industrial. It began in earnest after 1810,
    when a Boston businessman named Francis Cabot
    Lowell took a trip to view textile factories in
    England.

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/
28
  • When he came home to America he built a
    factory that was even better than those in
    England. Lowells factory had machines for both
    spinning and weaving. He took cotton fibers and
    turned them into finished cloth, all in the same
    building.

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answork/Factory/Merrimack.jpg
29
  • Once you get started with machines and
    technology, one invention seems to lead to
    another. There were big advantages to the system,
    but disadvantages, too.

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exhibitions/openspace/board_4/ezzc1.jpg
30
  • Factory goods cost much less than handcrafted
    goods. That meant that ordinary people could
    afford things they never been able to buy before.
    That made life better for most people. But not
    for everyone.

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31
  • Work in the factories was mind-dulling.
    Workers did the same task, over and over. The air
    in the cotton mills was full of tiny, almost
    invisible cotton fibers that got into your lungs
    (and sometimes led to cancer.)

www.longwood.k12.ny.us/lhslibrary/literature/10res
earch/industrialrevolution.htm
32
  • Some of the workers in the factories were
    children. Some were as young as seven years of
    age. Children often worked 10 or more hours a day.

http//www.becomingcloser.org/History/Child20Labo
r.jpg
33
  • Those new spinning machines and looms were big
    and powerful and had no safety devices. If a
    workers hand slipped, she might lose it.

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15/
34
  • Francis Lowell hired young farm women for his
    factory. Lowell housed them in dormitories and
    saw that they lived well and got fair salaries.

Lowell factory, Boston, Ma.
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35
  • But other factory owners took advantage of
    workers, especially women and children. They paid
    them poorly and made them work long hours.

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.gif
36
  • The factory workers were taking part in two
    revolutions. The first was the Industrial
    Revolution. The second was a market revolution.
    That means the U.S. was going from a farm economy
    to a market economy.

http//www.flickr.com/photos/dougbhill/223943546/
http//www.technocraftind.com/images/folding_plait
ing_machine.jpg
37
  • A market economy is based on jobs and money,
    where people earned wages and bought goods in
    markets and stores.

http//www.thecrowleycollection.com/photos/newengl
and/textiles/lowell/boottloom06sm.jpg
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