Impact of Westward Expansion
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Transcript Impact of Westward Expansion
Impact of Westward Expansion
CPUSH
2012-2013
How Americans Viewed Expansion
• Agreed on
• Need for expansion
• Disagreed on
• Government policies
1- about cheap land
2- tariffs to support
industry
3- expansion of slavery
http://www.teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?
video_id=123418&title=Expansion_of_the_Uni
ted_States_Map_1763___PresentSlide 12
1-TRANSPORTATION
REVOLUTION
& THE CREATION OF A NATIONAL
MARKET ECONOMY
Eras of Transportation
•
•
•
•
Turnpike & River Era
Canal Era
Railroad Era
Automobile Era
1790s-1820s
1825-1840s
1850s-1940s
1920s-present
First National Road
TRANSPORTATION REVOLUTION
•Steamboats
Robert Fulton
Clermont (1807)
•Impact on
transportation
and trade – allowed
merchandise and
people to move more easily
inland – encouraged settlement
TRANSPORTATION REVOLUTION
Erie Canal (1825)
Significance - affected
Cost of trade
Direction of trade
Settlement of NW
New York City
Upstate NY
Canal boom
TRANSPORTATION REVOLUTION
Principal Canals in 1840
Roads and Canals, 1820-1850
• Canal
boom
• Effect on transportation and
trade patterns
TRANSPORTATION REVOLUTION
• Railroads
• Baltimore & Ohio
RR (1830)
• short lines
• trunk lines
2- National
Market
Economy:
Inland
Freight
Rates, 17901865
National Market
Economy:
The Speed of
News in 1817
and 1841
3- BEGINNINGS OF
INDUSTRIALIZATION
Factory System developed
Rise of Corporations
Technological Innovations
Labor – need workers for jobs
Old Northwest – new market for goods
The
American Industrial Revolution
occurred between 1790 and 1860. It
began in England in the 18th century and
spread to the United States.
Cotton gin
National road
Canals
Steam boats
Railroads
Why we were these inventions so
important.
BEGINNINGS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
• textiles
• Samuel Slater
• factory system
Samuel
Slater
(“Father of
the Factory
System”)
BEGINNINGS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
• Lowell (or Waltham) Factory System
–
–
–
–
Francis Cabot Lowell
First dual-purpose textile plants
employees
first to produce cloth
• Lowell towns
Lowell, Mass. in 1850
New England Textile
Centers: 1830s
The Growth of Cotton Textile Manufacturing, 1810–1840
4. INVENTIONS &
INNOVATIONS
Americans were willing to try anything.
They were first copiers, then innovators.
•Patents Approved:
•1800: 41
•1860: 4,357
Eli Whitney: The
Cotton Gin, 1791
(Actually invented
by a slave)
Cyrus McCormick
& the Mechanical Reaper
CHANGES TO SOCIETY
The market economy changed:
•
•
•
•
class structure
The nature and location of work
Gender roles (Middle class)
the standard of living
Social Class structure
•
•
•
•
Working class
Rise of the middle class
Social mobility?
Geographic mobility
UPPER
MIDDLE
WORKING
LOWER
Where do Farmers fit?
POPULATION GROWTH
•
•
•
•
•
1775
1790
1820
1840
1860
2.5 Million
4 Million
10 Million
17 Million
32 Million
Immigration
Major immigrant groups
• Irish
• Germans
• English
When did they come?
Where did they settle?
National Origin of
Immigrants:
1820 - 1860
Immigration to
the United
States, 18201860