Power Presentations CHAPTER 11. Image Science and Technology From 1790 to 1840, you have seen an explosion of new inventions. These include the cotton.

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Presentation transcript:

Power Presentations CHAPTER 11

Image Science and Technology From 1790 to 1840, you have seen an explosion of new inventions. These include the cotton gin, the steamboat, the steel plow, and the telegraph. You have also seen neighbors leave their farms to run machines in new factories. You sense that the country is changing. How will new inventions change your country?

What would it mean to be able to grow more grain and cotton? What would it mean to communicate and travel more quickly? How might it feel to do factory work instead of farm work?

To World 1844 Telegraph line connects Washington, D.C., and Baltimore Nat Turner leads slave rebellion in Virginia Erie Canal completed Monroe Doctrine issued Missouri Compromise balances number of slave and free states. Image 1813 Weaving factory built in Waltham, Massachusetts War of 1812 disrupts U.S. shipping Congress bans the African slave trade Robert Fulton launches a steamboat on the Hudson River.

Back to Home Back to U.S Louis Daguerre is recognized for his photographic process Slavery is abolished in British Empire First public railroad operates in England Peru and Mexico gain independence from Spain.1815 Napoleon defeated at Waterloo Haiti wins independence from France.

Main Idea Why It Matters Now New machines and factories changed the way people lived and worked in the late 1700s and early 1800s. The industrial development that began more than 200 years ago continues today.

What were some new inventions of this period? When were they invented? How did they affect the United States? INVENTIONDATEEFFECTS interchangable parts standardized goods steamboat improved river transportation increased food production telegraph increased communication steel plow

Why was New England a good place to build early factories? What were working conditions like in Lowell mills? How were different U.S. regions linked economically?

Back to Home Making Judgments How would you judge Samuel Slater and Francis Lowell, who brought secrets to the United States illegally? Think About what they gained how they affected the United States and England what you believe about keeping technology secret

Main Idea Why It Matters Now The spread of slavery created lasting racial and sectional tensions. The invention of the cotton gin and the demand for cotton caused slavery to spread in the South. Map

Who were the different groups of Southerners? What were they like? GROUPFACTS one-third of population, large planters were powerful nonslaveholding whites small farms, supported slavery one-third of the Southern population, variety of jobs free blacks 8 percent of blacks in the South, faced restrictions enslaved blacks Image slaveholding whites

How did the cotton gin lead to the spread of slavery? How was life different for plantation slaves, city slaves, and free blacks in the South? What were three ways that enslaved people resisted slavery?

Back to Home Drawing Conclusions Why do you think Southern whites reacted as they did to Nat Turner’s rebellion? Think About Turner’s trial and hanging the killings that followed the rebellion the new laws that were passed

Main Idea Why It Matters Now Patriotic pride united the states, but tension between the North and South emerged. The tension led to the Civil War, and regional differences can still be found in the United States today.

What contributed to national unity during the early 1800s? protective tariffsnational bank road and canal systems strong federal government Map settled national boundaries NATIONAL UNITY

How did the Erie Canal help the nation grow? How did the Missouri Compromise resolve a conflict between the North and South? What was the main message of the Monroe Doctrine, and who was it directed toward?

Back to Home Recognizing Effects If the Supreme Court had decided differently in Gibbons v. Ogden or McCulloch v. Maryland, what might be one result today? Think About if states could interfere with federal laws if states controlled interstate commerce

REVIEW QUESTIONS ANSWERS: READ AND TAKE NOTES

1 How did the War of 1812 push the United States to build factories? 2 Why did its many rivers make the Northeast a good place to build early factories? 3 What was one effect of the steamboat? 4 How did interchangeable parts transform the manufacturing process? 5 Why did slavery spread in the South?

6 What were three hardships faced by enslaved people on plantations? 7 How did religion help people endure or resist slavery? 8 How did the Supreme Court’s ruling in McCulloch v. Maryland strengthen the federal government? 9 How did the United States gain the territory of Florida? 10 What were the terms of the Missouri Compromise?

Back to Home REGIONAL GROWTH SECTIONAL TENSIONS NATIONAL UNITY Analyzing Causes and Recognizing Effects CAUSESEFFECTS cotton gin, textile factories, farming advances, better transportation slavery, different economies, tariffs better communication, better transportation, economic cooperation, national currency, stronger federal government, territorial gains

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