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Mr. King Central Cabarrus HS. Chapter 7 Section 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Mr. King Central Cabarrus HS. Chapter 7 Section 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mr. King Central Cabarrus HS

2 Chapter 7 Section 1

3

4 Changes in Manufacturing p 1793 Eli Whitney invents cotton gin p 1801 Eli Whitney pioneers use of interchangeable parts - identical pieces used to used to assemble products p Factory system: power driven machinery; workers with different tasks p Mass production is production of goods in large quantities p Industrial Revolution: social and economic reorganization - The Embargo Act of 1807 and the War of 1812 forced the United States to invest in domestic industries United States to invest in domestic industries - machines replace hand tools - leads to large scale factory production

5 Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin, 1793 Actually invented by a slave!

6 Eli Whitney’s Gun Factory Interchangeable Parts Rifle

7 Oliver Evans First prototype of the locomotive First automated flour mill

8 John Deere & the Steel Plow (1837)

9 Cyrus McCormick & the Mechanical Reaper: 1831

10 Samuel F. B. Morse 1840 – Telegraph

11 Cyrus Field & the Transatlantic Cable, 1858

12 Charles Goodyear Vulcanized Rubber Year: 1839 Made working with rubber easier (sticking when hot and hard when cold) Removed sulfur and then heated so it would retained its elasticity

13 Elias Howe & Isaac Singer 1840s Sewing Machine

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15 New England Industrializes p Samuel Slater builds first thread factory in Pawtucket, RI (1793) p Lowell, Appleton, and Jackson mechanize all phases of cloth making (1813) - built weaving factories in Waltham, MA and Lowell, MA - thousands, mostly young women, leave family farms to work in factories - Lowell becomes booming manufacturing center

16 Samuel Slater (“Father of the Factory System”)

17 The Lowell/Waltham System: First Dual-Purpose Textile Plant Francis Cabot Lowell’s town - 1814

18 Lowell in 1850

19 New England Textile Centers: 1830s

20 New England Dominance in Textiles

21 American Population Centers in 1820

22 American Population Centers in 1860

23 National Origin of Immigrants: 1820 - 1860 Why now?

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25 Regional Specialization EAST  Industrial SOUTH  Cotton & Slavery WEST  The Nation’s “Breadbasket”

26 Two Economic Systems Develop p Cash crops do not grow well in the North and farms are much smaller than in the South p Northern slavery dying out by late 1700s p Cotton becomes king in the South (due to Eli Whitney) p Great demand for cotton in Europe p Slavery becomes entrenched p Plantation system established in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and much of the South

27 Uniting the Nation’s Economic Interests p House Speaker Henry Clay proposes plan as the American System - North produces manufactured goods - South and West produce food and cotton - National currency and bank facilitate trade - National currency and bank facilitate trade - Tariff protects American goods - America improves its transportation system

28 1790 First Turnpike: Lancaster, PA By 1832, nearly 2400 mi. of road connected most major cities.

29 1811: The National Road

30 Erie Canal System

31 Robert Fulton & the Steamboat 1807: The Clermont

32 The “Iron Horse” Wins! (1830) 1830  13 miles of track built by Baltimore & Ohio RR By 1850  9000 mi. of RR track [1860  31,000 mi.]

33 The Railroad Revolution, 1850s p Immigrant labor built the No. RRs. p Slave labor built the So. RRs.

34 Chapter 7 Section 2

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36 Strengthening Government Economic Control p Gibbons v. Ogden: Federal government controls interstate commerce - Ogden felt that only he had the right to run a steamboat on the Hudson River - Ogden felt that only he had the right to run a steamboat on the Hudson River p McCulloch v. Maryland: States cannot overturn laws passed by Congress - Maryland taxes local branch of Bank of U.S. - John Marshall declares this unconstitutional: “The power to tax is the power to destroy”

37 Nationalism Pushes America West US Population 1800 US Population 1820

38 Nationalism Shapes Foreign Policy p Secretary of State, John Quincy Adams, guided by nationalism - makes treaties on Great Lakes, borders, and territories (49 th parallel established by Convention of 1818)

39 Nationalism Shapes Foreign Policy p Spain gives up Florida and claims to Oregon Territory in Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819

40 Nationalism Shapes Foreign Policy p Monroe Doctrine (1823) warns Europe not to interfere in the Americas - U.S. will not interfere in Europe

41 Nationalism Pushes America West p Missouri Compromise - When a territory’s population reaches 60,000, the area may apply for statehood - A compromise was reached to preserve the balance between free and slave states - Maine admitted to Union as a free state, Missouri came in as a slave state - Louisiana Territory divided at 36 o 30’ line - Slavery legal south of this line

42 Nationalism Pushes America West The Compromise of 1820:


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