Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Market Revolution Chapter 8:i

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Market Revolution Chapter 8:i"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Market Revolution Chapter 8:i

2 In a very basic way water transformed the young economy of the U.S.
The waters of the Northeast gathered strength as they descended from mountaintops, surged through valleys, and plunged over waterfalls.

3

4 The power harnessed from these moving waters ran the new machines in factories that sprang up in the early 1800s. Products started rolling out of water powered factories at an astounding rate. The self-sufficient household, where family members spun their own thread or made their own soap, was beginning to disappear.

5 After the War of 1812, the U.S. economy soared although most were farmers.
A new generation of Americans began buying and selling goods, borrowing and circulating money, and creation wealth.

6 The way Americans made, bought, and sold goods is known as the Market Revolution.

7 The market Revolution was fueled by the American genius for inventions.
Invention resulted in new and better ways to make and transport goods. Farmers started putting more and more frontier lands into production, and some of these lands were ideal for growing wheat and corn. The McCormick reaper invented by Cyrus McCormick in McCormick built a factory in Chicago in 1847.

8 It may look pretty modest, but the John Bull locomotive is the world's oldest still operable self-propelled vehicle. Late in August 1831, after a six-week voyage from Liverpool, England, the Allegheny docked at a Philadelphia wharf. Lashed aboard were the parts for "one locomotive steam engine" that had been purchased by New Jersey entrepreneur and engineer Robert Stevens. Stevens was building a railroad, one of the first in the United States; he had hired Isaac Dripps as a skilled mechanic. Eleven days later, Dripps and his crew had put the engine together on a short length of track. A fire was lit, and steam raised. To everyone's relief, the machine moved, although it would need considerable fine-tuning before it worked properly. In November, Stevens held a party to display the engine to politicians whose support he needed to complete his railroad. After the party, Stevens put his engine in a shed for two years while he worked on his railroad, laying rails between Camden and South Amboy, New Jersey (hence the name Camden and Amboy Railroad). Travelers then took ferries at either end to reach the cities of New York or Philadelphia. The Camden and Amboy became one of the most successful early railroads in the U.S.

9 Samuel Colt patented his revolving pistol in 1836.
As a direct result of his invention and the marketing and sales success that followed, Sam Colt and his firearms played a prominent role in the history of a developing America. So popular was the Colt revolver during the latter half of the 1800s that it was perhaps the best-known firearm not only in this country but also in Canada, Mexico, and many European countries. To this day, the name Colt suggests firearms to most Americans. Sam Colt's success story began with the issuance of a U.S. patent in 1836 for the Colt firearm equipped with a revolving cylinder containing five or six bullets. Colt's revolver provided its user with greatly increased firepower. Prior to his invention, only one- and two-barrel flintlock pistols were available. In the 163 years that have followed, more than 30 million revolvers, pistols, and rifles bearing the Colt name have been produced, almost all of them in plants located in the Hartford, Connecticut, area.

10 Manufacturing-the making of products by machinery.
Name some manufacturing techniques today.

11 In 1813 group of businessmen led by a Boston merchant named Francis Cabot Lowell built a factory in Waltham, Mass. to manufacture textiles. The FIRST time in the world that spinning and weaving were done in one operation under the same roof. The FIRST power loom to be used in the United States. The FIRST time in the United States that young women were employed as the predominant workforce and paid actual cash for their labor. The FIRST company-sponsored housing provided for employees. The FIRST textile mill to be built of brick. The Boston Manufacturing Company was the FIRST large successful manufacturing company in the United States. They raised over $400, from investors to build the buildings and machinery. The BMC was the prototype of the modern Corporation. The FIRST industrial labor strike in the United States was in this mill in The protesters were women and the issue was wages.

12 Lowell’s was the world’s first truly centralized textile factory
Lowell’s was the world’s first truly centralized textile factory. All the tasks involved in making a product were carried out in one place. Lowell’s Waltham mill and the many later mills that were built along rivers in New England brought together all the tasks of spinning, weaving, and dyeing that turned raw cleaned cotton into finished cloth.

13 From the 1820s to 1840s, manufacturing industries arose in New England and become the backbone of the North’s economy.

14 In 1817 New England’s textile mills produced 4 million yards of cotton cloth it was 323 million. Centralizing work dramatically increased production.

15 Free enterprise system--an economic system in which companies compete for profits. This system, also is called capitalism. Capitalism rewards people who could find better, faster, and more efficient ways of running their businesses. It encouraged the creation of new industries, jobs, and wealth.

16 In 1771, Adam Smith outlined the free enterprise system
In 1771, Adam Smith outlined the free enterprise system. He argued that businesses should follow the market forces of supply and demand rather that government regulation. Free enterprise expanded greatly in the United States during the early 1800s. Today’s concept of capitalism> The federal gov. and state gov. now play important roles in the economy, such as regulating business to protect workers and consumers. Yet free enterprise remains the heart of the American economy and the foundation of American prosperity.

17 For most Americans, “going to work” in the 1700s generally meant working in the home or around the farm. Some skilled artisans did produce goods such as books or glass that could not be made easily at home. Others were employed in the shipping industry or legal or financial professions. Most people, however, simply labored to make the food, clothing, and shelter they needed.

18 In the 1800s the building of new factories sharply increased the demand for people to work outside the home.

19 Banks provided capital-wealth that can be invested to produce goods and make money.

20 The first banks appeared in the U. S. in the 1780-90s
The first banks appeared in the U.S. in the s. By the 1830s hundreds of new banks were built. Generally, a group of private investors would obtain a charter from the state to start a bank. The bank made money by charging interest for the loans it made. It made these loans using the money that customers deposited in the bank for safekeeping. Banks thus helped the economy grow by providing the money that businesses needed to expand. The system generally worked out well. However, disasters could, and did, occur.

21 In the 1800s, states did not restrict bank’s runaway lending
In the 1800s, states did not restrict bank’s runaway lending. The new banks often made bad loans to people who could not repay them. Today, most deposits are insured by the government. Banks are required to keep a certain amount of cash on hand instead of lending it all out. The banks then lacked the cash to give to depositors who wanted to take their money out. Customers would panic, rushing to the banks to get their money out before the banks went broke. What do you think happened to the economy?

22 The gov. did not issue paper money
The gov. did not issue paper money. Most preferred coins, gold, or silver.

23 The most common form of money was the bank note-a piece of paper that banks issued to their customers. Similar to modern-day checks, bank notes were promises to pay specie on demand. Anyone possessing a note could in theory walk into the bank anytime and cash it. The problem with these notes was that banks simply printed more of them whenever they needed money, so the value of this money was unpredictable. A farmer, for instance, might sell some corn and receive in payment a $100 bank note that could be worth anything form $50 to $200 depending on the time and place he tried to cash it.


Download ppt "The Market Revolution Chapter 8:i"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google