The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

24
Technology the First 50 years of the USA The Industrial Revolution

Transcript of The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Page 1: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Technology the First 50 years of the USA

The Industrial Revolution

Page 2: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Vocabulary

Cotton GinRobert FultonJohn DeerCyrus McCormick

Page 3: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

What is the Industrial Revolution?

INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

The time when machines were invented that did the work that humans normally did.

Page 4: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Beginnings of the Industrial Revolution

It started in England, in the textile (cloth) industry. Thread was always spun by hand on spinning wheels

until1764 Richard Arkwright Invented athread spinning machine powered byrunning water.These textile machines were in mills next to rivers for their power source.

SO, WHAT THE BIG DEAL?

During this time England wasStill in control of the colonies

Page 5: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

How did this impact society?

Factory System: which brings workers and machines together in one place. People began to leave farms and move to where the factories were, creating towns.

Workers went to work at a place that wasn’t their home, and had to work certain hours. Time becomes important!!!!!!!

Workers had to keep pace with machines, not their own pace.

As this developed in England, America fought and establish its Independence from England

Page 6: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Two major results from the new Industries

A Revolution in Transportation

A Hugh growth in new Inventions that created new industries

These industries impacted how America developed

Page 7: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

INVENTIONS THAT MADE A DIFFERENCE

How an idea leads to creating a invention that changes Society!

Page 8: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Eli Whitney’s Cotton Gin, 1791

Actually invented by a slave!

Machine cleans out cotton seeds from picked cotton faster and more

effective

Page 9: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

RESULTS FROM COTTON GIN

Having slaves to pick the cotton became even more profitable.

More slaves more cotton picked, sold, and more $$$.

Slave owners valued having slaves more. In the southern agricultural states slavery became

much more important to the economy. Cotton grown on plantations was in demand by the

textile factories in England and New England

This influenced how important Slavery became to the Southern states economies.

Page 10: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Steam powered engine

1790 First steam-powered plant.Factories didn’t have to be by streams, that could run dry.

Factories in cities where there was plenty of labor and resources. People began to move to the cities to work in the factories.

This especially impacted the New England states as they had poor farmland but great streams and rivers Factories and industries developed in New England. Steam boats created faster and reliable transportation of people and goods.

Invented By Robert Fulton

Page 11: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

John Deere & the Steel Plow

(1837)

John Deere & the Steel Plow

(1837)John Deere invented the steel plow in 1837 when the Middle-West was being settled.

The soil was different than that of the East it was a richer soil great for farming though wood plows kept breaking.

People moved west during the 1800-1860 to claim their own farms. The steel plow encouragedSettlement, and great production.

Page 12: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Cyrus McCormick& the Mechanical Reaper: 1831

Cyrus McCormick& the Mechanical Reaper: 1831

•At that time, grain was harvested by a manual process : the reapers mowed down the standing grain with a hand-swung scythe.

•Binders (workers) followed behind, tying the crop into bales, which were carted away, for storage in barns.

•Reaping was a painstaking process, even farmers with land and seed to spare were forced to limit their crop to what they could reap in a given season.Impacted the movement out west to the Great Plains. Farmers could now reap more to sell and make greater profits.

Page 13: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Review of the effects of these Inventions

Cotton Gin – slavery more profitable….southern culture believes slavery needed for economic success.

Steam engine—easier and faster transportation of goods and people. Robert Fulton steam boat. Not dependent on currents or wind. More efficient factories.

Steel plow—better plowing, needed for the land in mid-west and the great plains.

Mechanical Reaper—grow and harvest more crops. Bigger profit.

Page 14: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

TransportationRevolution

Page 15: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Cumberland (National Road), 1811

First National Road was built in the northern states. Allowed greater movement of people and goods out west. A year before the War

of 1812

Page 16: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Erie Canal 1820s

Allowed greater amount of goods, people and ideas to travel faster and easier.

Better for business. During this period Missouri Compromise

Page 17: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Erie Canal System

Connected factories in the east to the settlers moving west. Enabling them to better supply the

settlers with items that they need.

Page 18: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

The Iron Horse 1830

1830 13 miles of track built by the Baltimore and Ohio RR

1850 9000 miles of track built 1860 31000 miles of track built

Page 19: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

The Railroad Revolution,1850s

Immigrant labor built the Northern. RRs. Most track was laid in the North. Gave the North a great advantage in the movement of goods and people.

Slave labor built the Southern . RRs.

The Railroads determined much of the development in the areas where there was a lot of tracks

Page 20: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Country Expands so too does Transportation

Facilitates the movement of:Goods PeopleIdeasInformation

Especially as people moved out west!!!!!

Page 21: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Transportation: Establishes and the Development of the Northern States and Southern States

The North had better transportation and most of the industry in the country.

The South was mainly agricultural. Slavery was a major factor in being agriculturally successful. Slavery was seen by the South as essential to a good economy.

Page 22: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Transportation and Invention Revolutions impact on the UNITED

STATES

NORTHEAST Industrial, more Railroads

SOUTH Cotton & Slavery becomes vital

WEST The Nation’s “Breadbasket

Page 23: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.
Page 24: The Industrial Revolution. Cotton Gin Robert Fulton John Deer Cyrus McCormick.

Andrew Jackson president, Indian Removal Act. 1830

As better transportation moved settlers west, they encroached more and more on the Native American population.

As the average mans president Jackson sided with the settlers to take over the Native American lands.

He passed the Indian Removal Act.

After lawsuits and a supreme court decision, 1838 US army forcibly removed Native Americans from their homeland and forced them to march in which many perished to a new homeland in Oklahoma. This is known as the Trail of Tears.