Part I: The Market Revolution (1793-1860)
The Market (Industrial) Revolution (1793-1860)
- Defined
- Technological
- Cotton Gin, Steam train
- Transportation
- Turnpikes
- Communication
- Telegraphs
- Agrarian → Industrialization
- Essential Components
- we have the necessary components
- forestry, railroad, iron
- the labor, consumers
- the transport, capital, people w/ ideas
- favorable government feeding into industrialization
- Capitalism
- let free market reign
- Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations (1776)
- Sectionalism
- North (embraces Industrial Revolution)
- Growth of Cities
- factories near populations for workforce
- banks
- roads
- factories of industries (away from farming
- South
- most rejecting of industrial revolution
- didn’t embrace because of farming & slave profits
- West
- not supportive
- sparsely populated
- mostly aligns with North b/c they want industrial products + get bank loans + railroad
- wannabe north
1st Industrial Revolution (1760-1840)
- Industrial Revolution
- Defined
- producing things by machine in factories
- Factory System
- Wage Labor
- white males paid the most
- paid by weak
- females & children paid worst
- Division of Labor
- becoming an expert in one thing
- fast and efficient
- James Watt & Steam Engine (1763-1775)
- turn water into power for steam engine
- England barred transferring ideas to America
- searched for blueprints
- Samuel Slater (1790)
- “Father of the American Industry Revolution/Factory System”
- memorized the blueprint
- started 1st american factory
- Textile Industry
- Waltham Lowell System
- allowing unmarried women (15-35) to work there (unique)
- 6 days a week
- producing clothing start→finish
- Scheduled lives
- South was biggest producer of cotton in the world
- Machines could take cotton → thread → clothing
Eli Whitney
- Cotton Gin
- separated seeds from cotton fibers autonomously
- Results
- “Cotton is King!” OR “King Cotton”
- South & Textile Industry
- #1 export = Cotton
- doesn’t support Industrial Revolution b/c of Cotton economy
- Textile Factories in North
- Increased Slavery
- Massive Growth of Slavery
- 1M Washington Presidency → 4M Civil War
- Interchangeable Parts (1801)
- couldn’t profit from Cotton Gin so he made interchangeable parts for guns
- mass producing these parts for guns (interchangeable)