Title: Chapter 14: Forging the National Economy (1790-1860)
1Chapter 14 Forging the National Economy
(1790-1860)
2The Westward Movement
- US marched quickly toward west (very hard w/
disease loneliness) - Frontier people were individualistic,
superstitious ill-informed
3Shaping the Western Landscape
- The westward movement molded the environment.
- Tobacco overuse had exhausted the land forcing
settlers to move on, but Kentucky bluegrass
thrived. - Settlers trapped beavers, sea otters, and bison
for fur to ship back East.
4Shaping the Western Landscape
- The spirit of nationalism led to an appreciation
of the American wilderness. - Artist George Catlin pushed for national parks
and later achieved it with Yellowstone in 1872.
5The March of the Millions
- Mid-1800s, pop contd to double every 25 years
- 1860-orginial 13 states now has 33 states pop
4th in the world (Russ, Fra, Austria) - Urban growth explosive
- 1790-only New York Philadelphia had gt20,000
people, but 1860, 43 had - Brought bad sanitation ? sewage system pipe-in
water
p290
6The March of the Millions
- High birthrate had accounted for pop growth, but
near 1850s, millions of Irish, German came - A surplus pop. in Euro but not all came to US
25/60 million - Appealing of US (land, freedom from church,
aristocracy, 3 meat meals a day) - Intro of transoceanic steamship (reduce traveling
to 12 days, death rate high not as bad)
7The Emerald Isle Moves West(1830s-1960s-2 million)
- Irish potato famine in mid-1840s led to death of
2 million many flee to US - Illiterate, discriminated
- Hated by Protestants
- Hated competition w/ blacks for jobs
- Ancient Order of Hibernians (serve to aid Irish)
8The Emerald Isle Moves West (1830s-1960s-2
million)
- Gradual property owning (grand success), children
educated. - Attracted to politics, filled police dept.
- Politicians tried to appeal to Irish by yelling
at London
9The German Forty-Eighters
- 1 million poured in bet 1830s-1860s
- Liberals such as Carl Schurz contributed to
elevation of US politics - Had more than Irish so bought land in west esp.
in Wisconsin - Votes crucial so wooed by US politicians but not
as potent - Contributed to US culture (Christmas tree)
isolationism - Urged public education freedom (enemies of
slavery) - Resentment from Old because of group aloof
brought beers to US
10Flare-ups of Anti-foreignism
- Nativists prejudiced newcomers in jobs,
politics, religion - Catholic became major religious group because of
immigration of 1840s, 50s set out to build
catholic school
11Flare-ups of Antiforeignism
- Nativists feared that Catholicism would build on
Protestantism (popish idols) so formed Order of
star-spangled Banner - Met in secrecy-Know-Nothing party
- Fought for restriction on immigration,
naturalization deportation of alien paupers - Wrote fiction books about corruption of churches
- Mass violence, ex. Philadelphia 1844-burned
churches, schools, people killed - Made America pluralistic society w/ diversity
- No longer hated because they were crucial to
economic expansion more availability of jobs
12The March of Mechanization
- Industrial revolution spread to US US destined
to be an industrial giant bec. - Land was cheap, labor scare, for investment
plentiful, raw materials not discovered - Lacked consumer for factory-scale manufacturing
- British long-estab. factory was competition
- Kept textile to own monopoly (forbade travel of
crafts men export of machine) - US remained very rural to farming
13Whitney Ends the Fiber Famine
- Samuel Slater Father of the Factory System
- Learned machinery when working in British
Factory? escaped to US, aided by Moses Brown?
build 1st cotton thread spinner in US (1791) - Eli Whitney built a cotton gin (50 times more
effective than hand picking cotton) - Cotton economy now profitable, saved the South to
King Cotton - South flourished expanded cotton kingdom toward
west - Northern factories manufactured, esp. New England
(w/ poor soil, dense labor, access to sea, river
for water power)
14Marvels in Manufacturing
- Embargo of war of 1812 encouraged home
manufacture - With peace of Ghent, British poured in surplus in
cheap , forcing close of American factories - Congress passed Tariff of 1816 to protect US
economy - Eli Whitney introduced machine made replaceable
parts (on muskets-1798) universal in
manufacturing by1850 - Base of assembly line (flourished North) cotton
gin flourished south
15Marvels in Manufacturing
- Elias Howe Issac Singer (1846) made sewing
machine (foundation of clothing industry) - Decade of 1860 had 28,000 patents while 1800 only
had 306 - Principle of limited liability stimulate seconomy
- Laws of free incorporation (1848)-no need to
apply for charter from legislature to start corp.
p302
16Marvels in Manufacturing
- Born 1791 in Masachusetts
- Professional artist
- In 1832 gets idea on board a ship
- 1842 demonstrates for Congress
- Samuel Morses telegraph connected business world
-What hath god wrought?..the first message
typed from Washington to Baltimore-by Morse.
p302
17Workers and Wage Slaves
- Factory system led to impersonal relations
- Spindle cities, slums
- Benefit went to factory owner, labors were long
hours, wages low, bad meals, no union - Child labor 1820 ½ workers are under 10.
- 1836 First state child labor law Massachusetts
requires children under 15 working in factories
to attend school at least 3 months/year
18Unions
- Adult working condition improved in 1820s 30s
w/ mass vote to workers - 10 hour day, higher , tolerable condition,
public education, ban of imprisonment for debt - 1840s president Van Buren made 10 hour day for
Federal Workers - Many struck but lost because employers import
more workers (so hated immigrants) - Only 24 recorded strikes before 1835
- Unions formed in 1830s but hit by panic of 1837
- Case of Commonwealth vs. Hunt in Supreme court of
MA (1842) - Before labor unions which attempted to 'close' or
create a unionized workplace could be charged
with conspiracy. However, in March 1842, Chief
Justice Lemuel Shaw ruled that unions were legal
organizations and had the right to organize a
strike. - Legalized union on peaceful honorable protest
- Jacksonion democracy (voting) does help worker
19Women and the Economy
- Factory girls toiled in factory under bad
conditions - 10 outside the home in 1850 Opportunities rare
women mainly in nursing, domestic service,
teaching - Women usually worked before marriage, after
marriage they were house wives (made more
decisions in family) - Arranged marriages died down
- Family grew smaller (avg. 6) fertility rate
dropped sharply
20Western Farmers Reap a Revolution in the Fields
- Trans-Allegheny region (Ohio-Indiana-Illinois)
became nations breadbasket - Planted corn raised hogs
- Chicago known as porkopolis of the west
- Inventions that boomed agriculture
- John Deere -1837 steel plow that cut through hard
soil can be pulled by horses - Cyrus McCormick -mechanical mower-reaper
- Led to large-scale production cash crops
- Produced more than south
21Highways and Steamboats
- Improvements in transportation needed for raw
material transport - Lancaster turnpike-hard road from Philadelphia
Lancaster brought economic expansion to west - Federal govt constructs Cumberland Road
(Maryland -Illinois) (1811-1852 ) w/ state
federal money - Robert Fulton invents steam engine (Steam
boats)-1807 - He also designed a new type of steam warship. In
1800 he was commissioned by Napoleon Bonaparte to
design Nautilus, which was the first practical
submarine in history. - Contributed to development of South Wests
economy
22Clintons Big Ditch in New York
- Clintons Big Ditch-Erie Canal between Great
Lakes Hudson River(1817-1825) - Famous in song and story. Proposed in 1808 and
completed in 1825, the canal links the waters of
Lake Erie in the west to the Hudson River in the
east. An engineering marvel when it was built,
some called it the Eighth Wonder of the World. - Shortens expense time of transportation
cities grew along the side, - Price of food reduced
23Pioneer Railroad Promoters
- 1st railroad in US (1828) by 1860-30,000 mi.
railroad tracks in US (3/4 at north) - Railroad 1st opposed bec. financier afraid to
loose from Erie canal also caused fire to
houses - Trains were badly constructed (brakes bad)
gauge of traveling varied
24The Transport Web Binds the Union
- Steamboat allowed reverse transport of S to E to
bind them together - New York became the Queen port of the country?
goods distributed - Principle of divided labor-each region specialize
in own economic activity - Transformed the home no longer the center of
industry
25Wealth and Poverty
- The industrial revolution widens the gap bet.
rich poor - Unskilled workers were drifters who went from
town to town for jobs - (1/2 of industrial pop) -forgotten
- Social mobility existed but not in proportion,
rags-to-riches were rare - Standard of living did raise, wage rose too
(helped diffuse potential class conflict)
26Cables, Clippers, and Pony Riders
- Cotton accounted for ½ of exports
- After repeal of Corn Law of 1846, wheat became
imp role in trade w/ Eng. - American imported more than exported (substantial
debt to foreign creditors) - 1858-Cyrus Field laid Cable between US Euro
(but died in 3 weeks) better one in 1866 - Golden age of naval commerce came in 1840s, 50s
- Mckay builds clipper ships (fast, long)
- Tea trade w/ British flourishes carried many to
CA - Crushed by Britishs iron tramp steamers
- Speedy communication-roads from Missouri to CA,
Pony Express