Forging the National Economy

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Forging the National Economy 1790-1860

Western Demographics By 1840: demographic center of American population had crossed over the Alleghenies 1850: half of Americans under age 30 Pioneer Americans: ill-informed, superstitious, had rugged individualism Ralph Waldo Emerson: lecturer, essayist, poet; author of Self- Reliance Frontier life very difficult: poorly fed, poor housing, disease, premature death, loneliness, isolation

Use of Western Lands Tobacco exhaustion west KY: after burning the tough sugar cane, European bluegrass grew well and became grazing livestock land Rendezvous system of trade: traders went to Rocky Mt. Valley to trade goods for beaver pelts Trade in buffalo robes and annihilation of bison herds Painter George Catlin: proposed creation of a national park - Yellowstone Park

Movement of Millions Pop. doubling every 25 years: higher birth rates and increased immigration in 1840s and beyond Quick urbanization: slums, inadequate policing, impure water, foul sewage, improper garbage disposal Why do so many immigrate? 1840s Potato Famine in Ireland Surplus of people in Europe Land of freedom and opportunity - rights and religion Transoceanic steamships made voyage shorter

Irish Immigrants Irish Catholics immigrated to Boston and NY Irish experience: lived in slums, scorned by the older American stock especially Protestant (WASPS); worked on railroads and in kitchens; mostly low-skill occupations Gained control of powerful city political machines; i.e. NYC s Tammany Hall (patronage, spoils system, rewards for votes)

German Immigrants Why immigrate? Crop failures, political refugees, other hardships Where? Wisconsin, Missouri German contributions to American society: conestoga wagon, kentucky rifle, Christmas tree Against slavery Supported public schools

Nativism Nativists: anti-immigration fear of being out-voted, outbred and ousted from jobs American Nativists formed the Order of the Star-Spangled Banner ; became the Know-Nothing Party Worked for restriction on immigration & naturalization and deportation of alien paupers 1840s: Roman Catholics created a separate Catholic educational system By 1850, Catholics outnumbered all other denominations Violent attacks on Catholic convents, schools, churches

In 1815, the cost of moving goods by land was high Cost just as much to haul heavy goods by horse-drawn wagons 30 mi. as it did to ship the 3,000 mi. across the Atlantic Ocean Water transportation was much cheaper, but was limited to the coast or navigable rivers Only farmers located near a city or river could grow surplus crops for sale

Between 1815 and 1860, advances in transportation will drastically change the American economy and landscape Steamboats Roads Canals Railroads

Improvements in Transportation 1790s - Lancaster Turnpike toll road completed in PA; hardsurfaced highway Led to canvas-covered Conestoga Wagon

In 1806, Congress funded the building of the National Road o Begun in 1811 o Helped facilitate movement of pioneers west o Livestock and farm produce traveled east towards markets o Largest federally-funded transportation project of its time

1807: Robert Fulton places a perfected steam engine on a boat (the Claremont ) Traveled 150 miles UP the Hudson River (against the current) Steamboats make river travel more reliable Causes a growth in river travel and canal building

Impacts of the Steamboat Travel time decreased: Could go against wind, tide, currents, and waves Could travel at over 10 miles per hour In 1820s, over 60 steamboats By 1860s, over 1,000

Canals Erie Canal -Proposed in 1808 in response to the steamboat - Ran through NY state, linking Lake Erie in the west, with the Hudson River in the east - Completed in 1825 -Reduced cost of transport of goods by 90% - By 1840s, more trade went down Erie Canal than the Mississippi through New Orleans A manmade waterway used for travel, shipping, or irrigation

Route of the Erie Canal and the Lock System Spurred by the success of the Erie Canal, other canal systems were dug throughout the northeast By 1840, over 3,000 miles of canals had been dug

Canal System by 1850

Railroads First general-purpose railroad began traveling in England in 1825 American construction began in late 1820s Traveled at 15-20 mph

What do you notice about where the railroads are placed? Will this have an impact on the future of the U.S.?

Impact on Travel Time New York to Philadelphia 1800-2 days 1830-1 day 1860- Less than 1 day New York to Charleston 1800- More than a week 1830-5 days 1860-2 days New York to Chicago 1800-6 Weeks 1830-3 Weeks 1860-2 days New York to New Orleans 1800-4 Weeks 1830-2 Weeks 1860-6 Days

Market (Industrial) Revolution Transformed America from a subsistence economy of the Antebellum Era (pre- Civil War) to a national network of industry and commerce Big business brought new problems for federal and state governments Family structures changed as a result of industrial work Polarity between rich and poor became heightened

New Inventions Eli Whitney: interchangeable parts that can be replaced/repaired rather than the whole machine (adopted 1850) - became basis of modern mass production - assembly line production Elias Howe: sewing machine ready made clothing, drove seamstresses to factory work Samuel Morse: telegraph (Morse Code): revolutionized news gathering, diplomacy, finance John Deere: 1837 steel plow to till soil, light enough to be pulled by horses Cyrus McCormick: 1830s mechanical reaper for harvesting New machinery increased debts

Life of Factory Worker Factory system led to labor problems: long hours, low wages, poor meals, unsanitary buildings, unsafe conditions Labor unions forbidden Child labor: Children under 10 Whipping rooms use corporal punishment Spurred a demand for public education

1840 - President Van Buren established 10 hr. work day for federal employees on public works Commonwealth v. Hunt - Supreme Court case revolving around a shoemakers union SC ruled that labor unions were not illegal conspiracies if peaceful and honorable

Women in Factories Factory work replaced handmade production Mostly single factory girls worked 6 days a week, 12-13 hrs. a day 20% worked before marriage Domestic Feminism "A woman's place is in the home; and out of it whenever she is called to guard those she loves and to improve conditions for them. Nellie McClung Effect: fertility rate (# of children that would be born through women in childbearing years) dropped sharply after Industrial Revolution

The North Industrializes 1793: Samuel Slater and Moses Brown build water powered spinning mill in RI Lowell, MA became the center of American textile production 40 mill buildings 10,000 looms Most workers in Lowell mills were young women recruited from local farms Good wages but long hours and not always the best conditions (up to 14 hrs a day, 6 days a week)

Through early and mid-1800s, industrialization spread to other Northern industries 1830s: steam engines became better quality and more widely available Power of steam engines helped make industry the fastest growing part of the U.S. economy The Industrial Revolution spreads Most Americans had lived in rural areas, but were now moving to the new cities in search of factory jobs and higher wages North evolved from series of small towns to include large cities and factories Industrialization in the North led to urbanization

The Southern Economy What was the Southern economy based on? Cash crops varied depending on location: Tobacco in upper Southern states Rice in coastal areas Sugar cane in deep South (TX and LA) Cotton throughout South

Eli Whitney 1793: while visiting the South, noticed that it was tedious work to remove seeds from cotton lint (1 day to separate a lb.) Cotton Gin (short for engine) Quickly and efficiently combed the seeds out of cotton balls

The Southern Economy In 1792 the South produced 6,000 bales of cotton By 1801 annual production reached 100,000 bales At the same time as the invention of the cotton gin: Textile mills were expanding in Europe Called for all of the cotton they could get

King Cotton By the late 1860s, the South was producing almost 4 million bales of cotton annually Sold for a total of $191 million in Europe Almost 2/3 of all U.S. export trade Makes Southern planters rich Strengthens the institution of slavery Congress had outlawed foreign slave trade in 1808 High birthrate encouraged sale of slaves within U.S. Slave population in South in 1820: 1.5 million Slave population in South in 1850: 4 million

Society in the South 1850: approx. 3.6 mil. blacks lived in the South 37% of the Southern population There was a small population of free blacks in the South