5-01 Sean Helmlinger, Gavin Hoffman, Connor Thatcher, Tyler Gilchrist
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- Slide 1
- 5-01 Sean Helmlinger, Gavin Hoffman, Connor Thatcher, Tyler
Gilchrist
- Slide 2
- Beginning of industrial revolution -was a period of time in
using machines for manufacturing products which was a breakthrough
More efficient
- Slide 3
- In 1769 Englishman Richard Arkwright invented the water frame
The wheel was divided into separate segments and when filled with
water its weight causes it to turn The water frame was a lot more
efficient than the previous technology It increased job growth
because workers were needed to work the water frame
- Slide 4
- Steps of water wheel 1. Flowing water 2. Water moved parts 3. A
machine cleaned raw cotton 4. Cotton spun 5. Woven into cloth *
Workers were only needed to watch spools
- Slide 5
- Mills were constructed in RI, CT, MA Children and adolescents
worked in mills for 25 cents per a week The largest watermill was
built in Barbegal
- Slide 6
- Deverell, William. United States History; Beginnings to 1877.
Orlando:Holt, Rinehart, 2007. Print. Williams, Trevor. Triumph of
Inventions. The History of Inventions. New York: Facts of File,
1987.Print. Textile Industry. Gale Encyclopedia of US History. Us
History in Context. Web. 2 April 2013.
- Slide 7
- Water Power Textile Mill
- Slide 8
- 5-02 Eli Whitney Shane Hieber, Brooke Calle, Annemarie
Reardon.
- Slide 9
- Database Born December 8, 1765, Westboro, Massachusetts Died
January 8, 1825, New Haven, Connecticut Graduated from Yale
1792
- Slide 10
- Text Book Created interchangeable parts-parts of a machine that
are identical Made 10,000 muskets in two years Created Cotton Gin
Mass production- the efficient production of large number of
identical goods
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Book Started his own business at 12 years old Finished collage
at 28 Became a tutor for a family in South Carolina
- Slide 13
- Work Cited Alter, Judith. Eli Whitney. New York: Franklin,
1990. Print. Deverell, William and White, Deborah. United States
History Beginnings to 1877. Orlando: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
2007. Print. Eli Whitney. Science and its Times. US History in
Context. Web. 1 April 2013
- Slide 14
- By: Matt Gamils and Quanton
- Slide 15
- Skilled workers formed labor unions to attempt improvement of
pay and working conditions Employers believed that higher cost of
union employees prevented competition with other manufacturers
- Slide 16
- Workers demanded their needs or refused to work At an early
stage It did not work America's first labor strike in 1786,
successfully obtain a $6 per week minimum wage Sarah G Bagley was a
strong voice in the movement
- Slide 17
- Causes died down Motivation declined and groups like KoL and
NLU disbanded
- Slide 18
- Deverell, William. US history. Austin Texas: Holt, Runehart and
Winston, 2007. Print. Dynan, Linda.. Trade Unions. Dictionary of
America. History In Context. Web. 2 April 2013. Taylor R, George.
Bagley, Sarah G. Notable American Women 1605-1950. Vol.1, Cambridge
MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1971. Print.
Google Images
- Slide 19
- 5-04 The Steamboat By: Mike Fey, Luke Nelson, Alex
Ochmanowicz
- Slide 20
- U.S. History in Context (Book) -The first steam boat was made
in France while the first commercial steamboat was tested in
America called the Clermont which traveled upstream the Mississippi
without trouble; soon the demand for the service arose.
- Slide 21
- U.S. History in Context (Database) -The first steamboat made in
the U.S. was made from Robert Fulton. Fulton met Robert R.
Livingston, the U.S. minister to France while trying to develop a
submarine in paris. He made the first practical commercial
steamboat by the financial resources of Livingston. This steamboat
inspired many new ideas for better overall design and
efficiency.
- Slide 22
- Steamboats (A History of the Early Adventure ) (Book) -The
Steamboat changed lives in America because you could travel for a
lot cheaper than sailing or coach and also you could transfer goods
a lot quicker and cheaper than other modes of transportation.
- Slide 23
- Works Cited Deverell,William and Deborah Gray White.United
States History Beginnings to 1877.Orlando:Holt,Richard
Winston,2007.Print. Gudmestad, Robert H. "Steamboat." Encyclopedia
of the New American Nation. Ed. Paul Finkelman. Vol. 3. Detroit:
Charles Scribner's Sons, 2006. 241-242. U.S. History In Context.
Web. 2 Apr. 2013. Pictures from: Google Images and Bing Images
Ward, Ralph T. "Steamboats the History and Early Adventure."
Steamboats. The Bobbs-merrill Company Inc., n.d. Web.
- Slide 24
- By: Chuck Mistic and Kevin Biddulph
- Slide 25
- * Eli Whitney was the inventor of the cotton gin * The cotton
gin had a hand cranked- cylinder with wire teeth to pull fibers
from the seeds * The cotton gin revolutionized the cotton
industry
- Slide 26
- * Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin in 1794 * He received
almost $100,000 * The cotton gin was designed to separate short-
staple cotton
- Slide 27
- * The cotton gin is short for cotton engine * Eli was born in
1765 on December 8th * Eli died in 1825 January 8th
- Slide 28
- * Veverell, William. Eli Whitney's Cotton Gin. United States
History. Vol. 9, Orlando: holt Rinehart whinstone, 2007. print. *
Cooper, Grace R. "Cotton Gin." Dictionary of American History. Ed.
Stanley I. Kutler. 3rd ed. Vol. 2. New York: Charles Scribner's
Sons, 2003. 428-429. U.S. History In Context. Web. 2 Apr. 2013. *
Alter, Judith. Eli Whitney. New York: Franklin Watts, 1990.
Print.
- Slide 29
- Rachael Nicholson, Gabi Duhn, Gina Unal
- Slide 30
- Nativists - people who were opposed to immigration Feared
losing job to immigrants Immigrants- form unions for better wages
1840s American Republican Party (Know-Nothings group) elected 5
senators and 43 representatives
- Slide 31
- Industrial factories hired immigrants- worked for less money
which caused workers to become distraught with the thought that
they would lose their jobs
- Slide 32
- Economy failing in Europe- Traveled New World Majority of
immigrants- Catholic, poverty and diseases. Chinese Exclusion Act
1882 ( violence breaking out among workers at the mines, railroads,
etc.) American Protective Association (1887)
- Slide 33
- Michael Burgan, Robin Doak, Matt Kachur, Joanne Mattern.
Nativism in the work place. American Immigration. Vol. 1, Danbury:
Grolier Educational, 1999. Print. Deverell, William and Deborah
Gray White. United States History Beginnings To 1877. Orlando:
Holt, Rinchart and Winston, 2007. Print. Immigration and
Immigrants. Encyclopedia of the United States in the Nineteenth
Century. Ed. Paul Finkelman. New York: Charles Scribners Sons,
2001. U.S. History In Context. Web. 2 Apr. 2013. Images obtained
from Google.
- Slide 34
- 5-7 Prison Reform By Zach Rothenberg, Emily Watkins and Erin
Bartlett
- Slide 35
- Works Cited Axelrod, Alan. Heroes and Pioneers. New York:
Macmillian, 1998. Print. Deverell, William. U.S. History:
beginnings to 1877. Austin, Texas: Holt, 2007. Dix, Dorthea.
Historic World readers. Gale, 1994. U.S. History and context. Web.
2 April 2013.
- Slide 36
- 1840s prisons Criminals had little food, no light, chained to
walls and no clothes Put mentally ill people with criminals Treated
the same way Prisons had no heat or air conditioning
- Slide 37
- Dorothea Dix Major influence in improving the conditions of
some of society, weakest people Middle class reformer who started
visiting prisons in Massachusetts in 1841 1 of the first women to
conduct public campaigns for American Social Reform
- Slide 38
- How she helped Reported it to the state legislate and factories
were built for the mentally ill Started campaigns to get the
disabled out of prisons She wanted to start telling people the
prison conditions Thought mentally disabled shouldnt suffer or be
put with criminals Built asylums later on in the 1840s
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Thank you soooooo very much for watching our power point! We
hope you had a fun time and learned a lot!
- Slide 41
- American Anti- Slavery Society By Brandon.L and Andrew.R
- Slide 42
- American Anti-Slavery Society Abolition- the legal prohibition
and ending of slavery, especially of slavery of blacks in the
U.S.
- Slide 43
- American Anti-Slavery Society The Abolitionists were people who
hated slavery and wanted to put an end to it, they used different
ways to convince people. Many people who were against slavery made
pamphlets and books that moved many people and made them Anti-
Slavery.
- Slide 44
- American Anti-Slavery Society One of the things Abolitionists
used was pictures.
- Slide 45
- American Anti-Slavery Society William Lloyd Garrison was a poet
who wrote abolitionist poems and convinced people to put an end to
it.
- Slide 46
- American Anti-Slavery Society Resolved, That the compact which
exists between the North and the South is a covenant with death and
an agreement with hell; involving both parties in atrocious
criminality, and should be immediately annulled. - William Lloyd
Garrison.
- Slide 47
- Andrew Wildgust, Josh Vinglas, Jason Webster
- Slide 48
- Fredrick Douglass was born a slave in 1817 When he escaped at
the age of 20 he fought for freedom of others Douglass was a friend
and a advisor of Abraham Lincoln Douglass started a newspaper
Called The north Star Douglass died of a heart attack in 1895
Fredrick Douglass The blessings in which you, this day, rejoice,
are not enjoyed in commonThis fourth of July is yours, not mine.
You may rejoice, I must Mourn -Fredrick Douglass 1852 fourth of
July
- Slide 49
- Born a slave in 1797 in Ulster County in New York Sojourner
truth was auctioned off at the age of nine She was brutally beaten
sometimes for no reason She claims God told her that she was to
travel across the united states and preach about slavery and
women's rights Truth died November 26 th 1883 Sojourner Truth
- Slide 50
- Darwell,William and Deborah gray white. United States History:
Beginning to 1877.Orlando:Holt Rinehart and Winston, 2007.Print.
Adler, David. Fredrick Douglass a noble life.WI: Holiday House,
2010.Print Sojourner Truth": World of
sociology:Gale,2001.Biography.incontext,Web:3 April.2013. \ Bing
Images Works cited
- Slide 51
- By: Megan Nolte Morgan Collito Faith DiJulia
- Slide 52
- In the 1830s a group helped slaves escape from the south.
Arrange transportation and hiding places for slaves and fugitives.
Slaves and Fugitives stopped at stations during the day and moved
during the night.
- Slide 53
- Harriet Tubman was one of the most famous conductors to help
free slaves. She helped more than 300 slaves from the south to
freedom. The railroad was so secret that they disguised it by
acting like it was a railroad when in reality it was housed as a
hiding place for slaves.
- Slide 54
- A few punishments for conductors were arrests, fines,
imprisonments, abuse and deaths. Northern states like Boston and
Cincinnati were the safest place in the country and the neighboring
country Canada.
- Slide 55
- 1) Slavicek, Louise. Harriet Tubman and the Underground
Railroad. Farming Hills: Gale, 2006. Print. 2) Deverell, William
and Deborah White. The underground railroad. United States History
Beginnings to 1877. Holt, 2007. Print. 3) Brannen, Daniel and
Rebecca Valentine. Underground Railroad. Detroit UXL 2009. US
History in Context. Web. 2 April 2013.
- Slide 56
- Seneca Falls Convention Tyler Joyce and Riley Thompson
- Slide 57
- Early Problems Elizabeth Cady Stanton attended Worlds
Anti-Slavery Convention in London, England Women werent allowed to
participate Forced to sit behind a curtain Lloyd Garrison, who
helped find the Anti-Slavery Society, protested with them This
treatment angered Stanton and her friend, Lucretia Mott They felt
that men and women should be treated equally Called for equality in
things such as marriage, voting, property rights, and child custody
rights This led to
- Slide 58
- Seneca Falls Convention First public meeting about womens
rights held in the United States Opened on July 19 th, 1848 in
Seneca Falls, New York About 240 people attended
- Slide 59
- Declaration of Sentiments The convention organizers wrote a
Declaration of Sentiments, which detailed beliefs about social
injustice towards women Used Declaration of Independence for basis
of its language Authors included 18 charges against men Nearly 100
people signed it
- Slide 60
- 5-11 TEMPERANCE ALCOHOL #DEATH BY: Meghan Quinlan, Kasey
Taylor, and Alexandria Quinlan
- Slide 61
- Seventeenth and eighteenth century Drinking was frequent Every
meal Children and adults Uses for alcohol Alternative use
- Slide 62
- Worries about the effects of alcohol Worries led to the
temperance movement Persuade people Reformers wanted a limit
American temperance Union Minister Lyman Beecher
- Slide 63
- 5,000 state and local Temp societies Between 1800 and 1830 rose
Maine banned the ability to purchase altogether 1 million members
1840s rates had fallen
- Slide 64
- WORKS CITED Deverell, William and Deborah Gray White. United
states History : Beginnings to 1877. Orlando: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 2007. Print. Claybaugh,Amanda.Temperance.AmericanHistory
through literature 1820-1870. U.S. History in context. Web. 1 April
2013. McNeese, Tim. Early National America 1790-1850. New York:
Infobase Publishing, 2010. Print. All images obtained from Google
Images
- Slide 65
- 5-13 Uncle Toms Cabin By: Henry Black, Jack Breithaupt And Matt
Rowen
- Slide 66
- Facts from Book Harriet Beecher Stowe had five children She
wrote four newspaper She lived in Connecticut before she moved to
Ohio Saw and met fugitive slaves across the Ohio River Took her
from February 1851 to June 5, 1851 to write the book
- Slide 67
- Facts from Database Stowe wrote Uncle Toms Cabin as a protest
against the compromise of 1850 The novel sold 50,000 copies in the
first two months and 300,000 in the first year
- Slide 68
- Facts from Textbook Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote the
anti-slavery novel to inform the public about the wronging's of
slavery Lyman Beecher was the Connecticut minister and father to
Harriet She lived in Connecticut until she moved to Ohio at age 21
In Ohio she met slaves and learned about their hardships. Her
fictional book was about a slave name Tom who was taken from his
wife and sold to slavery. His new owners beats him to death. The
novel made the South angry, and the North scared. It was supposed
to be said that Lincoln said that Harriet was the little lady who
started this big war.
- Slide 69
- Works Cited Deverel, William and Debra Gray White. United
States History: Beginning to 1877. Orlando: Holt, Rinehart, 2007.
Print. Jakoubek, Robert E. Harriet Beecher Stowe. New York: Chelsea
House. 1989. Print. Weinstein, Cindy. Uncle Toms Cabin. American at
War. U.S History in Context. Web. 2 April 2013.