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Page 1: Innovation  & Industry

Innovation & Industry

Page 2: Innovation  & Industry

American Industrial Growth• Factories increase production– New tools and production methods for larger numbers

of goods– Mass production – Assembly lines– Long work days

• Transformation of the food Industry– Methods of processing food for shipping

• Railroads expand markets and shipping for resources

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Natural Resources—Coal • Abundant resources

help fuel growth

• Coal mines on Eastern Seaboard –fuel for powering steam locomotives and factories

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Forests & Riverways• LUMBER - Thick

forests cut down and used for construction

• Riverways transported resources to cities

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Discovery of Oil• World’s first oil well

drilled in 1859–Titusville,

Pennsylvania–Edwin Drake

• Drilled Oil cheap to produce/easy transport

• Oil industry grew quickly—encouraged growth in kerosene & gasoline industries

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Oil before Drake

• Oil used for light and fuel

• Oil obtained from boiled down whale blubber– Time consuming– Scarcity of whales

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A Growing Workforce• Large numbers of

immigrants come to the United States after the Civil War

• 1 million/year by 1900• Reasons for

Immigration– Political upheavals– Religious

Discrimination– Crop failures

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Immigrants & the Workforce

• Large willing workforce

• Provided cheap labor

• Prepared to move frequently

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Entrepreneurs• Flourish in system of Capitalism & Free

Enterprise

• Fuel industrialization by investing in products or ideas to make a profit

• Invested in factories, railroads, & mines

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Rags to Riches• Horatio Alger,

Jr. – an American author

• Stories of poor boys who worked hard and gained wealth and fame

• Anyone who works hard can escape poverty

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Government & Business• Gave free land to railroad builders • Use of protective tariffs• Laissez-faire policies• Patent—granted by the federal

government to an inventor for exclusive rights over their invention• Encourages invention and

innovation

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• 1876—Established research lab at Menlo Park, NJ

• Received more than 1,000 patents for new inventions– Battery for electric car– Mechanical voice recorder– Motion Picture Camera– Improved the Light Bulb

THOMAS EDISON

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George Westinghouse

• Technology for sending electricity over long distances• Powered homes,

factories, and city streets• Patent for train air

brakes in 1869

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Alexander Graham Bell• 1876—patented the

telephone• Spread quickly• By 1881, more than 34,000

miles of wire strung• Long distance lines connected

cites in the Northeast & Midwest

• More than 1 million telephones in the United States by 1900

• 1896—Guglielmo Marconi invented wireless telegraph

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Henry Bessemer & Steel• Bessemer Process -

developed in the 1850s in England by Henry Bessemer

• Process for purifying iron—resulted in strong and lightweight steel!

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Steel and Innovation• Quickly adapted by

Americans– out producing British in steel

manufacture by 1890• Steel used for skyscrapers,

elevators, suspension bridges – roadway suspended by steel

cables• Brooklyn Bridge (1883)• Flatiron building(1902)– one of first skyscrapers

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ELISHA OTISWorked on the elevator system in the U.S.

Created a system for abraking system for the elevator

His invention made skyscrapers practical

Steel made them possible!!!!

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Granville Woods & the Steam Boiler Furnace• 1884– Improved steam-

powered furnace for running trains

1887Telegraph system for trains

• More than 60 patents—mostly relating to trains and streetcars

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Gustavus Swift• Meatpacker• Developed

refrigerated cars for food• Pioneered use of

animal by-products for items such as soap, glue, & fertilizer

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C.F. Dowd’s Time Zones

• Throughout the 1800s, most towns set clocks independently

• Time differences made it hard to set train schedules

• In 1884, delegates from 27 countries divided the globe into 24 time zones.

• Railroads adopted this system

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Mass Production

• Growing demands from the American and European consumer

• Need for quickly and cheaply developed products

• Machinery and systems for making many products once done by hand

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Exports• By the 1880s,

Americans dominated international markets with grain, steel, and textiles

• Fueled the expansion of American economy

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Farming and Society• Farms became mechanized–Reduced need for farm laborers

• Many farmers moved to urban areas–Added to growing workforce–Dependent upon cash wages to buy

food–Higher cost of living

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Concerns for the Environment• Industrial waste, soil erosion,

and dust storms– Fueled concerns about

protecting the environment & natural resources

• Congress responded by setting aside land– Yellowstone National Park

(1872)