The post-Civil War Industrial Revolution was the continuation of changes in the United States economy that had started prior to the war. The fundamental change was from an economy based on agriculture and trade to one increasingly based on the production of manufactured goods. The manufacture of goods required raw materials, workers, capital equipment, and new ideas (technology) about how to use these factors to create goods. [Economists refer to these as the factors of production: land, labor, capital, and technology] It is important for students to understand that the term technology refers to new ideas about how to do something as well as the equipment needed to do it.
Government policies that encouraged westward movement such as the funding of the transcontinental railroad and the availability of free land to homesteaders encouraged the use of the abundant natural resources of the West. The transportation system provided by the transcontinental railroad shipped raw materials to cities where manufacturers changed the raw materials into consumer products and then shipped those products to people throughout the country and world. Grains shipped from farms on the Great Plains to giant mills became cereal for American breakfast tables. Hogs and cattle shipped to meat processing plants were served for dinner throughout the country. Iron ore was shipped to processing plants where it was converted to steel for the building of more railroads or the creation of steel girders for skyscrapers and bridges.
New methods of mass production were used to turn the raw materials into consumer products. Andrew Carnegie brought the Bessemer process, which converted iron into steel, to the United States. His company, Carnegie Steel, built huge steel foundries and created a monopoly on the production of steel. Meat packers developed a ‘dis-assembly’ line where the hogs and cattle were killed and then cut into steaks and chops and the leftovers were stuffed into sausages. One meat packer boasted that his plant could use every part of the pig but its squeal. Although manufacturers in the late 19th century produced goods on a large scale and used the system of interchangeable parts first introduced in the late 1700s by Eli Whitney, the assembly line was not introduced until the early twentieth century. Henry Ford first used the assembly line in the production of automobiles [in 1913].
Inventions also helped to promote industrial growth in the late 19th century. The telegraph was invented in the pre-Civil War period by Samuel Morse in order to help the railroads communicate, stay on schedule and prevent accidents. It was soon used to place orders for goods by means of the Morse code and to ensure that both raw materials and finished products were delivered to the right place at the right time. The telegraph thus promoted economic growth and the industrial revolution. The telephone was invented by Alexander Graham Bell [1876] and improved communication previously accomplished by the telegraph. Now businesses could communicate by telephone more quickly and easily. Soon homes of wealthy people had telephones and eventually almost every home would have a telephone. The telephone was easier to use because it did not require people to learn a new system of communication such as the Morse code.
The light bulb was not invented by Thomas Edison; however, he significantly improved it and made it practical for use. Edison invented the incandescent light bulb [1879]. It promoted economic growth because it made it possible to light factories as well as homes more safely than kerosene lamps. The light bulb made the use of electricity popular and therefore electric generators [1881] were built and electric lines were strung in cities and towns. Electricity, in turn, provided a new way of powering the manufacturing plants that had been relying on water power from rivers or steam power produced by burning coal. The light bulb, therefore, contributed to the economic growth of the United States by encouraging the development of electric powered factories that could be located wherever electric lines could be strung.
Electricity also contributed to the growth of transportation. Electric powered streetcars made it possible for people to move to the outskirts of the cities to live and commute to work by streetcar. The availability of electricity also led to the invention of many labor saving devices for the home that were run by electricity, such as the washing machine and the vacuum cleaner. These inventions made life easier for the women whose families could afford to buy them. The invention of the telephone provided new jobs for telephone operators, a job most often performed by women. The invention of the sewing machine and the typewriter also provided women with new job opportunities in clothing factories and offices.
The Wright Brothers (Orville and Wilbur) started the aircraft industry with their experiments in manned flight. They experimented with a flying machine for several years before their motorized airplane flew for 12 seconds at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina [in 1903].
Step 1: How was the industrial Revolution furthered new technologies and inventions?
*What is an industrial revolution?
*Work with your group to try to come up with with a definition for Industrial Revolution
*Now read a piece of text with your partner. Shoulder read.
*Was your definition accurate? Adjust it if needed.
*During this time what kind of shift took place in the US Economy?
*Develop a Summary Statement of the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and the shift in the US Economy.
Step 2
*Finish reading the notes under standard 5-3.1
*You will find a chart on Edmodo to fill in using the information you just read.
* Review with your class then submit the assignment.
Step 3: How did Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, the Wright Brothers and Albert Einstein affect the growths the US?
*reread the notes
* Use the information in that text to fill out the graphic organizer on inventions found in a Edmodo.
Step 4: Two new inventions were the telegraph and telephone. Today we are going to look at how these inventions are similar.
*click to watch a video.
*Read the text and complete the chart on edmodo.
Step 5:
* make a chart of inventors
* include inventor,inventions, photo, and how they aided the US
*choose your program
Government policies that encouraged westward movement such as the funding of the transcontinental railroad and the availability of free land to homesteaders encouraged the use of the abundant natural resources of the West. The transportation system provided by the transcontinental railroad shipped raw materials to cities where manufacturers changed the raw materials into consumer products and then shipped those products to people throughout the country and world. Grains shipped from farms on the Great Plains to giant mills became cereal for American breakfast tables. Hogs and cattle shipped to meat processing plants were served for dinner throughout the country. Iron ore was shipped to processing plants where it was converted to steel for the building of more railroads or the creation of steel girders for skyscrapers and bridges.
New methods of mass production were used to turn the raw materials into consumer products. Andrew Carnegie brought the Bessemer process, which converted iron into steel, to the United States. His company, Carnegie Steel, built huge steel foundries and created a monopoly on the production of steel. Meat packers developed a ‘dis-assembly’ line where the hogs and cattle were killed and then cut into steaks and chops and the leftovers were stuffed into sausages. One meat packer boasted that his plant could use every part of the pig but its squeal. Although manufacturers in the late 19th century produced goods on a large scale and used the system of interchangeable parts first introduced in the late 1700s by Eli Whitney, the assembly line was not introduced until the early twentieth century. Henry Ford first used the assembly line in the production of automobiles [in 1913].
Inventions also helped to promote industrial growth in the late 19th century. The telegraph was invented in the pre-Civil War period by Samuel Morse in order to help the railroads communicate, stay on schedule and prevent accidents. It was soon used to place orders for goods by means of the Morse code and to ensure that both raw materials and finished products were delivered to the right place at the right time. The telegraph thus promoted economic growth and the industrial revolution. The telephone was invented by Alexander Graham Bell [1876] and improved communication previously accomplished by the telegraph. Now businesses could communicate by telephone more quickly and easily. Soon homes of wealthy people had telephones and eventually almost every home would have a telephone. The telephone was easier to use because it did not require people to learn a new system of communication such as the Morse code.
The light bulb was not invented by Thomas Edison; however, he significantly improved it and made it practical for use. Edison invented the incandescent light bulb [1879]. It promoted economic growth because it made it possible to light factories as well as homes more safely than kerosene lamps. The light bulb made the use of electricity popular and therefore electric generators [1881] were built and electric lines were strung in cities and towns. Electricity, in turn, provided a new way of powering the manufacturing plants that had been relying on water power from rivers or steam power produced by burning coal. The light bulb, therefore, contributed to the economic growth of the United States by encouraging the development of electric powered factories that could be located wherever electric lines could be strung.
Electricity also contributed to the growth of transportation. Electric powered streetcars made it possible for people to move to the outskirts of the cities to live and commute to work by streetcar. The availability of electricity also led to the invention of many labor saving devices for the home that were run by electricity, such as the washing machine and the vacuum cleaner. These inventions made life easier for the women whose families could afford to buy them. The invention of the telephone provided new jobs for telephone operators, a job most often performed by women. The invention of the sewing machine and the typewriter also provided women with new job opportunities in clothing factories and offices.
The Wright Brothers (Orville and Wilbur) started the aircraft industry with their experiments in manned flight. They experimented with a flying machine for several years before their motorized airplane flew for 12 seconds at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina [in 1903].
Step 1: How was the industrial Revolution furthered new technologies and inventions?
*What is an industrial revolution?
*Work with your group to try to come up with with a definition for Industrial Revolution
*Now read a piece of text with your partner. Shoulder read.
*Was your definition accurate? Adjust it if needed.
*During this time what kind of shift took place in the US Economy?
*Develop a Summary Statement of the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and the shift in the US Economy.
Step 2
*Finish reading the notes under standard 5-3.1
*You will find a chart on Edmodo to fill in using the information you just read.
* Review with your class then submit the assignment.
Step 3: How did Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, the Wright Brothers and Albert Einstein affect the growths the US?
*reread the notes
* Use the information in that text to fill out the graphic organizer on inventions found in a Edmodo.
Step 4: Two new inventions were the telegraph and telephone. Today we are going to look at how these inventions are similar.
*click to watch a video.
*Read the text and complete the chart on edmodo.
Step 5:
* make a chart of inventors
* include inventor,inventions, photo, and how they aided the US
*choose your program