industrial revolution by tj roberts & colin drotar

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Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

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Page 1: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Industrial Revolution

By TJ Roberts &Colin Drotar

Page 2: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Facts About Industrial Revolution

• The Industrial Revolution was a rapid period of growth.• Manufacturing methods did not produce enough goods to

meet everyone's needs.• It was first formulated by British Historian Arnold Toynbee.• America went from working in homes and farms to water

power, then to steam power• The first big breakthrough was from water power and it was

textiles.• Also, agricultures and roads improved and populations grew.

Page 3: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Industrial Revolution Pictures

Page 4: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Works Cited• Martello, Robert. "Industrial Revolution." Encyclopedia of Science,

Technology, and Ethics. Ed. Carl Mitcham. Vol. 2. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2005. 993-999. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012

Page 5: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Labor Unions

For Garment and Textile Workers

Page 6: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

How it started

• Sara G Bagley, founded Lowel Female Labor Reform Association in 1844.

• Sara Bags was the first women to hold a high ranking in America labor movement.

• The associations had two main goals to influence and investigation of working conditions by Mass. State legislature and to obtain a ten hour working day.

• This was all for garment and textile workers.• Union supported the ten hour working campaign.

Page 7: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Working Conditions

• Men and women often worked 12/14 hours per day 6 days a week.

• working conditions were know to be terrible and were dangerous.

• Mill workers got very little pay for what they did.

Page 8: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Successes

• President Martin Van Buren had granted a ten hour workday in 1940.

• New Hampshire, Ohio Pennsylvania passed ten hour workday laws.

• For factory workers in other states long hours remained common.

• Union supporters continued to fight for work reforms such as, an end to child labor in the factories in the 1800s.

Page 9: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Eli Whitney & Interchangeable Parts

Erik Irvin & Troy Pearlman

Page 10: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Eli Whitney

• In 1798 addressed some tool problems• Gave officials a proposal for mass-production

of guns by using water powered machinery• Made water powered machines• Also came up with the idea of interchangeable

parts

Page 11: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Interchangeable Parts

• Parts of a machine that are identical • Using these interchangeable parts made

machines easier to repair and replace broken parts

• Whitney promised to build 10,000 muskets in 2 years with the machines

• He got money to build his own factory in 1801

Page 12: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Influence

• Whitney proved the British technology could be improved

• Mass-production became the efficient production of large numbers of identical goods

Page 13: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Steamboats

By: Wesley Olsen, and Taylor Goldberg

Page 14: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

The Beginning

• In 1803 Robert Fulton tested the first steamboat in France, several years later he tested the first full sized steamboat. It was called the Clermont.

• The steamboat could move upriver easily and did not rely on wind power which meant they could carried more goods and people with additional efficiency

• They burned coal to fuel the engine.

Page 15: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

improvements

• Henry shreve created a steamboat with an engine on the upper deck allowing the boat to draw in less water and navigate easier and safer

• In 1824 the court reinforced the federal governments authority to regulate the river/water control over states ending monopolies

Page 16: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

The Future

The steam boat made a big step for us InTechnology and economy which keeps us moving forward. Steamboats has allowed us to be able to make improvements and better means of transportations

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THE COTTON GINProject By: Tyler Kaplan,

Shawn Scaffa

"Cotton Gin." U*X*L Encyclopedia of U.S. History. Sonia Benson, Daniel E. Brannen, Jr., and Rebecca Valentine. Ed. Lawrence W. Baker and Sarah Hermsen. Vol. 2. Detroit: UXL, 2009. 399-400. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.

Work Cited

Page 18: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Eli Whitney

Eli Whitney: inventor of Cotton Gin Revolutionized cotton production Increased speed of production Powered by Water Mills Wanted to keep secret

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Cotton Gin

Extracted Seeds Processed Cotton into string Produced more cotton than 20 slaves Reduced Jobs

Page 20: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Production Rate

1800 1820 1840 18600

5

10

15

20

25

Cotton Production

Page 21: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons

Cleans 50 lbs of cotton per day Uses Water Mill Power

Can work all day without stopping Reduces Jobs

Collects seeds from cotton automatically

Prolonged Slavery

Comprised 2/3 of all American exports

Cotton Gin needs high maintenance without Water Mill

Page 22: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

GAME

Who was the inventor of the cotton gin?

A. Eli WhitneyB. Mike WisouskyC. Brian ChoiD. God Zilla

Page 23: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Try Again

Page 24: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Really?

I wish he made the cotton gin too.

Page 25: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

WINNER!!!

THANKS FOR PLAYING!

Page 26: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Cotton Gin

By: Kristin Kroh and Jackie Salantri

Page 27: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

• The Cotton Gin was invented by Eli Whitney in 1793.

• The Cotton Gin is a machine that removes seeds from short staple cotton.

• It use’s a hand crank cylinder with wired teeth, that separates the seeds and cotton fibers.

• Person = 1 pound/day• Cotton Gin= 50 pound/day

Page 28: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

• Eli Whitney was not the first person to invent the cotton gin machine.

• The downside to the cotton gin was the effect it had on slavery. The more the cotton gins the more demand of slaves and workers.

• Another downside, was people began to copy hisidea of the cotton gin, selling it around the world.

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-1836 cotton was 2/3 of all American exports.

Page 30: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Works Cited

• "Cotton Gin." U*X*L Encyclopedia of U.S. History. Sonia Benson, Daniel E. Brannen, Jr., and Rebecca Valentine. Ed. Lawrence W. Baker and Sarah Hermsen. Vol. 2. Detroit: UXL, 2009. 399-400. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.

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By Dr. Seuss

(AKA Aftyn Andersn and Andréa Bauer)

Anti Immigration Movements

Page 32: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Long ago in a land far away immigrants went to the Midwest to live out their days

They went to get farms and to become laborers, many Americans did not like their new cultures

Americans were protestants before Catholics came, native born Americans felt they weren’t the same

Page 33: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

The Know-Nothing party, a political group, treated the immigrants like they were poop

The Know Nothing politicians made difficult laws to prevent foreigner to be citizens to do what they want

They had to live in here for 21 years to become citizens but the know-nothings fell apart due to slavery disagreements

Page 34: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

By Dr. Seuss

(AKA Aftyn Andersn and Andréa Bauer)

This has been written in poetry form

ANTI IMMIGRATION MOVEMENTS

Page 35: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

• Long ago in a land far away,

immigrants went to the Midwest to live out their days

• They went to get farms and to become laborers,

many Americans did not like their new cultures

• Americans were protestants before Catholics came,

native born Americans felt they weren’t the same

Page 36: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

• The Know-Nothing party, a political group,

treated the immigrants like they were poop

• The Know Nothing politicians made difficult laws

to prevent foreigner to be citizens to do what they want

• They had to live in here for 21 years to become citizens

but the know-nothings fell apart due to slavery disagreements

Page 37: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

WE USED THIS!!!!

•http://ic.galegroup.com/ic/uhic/ReferenceDetailsPage/ReferenceDetailsWindow?displayGroupName=Reference&disableHighlighting=false&prodId=UHIC&action=e&windowstate=normal&catId=&documentId=GALE%7CCX3401802264&mode=view

Page 38: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

TEMPERANCE ACT

Jenny Salvatore

Kelly Viola

Page 39: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

TEMPERANCE ACT The temperance movement was

marked by an undercurrent of ethnic and religious hostility.

Some of the first advocates were people of Anglo-Saxon heritage who associated alcohol with the growing number of Catholic immigrants from Ireland and the European continent.

Supposedly, the Catholics were loud and boisterous as a result of too much drinking.

According to these activists, the consumption of alcohol was responsible for many personal and societal problems, including unemployment, absenteeism in the workplace, and physical violence.

Page 40: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

TEMPERANCE ACT Congress enacted the Lever Act of

1917 (40 Stat. 276) to outlaw the use of grain in the manufacture of alcoholic beverages, and many state and local governments passed laws prohibiting the distribution and consumption of alcohol.

The Temperance Movement began in the Nineteenth Century.

It had an unprecedented agreement to reform the agitation.

They accepted the consumption of alcoholic beverages. It was an attack of the ignited popular enthusiasm.

This all took place in the United Sates.

Page 41: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

WOMEN'S GROUPS

Groups such as the Women's Christian

Temperance Union (WCTU) and the Anti-Saloon

League were at the forefront of the onslaught on

alcohol.

Members of these groups spoke publicly in favor

of Prohibition and lobbied elected officials for laws

banning the consumption of alcohol.

Some of the more active members disrupted

business at saloons and liquor stores

Page 42: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

WORKS CITED

"Temperance Movement." West's Encyclopedia of

American Law. Ed. Shirelle Phelps and Jeffrey

Lehman. 2nd ed. Vol. 9. Detroit: Gale, 2005. 453-455.

Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.

“Temperance Movement.” Encyclopedia of the

United States in the Nineteenth Century. Ed. Paul

Finkelman. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons,

2001. Gale U.S. History in Context. Web. 20. Apr.

2012

Page 43: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

PRISON REFORM

B Y : K Y L E S E D I A A N D J I M M Y R A G N O L I

Dorothea DixPrisoner reform

Page 44: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

DOROTHEA DIX

Dorothea dix helped the mentally ill who we keep in prisons. The mentally ill were treated the same as the prisoners. When she found out that this was happing he talked to the state legislature. Then Massachusetts started to make facilities for the mentally ill so there were need where meet and there were living better. Children who did crimes were treated the same as adults. But soon they were put into housing units where they can get educated. Soon they tried to end pusiment all together and just use education to change there behavior

Page 45: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

The Underground Railroad

By: Dona Lisciotto Madeleine Whitmore

North

Page 46: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Facts

• Underground railroad wasn’t even an underground railroad it was a network of people that agreed to help slaves

• Loosely organized groups begun to help slaves escape from South to North or Canada

• Traveled on foot, small boats, and covered wagons they were even shipped in boxes

• The escaped slaves were called packages of freight

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Facts• The slaves had no guideposts but the stars• Rest spots during the day were called “stations”,

they were barns ,attics, or other places on property owned by abolitionists (station masters or someone who helped the slaves)

• Most famous and daring conductor of the Underground railroad was Harriet Tubman

• Harriet escaped slavery in 1849, she lead her whole family and 300 others out of slavery

• If you caught her you the reward would be $400,000

Page 48: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Pictures

Map of Underground railroad routes

Slaves who used the Underground Railroad

Harriet Tubman was a "conductor" on the Underground Railroad. She made at least fifteen trips into the South to help runaway slaves travel north to find freedom.

Page 49: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Works Cited • "Underground Railroad." U*X*L Encyclopedia of U.S. History. Sonia Benson, Daniel

E. Brannen, Jr., and Rebecca Valentine. Ed. Lawrence W. Baker and Sarah Hermsen. Vol. 8. Detroit: UXL, 2009. 1602-1604. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 20 Apr. 2012.

• "Harriet Tubman was a conductor on the Underground Railroad. She made at least fifteen trips into..." American Social Reform Movements Reference Library. Ed. Carol Brennan, et al. Vol. 2: Almanac. Detroit: UXL, 2007. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.

• "Slaves who used the Underground Railroad." U*X*L Multicultural: A Comprehensive Resource on African Americans, Hispanic Americans and Native North Americans. Detroit: U*X*L, 2010. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.• "Map of The Routes of the Underground

Railroad." Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History. Ed. Thomas Carson and Mary Bonk. Detroit: Gale, 2010. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.

Page 50: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

SENECA FALLS CONVENTION

By: Julia Littman and Gigi Pagano

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BEFORE THE CONVENTION

In the nineteenth century, women could not vote,

hold office, sit on juries, and were barred to speak in

public. Elizabeth Cady Stanton went to the World’s

Anti-Slavery Convention in London and realized she

wasn’t allowed to participate. Women had to sit

behind a curtain.

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HOW IT STARTED

Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton started a

society to advance the rights of women. The first

public meeting about women rights was held in the

United States.

Page 53: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

DECLARATION OF SENTIMENTS

Declaration of Sentiments, was detailed beliefs about

social injustice toward women. The DOI was the

basis for the language of DOS. They was 18 charges

against men and 100 people signed the DOS.

Page 54: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

UNCLE TOM’S CABIN

By: Kyle Whatley and Sam Steele

Page 55: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

WHAT WAS UNCLE TOM’S CABIN?

• Surprisingly it is not a cabin and happens to be a book.

• It was written by Harriet Beecher Stowe and published in 1852.

• The book spoke out against slavery and was geared towards educating the north about why slavery was wrong.

• In the book, a young African American man named Tom was taken from his wife and sold to a cruel man named Simon Legree in Louisiana.

• In a fit of anger, Simon has Tom beaten to death.

• This book sold 2 million copies and outraged the North

• Stowe’s book is still read today to learn about the harsh realities of slavery.

Page 56: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

WHO WAS HARRIET BEECHER STOWE?

• Harriet was the daughter of the Connecticut minister, Lyman Beecher.

• She met some fugitive slaves after moving to Ohio at the age of 21.

• From them she learned how mistreated and harshly slaves are treated and was outraged by the Fugitive Slave Act.

• Because of her meeting with the slaves, she decided to right her book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

• When Stowe met with President Lincoln, a year into the Civil War, he remarked “So this is the little lady who brought on this big war”

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WORK'S CITEDLesinski, Jeanne M. "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Gale Library of Daily Life: Slavery in America. Ed.

Orville Vernon Burton. Vol. 2. Detroit: Gale, 2008. 164-167. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 23 Apr. 2012

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Uncle Tom’s Cabin • Written by Harriet Beecher

Stowe. • The book is about anti-slavery.• Harriet Beecher Stow met

fugitive slaves and learned about cruelties of slavery

• She wrote a book to educate Northerns about slavery.

• Daughter of a Connecticut Minister named Lyman Beecher

• Had seven children, which one of them died

Page 59: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Uncle Tom’s Cabin

Met with Abraham Lincoln.

Abraham Lincoln said “So this is the little woman that bought on this big war.”

More than 2 million copies sold

Was a best seller in the United States.

The book was also sold in Europe.

Main character was an African American named Tom

Tom was taken from his wife and was beaten to death by Simon Legree.

The book contributed to the cause of the civil war.

Many Southerners called it faulty.

Page 60: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

Lesinski, Jeanne M. "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Gale Library of Daily Life: Slavery in America. Ed.

Orville Vernon Burton. Vol. 2. Detroit: Gale, 2008. 164-167. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 20 Apr. 2012.

"Topsy from Uncle Tom's Cabin."  The Civil War. Web. 23 Apr. 2012. <http://www.sonofthesouth.net/slavery/african-american-art/uncle-tom-cabin-topsy.htm>.

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Aftyn Anderson and Andrea Bauer

ANTI IMMIGRATION MOVEMENTS

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• immigrants went to the Midwest to find work in America

• Many immigrants wanted to start farms and to become laborers because land was fairly easy to gain

• many Americans did not like their new cultures

• Americans were protestants before Catholic immigrants came to America

• native born Americans felt they weren’t equals

Page 63: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

• The Know-Nothing party was a political group that didn’t want immigrants to become citizens

• The Know Nothing politicians made difficult laws

to prevent foreigner to become citizens.

- One of the laws required immigrants live in America for 21 years to become citizens

- the know-nothing party fell apart later due to slavery disagreements

Page 64: Industrial Revolution By TJ Roberts & Colin Drotar

WE USED THIS!!!!

•http://ic.galegroup.com/ic/uhic/ReferenceDetailsPage/ReferenceDetailsWindow?displayGroupName=Reference&disableHighlighting=false&prodId=UHIC&action=e&windowstate=normal&catId=&documentId=GALE%7CCX3401802264&mode=view