Chapter 13, Sections 1,2. The Industrial Revolution and Working Life.

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Chapter 13, Sections 1,2. The Industrial Revolution and Working Life.

Transcript of Chapter 13, Sections 1,2. The Industrial Revolution and Working Life.

Page 1: Chapter 13, Sections 1,2. The Industrial Revolution and Working Life.

Chapter 13, Sections 1,2.

The Industrial Revolution and Working Life.

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The Industrial RevolutionMore successful and widespread in the

North.

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Samuel Slater

Brought technical knowledge from

Britain and helped start a

textile mill.

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Manufacturing

Eli Whitney failed to make rifles, but he developed Interchangeable Parts.

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Mass ProductionThe efficient production of large

numbers of identical goods.

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The Industrial Revolution spread more quickly across Britain than in

through the US.

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Samuel Slater

Hired entire families to work in his factories.

Children were used for simple tasks,

and paid less.

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Francis Cabot Lowell

Hired young, unmarried women from local farms to work in his factory. They were referred to as the “Lowell Girls”.

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Wave of Immigration

Immigrants to America drove the price of labor lower than ever, and displaced the Lowell girls.

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Trade Unions are organizations created by workers to improve

working conditions.

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Labor Action

The early strikes went poorly because the courts and police supported the companies.

Union membership therefore rose slowly.

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Sarah Bagley

• A union leader who worked for a ten-hour workday.