Market Revolution

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Market Revolution

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Market Revolution. What was the Market Revolution?. Dramatic change in scale and impact of market activity. Surge in manufacturing (North and Northwest). More people brought into a larger market economy. Causes many economic, social, and cultural changes. Before the market Rev. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Market Revolution

Page 1: Market Revolution

Market Revolution

Page 2: Market Revolution

What was the Market Revolution?

• Dramatic change in scale and impact of market activity.

• Surge in manufacturing (North and Northwest).

• More people brought into a larger market economy.

• Causes many economic, social, and cultural changes.

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• Most people are rural (mainly subsistence) farmers.

• All of the family is involved—but patriarchal.

• Grow food & raise animals for self consumption.

• Make other things like clothes, furniture, etc.

• Trade with neighbors for things they can’t make (barter economy—no exchange of cash & no “fixed” prices).

• Some, though, have excess crops they sell on the commercial market.

Before the market Rev.

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Pre-Industrial Artisan System

• Artisan = skilled craftsman (blacksmith, shoemaker, barrel maker, wheel maker, tailor, etc).

• Apprentice—Journeyman—master

• “self-making”

• Leisurely and personal

• “home” and “work” are intermixed

• Make the “whole” product

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Home Manufacturing• “Putting-Out” System

• Merchant provides raw materials.

• 1st Women who do textile work at home to augment family income (usually in New England).

• Later, people are given parts of a process to work on (example = shoes). Lynn, Mass.

• Are paid by piece.

• De-skilling (no longer making whole product)

• Challenges artisan system

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The Market Revolution

• Causes:

– A. Improvements in Transportation– B. Increased Industrialization– C. Improvements in communications

Result = Increased commercialization (more Americans involved in commercial market activity).

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Transportation

• Steamboats

• Canals (Erie) N. East—N.West.

• Railroads– A. B & O (1830)– B. Different “gauges.”– C. Take-Off in 1840s– D. Mostly in North– E. Private funding & help from

local and national govt.

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Communication

• Samuel F.B. Morse

• 1844 “What Hath God Wrought?”

• Mostly in North

• Western Union

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Morse as an Artist

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Industrialism• Samuel Slater—Spinning Mill in Pawtucket, RI. First modern

factory in America. 1793

• Most early factories in NE use female labor.• Families in mid-Atlantic.

• 1st water, then steam for power

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The Lowell System

• Female Employees

• Chaperoned boardinghouses.

• Highly regulated environment

• Cultural activities

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American System

• Eli Whitney—Interchangeable parts

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Impact of Market Revolution

• More impersonal workplace

• More emphasis on time (less leisurely)

• More people use cash

• People begin to buy more things & make less.

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Impact on Home

• Home and workplace become separate (separate spheres).

• Home begins to be seen as refuge from hurly-burly of workplace.

• Middle-class women have new role as “home-maker” because of their unique female virtues.

• “Cult of Domesticity”

• But applies only to white middle and upper class women.

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The New Middle Class

• Market Rev. created new types of jobs—clerks, bookkeepers, etc. (“White Collar”).

• Land ownership no longer only avenue for wealth

• Increasing middle-class emerges

• Distinct lifestyle emerges in which material possessions indicate success.

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New Labor Force

• Competition forced factory owners to cut wages and working conditions began to deteriorate.

• Factory owners begin to turn to immigrant labor (The Irish).

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New Immigrants

• 1840s and 1850s = huge surge in Immigration.

• Irish—single, poor, Catholic (Eastern cities)

• Germans—families, $, mostly Protestant (Northwest)

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Response to Immigration

• Nativism

• Seen as a threat to republicanism

• Competition for jobs

• 1845—Native American Party– Wanted to ban Catholics and foreign born from

holding office, restrict immigration, and have literacy tests for voting.

– Eventually become “Know-Nothings”