A | B |
Erie Canal | Opened in 1825; connected Great Lakes and Atlantic via the Hudson River |
capitalist | person with money to invest in business |
Richard Arkwright | invented water frame |
Moses Brown | wealthy merchant in RI |
interchangeable parts | identical pieces that could be made and assembled quickly by unskilled workers |
spinning jenny | made the thread making process faster |
factory system | workers and machines in same place |
Francis Cabot Lowell | brought spinning and weaving together in one place |
Samuel Slater | memorized British machine design and brought it to US |
mass production | rapid production of identical products |
rivers | provided power to factories |
War of 1812 | led to the need for Americans to produce own goods |
Lowell Girls | girls who left family farms to work in industrial mills in Lowell, MA |
interchangeable parts | led to mass production; allowed unskilled to become manufacturers |
Eli Whitney | created efficiency in mass production; reduced need for skilled laborers; reduced costs for goods |
factory work conditions | unsafe; poor lighting and ventilation; 12-14 hour workdays |
Lowell work advertised opportunities | lectures; libraries; education |
steam engines | made it possible to locate factories away from riverbanks |
effects of Industrial Revolution | people started to work away from home; cheaper goods; cities developed; demand for cotton led to growth of slavery |
Barilla Taylor | girl who left family farm in Maine to work in Lowell |
average age of death in Lowell | 21 |
major improvements of late 1800s/early 1900s | electricity; plumbing; telephone; modern medicine; transportation |