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What was the Tom Thumb and why was it significant? It was a locomotive that was credited with bringing “railroad fever” to the United States.

What was the Tom Thumb and why was it significant?

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What was the Tom Thumb and why was it significant?. It was a locomotive that was credited with bringing “railroad fever” to the United States. 40 . Why were changes to manufacturing needed in the mid-1700s?. a. Factory owners were not satisfied with the size of their profits. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

What was the Tom Thumb and why was it significant?

It was a locomotive that was credited with bringing “railroad fever” to the United States.

Page 2: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

40. Why were changes to manufacturing needed in the mid-1700s?

• a. Factory owners were not satisfied with the size of their profits.

• b. Demand was greater than the available supply of goods.

• c. Workers were not satisfied with the level of their daily wages.

• d. Traders faced higher shipping prices for smaller amounts of goods.

Page 3: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Why did companies build their factories closer to cities and transportation

centers in the mid-1800s?

It provided easier access to workers.

Page 4: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

How did technological developments during the Industrial Revolution enable people to build

factories almost anywhere?

The shift to steam power meant factories no longer had to be built near streams, rivers, or waterfalls.

Page 5: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

The telegraph was significant because it

Enabled people to send news quickly from coast to coast.

Page 6: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

The telegraph was invented several years

before it went into operation. What was the reason for the

delay?

Samuel Morse was at first unable to connect two locations with telegraph wires.

Page 7: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

34. How did the War of 1812 help American manufacturing?

• a. The government built factories to produce needed uniforms and weapons.

• b. Tariffs on foreign goods encouraged Americans to buy domestic goods.

• c. Foreign goods became too expensive so politicians placed tariffs on them.

• d. The government boycotted British products that Americans also produced.

Page 8: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Coal was a more appealing fuel source than wood because it

Produced more energy

Page 9: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

29. For how long would a typical “Lowell girl” stay at the mills?

• a. a decade• b. four years• c. one year• d. nine months

Page 10: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

By 1860, Isaac Singer’s company was the world’s largest maker of

Sewing machines.

Page 11: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

36. What was Eli Whitney’s influence on American manufacturing?

• a.He designed a way to produce inexpensive clocks.

• b.He served as President Adams’ secretary of war.

• c.He came up with the idea of interchangeable parts.

• d.He argued that all manufacturing should be done by hand.

Page 12: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

How did the Transportation Revolution affect America’s farming industry?

Settlers plowed up prairies and cut down trees to make farmland out of the Midwest.

Page 13: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Steel is made through a process called smelting, which means

Heating iron ore to very high temperatures.

Page 14: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

What challenges did engineers and mechanics face while building railroads?

The railroads had to pass through mountains and rivers.

Page 15: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

What did the Supreme Court decide in the case of Gibbons v. Ogden?

a. Aaron Ogden could monopolize the steamboat business in New York.

b. Thomas Gibbons’ federal license had priority over Aaron Ogden’s state license.

c. Travel licenses had to be granted by the federal government to be legitimate.

d. Thomas Gibbons had to share use of the New York waterway with Aaron Ogden.

Page 16: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Gibbons v. Ogden was a Supreme Court case about ………?

Thomas Gibbons’ federal license had priority over Aaron Ogden’s state license.

Page 17: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

31. The “Rhode Island system” was Samuel Slater’s strategy of

• a. hiring families of workers and dividing factory work into simple tasks.

• b. paying workers in company-store credit and reinvesting cash in the business.

• c. building houses for workers in exchange for the promise of company loyalty.

• d. hiring unmarried women and designing dual-purpose factory equipment.

Page 18: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

In the mid-1800s, companies began to mass-produce earlier inventions. What effect did this

have on families?

They could buy items they could not afford in the past.

Page 19: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

43. Who was the man responsible for bringing new textile machines to the United

States?

• a. Samuel Slater• b. Moses Brown• c. Richard Arkwright• d. James Hargreaves

Page 20: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Why was the steamboat well suited to river travel?

It traveled well upstream.

Page 21: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

32. What did textile manufacturers do to keep the costs of running a mill low?

• a. cut back on the maintenance of machinery

• b. hired children and paid them very little

• c. trained apprentices in exchange for decades of labor

• d. fed workers instead of paying wages in cash

Page 22: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Robert Fulton’s first full-sized commercial steamboat was called the

Clermont

Page 23: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

37. “I am persuaded that machinery moved by water [and] adapted to this business

would greatly reduce the labor and facilitate [speed] the manufacture of this article.”

What was Eli Whitney’s purpose for making this statement?

• a. let his audience know about a new manufacturing plant• b. argue for the benefits of trying one of his ideas• c. describe in specific detail how a new invention of his works• d. tell manufacturers how to lower the cost of labor

Page 24: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Two new forms of transportation invented during the Transportation Revolution were the….?

Steam-powered train and the steamboat.

Page 25: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

41. The Industrial Revolution is best defined as a

• a. period of rapid growth during which machines became essential to industry.

• b. series of explosive encounters between workers and wealthy factory owners.

• c. time of great excitement about mechanical approaches to controlling Nature.

• d. period of turmoil and upheaval within the United States government.

Page 26: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

Why were most early strikes by union members unsuccessful?

The courts and the police did not take their side.

Page 27: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

How did the inventions of the plow and the reaper help the farming industry?

They allowed farmers to plant and harvest huge crop fields.

Page 28: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

38. The tools used to produce items or to do work are known as

• a. interchangeable parts.

• b. mass production.• c. muskets.• d. technology.

Page 29: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

What was a trade union?

Organization of workers who tried to improve pay and working conditions for

members.

Page 30: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

30. What happened to workers in the textile industry as a result of Francis Cabot

Lowell’s introduction of a new system?• a. Many mill workers were laid off because Lowell’s

power loom did the work of two different types of machine.

• b. Investors were hesitant to provide financial support because they did not believe that the power loom would be successful.

• c. Male mill workers came to resent female mill workers because Lowell paid women more than he paid men.

• d. More women became mill workers because of the opportunity to earn better wages than most available jobs.

Page 31: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

French writer Alexis de Tocqueville said that the contributions made by the Industrial

Revolution made American life more.

Convenient.

Page 32: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

In the mid-1800s, most of America’s industry was located in the…?

Northeast.

Page 33: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

33. During the War of 1812, which American patriot said “to be

independent for the comforts of life we must fabricate [make] them ourselves”?• a.Eli Whitney• b.Albert Gallatin• c.Thomas Jefferson• d.Samuel Slater

Page 34: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

What communication system, featuring different combinations of dots and dashes to

represent letters, was developed by Alfred Lewis Vail?

Morse code

Page 35: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

The mechanical reaper, a machine that quickly cuts down wheat, was invented by

Cyrus McCormick.

Page 36: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

39. Why were more American textile mills built in the North than in the South?

• a. The South charged higher taxes on industry.

• b. The North had more rivers to provide power.

• c. The North attracted skilled English immigrants.

• d. The South was not interested in expanding agriculture.

Page 37: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

John Deere came up with the idea for a/an

Steel plow

Page 38: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

35. What was one argument given by Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin about why there were so few

factories in the United States?

• a. Urban areas were too messy to attract American workers from rural areas.

• b. There was a high availability of farmland in the United States.

• c. American factory workers were willing to work for low pay.

• d. The United States could not support industries such as iron production.

Page 39: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

What main benefit did the Transportation Revolution bring to trade?

It enabled goods to travel quickly across the United States.

Page 40: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

42. How did the water frame revolutionize the production of cloth?

• a. It increased the number of threads the home spinner could work with.

• b. It increased the pace of production in textile mills but made cloth more costly.

• c. It shifted the location of production from homes to textile mills.

• d. It raised the level of quality of home-spun cloth.

Page 41: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

1. In the mid-1800s, companies began to mass-produce earlier inventions. What effect did this

have on families?

a. They could buy items they could not afford in the past.

b. They could store fresh food safely for longer periods.

c. Their everyday lives became more complicated.

d. Families began creating their own inventions.

Page 42: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

2. By 1860, Isaac Singer’s company was the world’s largest

maker of

a. clocks.b. iceboxes.

c. safety pins.d. sewing machines.

Page 43: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

3. French writer Alexis de Tocqueville said that the

contributions made by the Industrial Revolution made American life more

a. unhappy.b. convenient.

c. routine.d. complicated.

Page 44: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

4. How did the inventions of the plow and the reaper help the

farming industry?

a. They allowed customers to buy on credit.b. They caused cities to become the center of industrial

growth.c. They allowed farmers to plant and harvest huge crop fields.

d. They made farmers rich by selling them to businesses.

Page 45: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

5. The mechanical reaper, a machine that quickly cuts down

wheat, was invented by

a.Cyrus McCormick.b.John Deere.c.Eli Whitney.

d.Samuel Morse.

Page 46: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

6. John Deere came up with the idea for a/an

a. iron plow.b. steel plow.c. wood plow.

d. steam-powered plow.

Page 47: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

7. Why did companies build their factories closer to cities and

transportation centers in the mid-1800s?

a. It allowed businesses to increase wages.b. It made shipping more expensive.

c. It caused people to move from cities to rural areas.d. It provided easier access to workers.

Page 48: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

8. In the mid-1800s, most of America’s industry was located in

the

a. Northeast.b. Southc. West.

d. Midwest.

Page 49: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

9. How did technological developments during the Industrial Revolution enable people to build

factories almost anywhere?

a. Trains could bring raw materials to and ship finished goods from virtually any area worth living in.

b. The shift to steam power meant factories no longer had to be built near streams, rivers, or waterfalls.

c. Trains and steamboats spread the population out so that any factory had a ready supply of workers.

d. The invention of the telegraph put factory managers and their city-based investors within easy reach.

Page 50: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

10. What communication system, featuring different combinations of

dots and dashes to represent letters, was developed by Alfred Lewis Vail?

a. the Vail Systemb. telegraph method

c. Morse coded. dot language

Page 51: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

11. The telegraph was significant because it

a. enabled people to send news quickly from coast to coast.

b. led to the invention of the railroad system.c. benefited from the work of international scientists.d. made its inventor a very wealthy and famous man.

Page 52: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

12. The telegraph was invented several years before it went into operation. What was the reason for the delay?

a. Operators did not have a system for communicating across the wires.b. People were not skilled enough to operate the machine.

c. Samuel Morse, a widower, took time away from the project to support his three children.

d. Samuel Morse was at first unable to connect two locations with telegraph wires.

Page 53: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

13. Coal was a more appealing fuel source than wood because it

a. burned more cleanly.b. produced more energy.

c. was easier to obtain.d. was lighter to carry.

Page 54: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

14. How did the Transportation Revolution affect America’s farming industry?

a.Settlers plowed up prairies and cut down trees to make farmland out of the Midwest.

b.Farmers were forced to sell their New England farms to logging companies that needed to plant trees.

c.Farmers were required to give up portions of their fields out West to make way for new railroad lines.

d.New steel equipment and machinery put many family farmers out of work.

Page 55: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

15. Steel is made through a process called smelting, which means

a. cutting down and removing trees on a large scale.b. making deep gashes in the earth to remove coal.

c. linking cities to each other via railroads.d. heating iron ore to very high temperatures.

Page 56: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

16. Why did locomotives make a powerful impression on passengers?

a. The trains constantly flew off the railroad tracks.b. The trains traveled faster than most people had ever gone.

c. Trains were a safer mode of transportation than horse-drawn wagons.

d. Trains always arrived on schedule.

Page 57: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

17. What challenges did engineers and mechanics face while building railroads?

a. The American public was not interested in railroads.b. The railroads had to pass through mountains and rivers.c. Locomotives usually broke down before arriving at their

destinations.d. Engineers did not have the necessary materials to build railroads.

Page 58: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

18. What was the Tom Thumb and why was it significant?

a. It was a sewing machine that prevented housewives from pricking their fingers.

b. It was a steamboat that brought thousands of settlers upriver to the Ohio Valley.

c. It was a ferry that was the first to transport commuters across the Hudson River.

d. It was a locomotive that was credited with bringing “railroad fever” to the United States.

Page 59: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

19. What did the Supreme Court decide in the case of Gibbons v. Ogden?

a. Aaron Ogden could monopolize the steamboat business in New York.b. Thomas Gibbons’ federal license had priority over Aaron Ogden’s

state license.c. Travel licenses had to be granted by the federal government to be

legitimate.d. Thomas Gibbons had to share use of the New York waterway with

Aaron Ogden.

Page 60: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

20. Gibbons v. Ogden was a Supreme Court case about which of the following?

a.interstate tradeb.states’ rightsc.travel licensesd.monopolies

Page 61: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

21. Why was the steamboat well suited to river travel?

a. It traveled well upstream.b. It was helped by the current.

c. It relied on wind power.d. It was meant to serve as a ferry.

Page 62: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

22. Robert Fulton’s first full-sized commercial steamboat was called the

a. Hudson.b. Atlantic.

c. Clermont.d. Ogden

Page 63: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

23. What main benefit did the Transportation Revolution bring to trade?

a. It provided more jobs for American workers.b. It enabled goods to travel quickly across the United States.c. It made the public more interested in cross-country travel.

d. It made foreign countries less willing to trade with the United States.

Page 64: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

24. New forms of transportation invented during the Transportation Revolution were the

a. steam-powered train and the steamboat.

b. horse-drawn railcar and the motorboat.

c. covered wagon and the sailboat.

d. automobile and the clipper ship.

Page 65: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

25. The Transportation Revolution was a period of

a. rebellion against foreign countries’ use of American shipping lanes.

b. economic depression brought on by inferior modes of travel.

c. public disapproval of traditional modes of transit.d. rapid growth in the speed and convenience of travel.

Page 66: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

26. Why were most early strikes by union members unsuccessful?

a. They did not make clear demands to managers.b. Workplace conditions were not very bad.

c. The courts and the police did not take their side.d. They had not formed an alliance with craftspeople.

Page 67: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

27. What was a trade union?

a. organization of workers who tried to improve pay and working conditions for members

b. collection of workers who appealed to the courts and police for assistance against employers

c. group of workers who arrived from poor countries and were willing to work for low pay

d. alliance of workers who wanted to prevent their employers from competing with other manufacturers

Page 68: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

28. Which statement best describes working conditions at the mills?

a. Workers were fired after a single absence, forcing replacements to operate machinery they were not properly trained to use.

b. Each worker was free to choose the time at which the workday began so long as 8 to 10 hours of work a day were completed.

c. Workers suffered from health problems, such as chronic cough, due to unsafe conditions.

d. Workers were fed three times a day to keep them strong and their health was a top priority of caring managers and investors.

Page 69: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

29. For how long would a typical “Lowell girl” stay at the mills?

a. a decadeb. four yearsc. one year

d. nine months

Page 70: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

30. What happened to workers in the textile industry as a result of Francis Cabot Lowell’s introduction of a new system?

a. Many mill workers were laid off because Lowell’s power loom did the work of two different types of machine.

b. Investors were hesitant to provide financial support because they did not believe that the power loom would be successful.

c. Male mill workers came to resent female mill workers because Lowell paid women more than he paid men.

d. More women became mill workers because of the opportunity to earn better wages than most available jobs.

Page 71: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

31. The “Rhode Island system” was Samuel Slater’s strategy of

a. hiring families of workers and dividing factory work into simple tasks.

b. paying workers in company-store credit and reinvesting cash in the business.

c. building houses for workers in exchange for the promise of company loyalty.

d. hiring unmarried women and designing dual-purpose factory equipment.

Page 72: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

32. What did textile manufacturers do to keep the costs of running a mill low?

a.cut back on the maintenance of machinery

b.hired children and paid them very little

c.trained apprentices in exchange for decades of labor

d.fed workers instead of paying wages in cash

Page 73: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

33. During the War of 1812, which American patriot said “to be independent for the comforts of life we must fabricate [make] them ourselves”?

a.Eli Whitney

b.Albert Gallatin

c.Thomas Jefferson

d.Samuel Slater

Page 74: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

34. How did the War of 1812 help American manufacturing?

a. The government built factories to produce needed uniforms and weapons.

b. Tariffs on foreign goods encouraged Americans to buy domestic goods.c. Foreign goods became too expensive so politicians placed tariffs on

them.d. The government boycotted British products that Americans also

produced.

Page 75: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

35. What was one argument given by Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin about why there were so few

factories in the United States?

a.Urban areas were too messy to attract American workers from rural areas.

b.There was a high availability of farmland in the United States.

c.American factory workers were willing to work for low pay.

d.The United States could not support industries such as iron production.

Page 76: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

36. What was Eli Whitney’s influence on American manufacturing?

a.He designed a way to produce inexpensive clocks.

b.He served as President Adams’ secretary of war.

c.He came up with the idea of interchangeable parts.

d.He argued that all manufacturing should be done by hand.

Page 77: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

37. “I am persuaded that machinery moved by water [and] adapted to this business would greatly reduce the labor and

facilitate [speed] the manufacture of this article.” What was Eli Whitney’s purpose for making this statement?

a. let his audience know about a new manufacturing plant

b. argue for the benefits of trying one of his ideas

c. describe in specific detail how a new invention of his works

d. tell manufacturers how to lower the cost of labor

Page 78: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

38. The tools used to produce items or to do work are known as

a. interchangeable parts.

b. mass production.

c. muskets.

d. technology.

Page 79: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

39. Why were more American textile mills built in the North than in the South?

a. The South charged higher taxes on industry.

b. The North had more rivers to provide power.

c. The North attracted skilled English immigrants.

d. The South was not interested in expanding agriculture.

Page 80: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

40. Why were changes to manufacturing needed in the mid-1700s?

a. Factory owners were not satisfied with the size of their profits.

b. Demand was greater than the available supply of goods.c. Workers were not satisfied with the level of their daily

wages.d. Traders faced higher shipping prices for smaller amounts of

goods.

Page 81: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

41. The Industrial Revolution is best defined as a

a. period of rapid growth during which machines became essential to industry.

b. series of explosive encounters between workers and wealthy factory owners.

c. time of great excitement about mechanical approaches to controlling Nature.

d. period of turmoil and upheaval within the United States government.

Page 82: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

42. How did the water frame revolutionize the production of cloth?

a. It increased the number of threads the home spinner could work with.

b. It increased the pace of production in textile mills but made cloth more costly.

c. It shifted the location of production from homes to textile mills.

d. It raised the level of quality of home-spun cloth.

Page 83: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

43. Who was the man responsible for bringing new textile machines to the United States?

a. Samuel Slaterb. Moses Brown

c. Richard Arkwrightd. James Hargreaves

Page 84: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

44. Why were more American textile mills built in the North than in the South?

a. The South charged higher taxes on industry.b. The North had more rivers to provide power.

c. The North attracted skilled English immigrants.d. The South was not interested in expanding

agriculture.

Page 85: What was the  Tom Thumb  and why was it significant?

The Transportation Revolution was a period of

Rapid growth in the speed and convenience of travel.