“I can make just such ones if I had tools, and I could make tools if I had tools to make them with.” (Fanning 59). This quote illustrates Eli Whitney's great inventive mind. He made this claim while working out a way to produce 10,000 firearms for the US military. First, was Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin. Next, was the creation of interchangeable gun parts. Finally, there was his factory. Eli Whitney’s several great accomplishments during the Industrial Revolution make him worthy of the honor of being placed on United States Currency. Eli Whitney’s first accomplishment was the invention of the cotton gin. The demand for cotton in England was growing, and the southern states could not keep up with the demand. The amount of labor and time required to pick the cotton was causing it to be unprofitable, and southern farmers need another way to …show more content…
Eli Whitney was visiting a plantation when he first heard of this crisis that the farmers were facing. He consulted with agriculturalists, and after a few months he finalized the idea of what he called a cotton gin. The “gin” in cotton gin is short for engine, so essentially this was a machine that sped up the process of producing cotton. The cotton gin consisted of a long box with a revolving cylinder. It also had saws that separated lint from seed. First, cotton bolls were put in the top of the machine. Then you turn the handle, which runs the cotton through the wire, combing out the seeds. On March 7, 1774, George Washington signed Whitney’s patent for the cotton gin. This invention made him famous overnight. Whitney decided that he would give cotton gins to farms, but he would get a 40% stake in all of the cotton profits. However, due to a patent loophole, many
Eli Whitney and Cyrus McCormick are two of the most impressive early inventors in United States history. Both inventors had huge impacts on the agricultural field with their respective inventions. Whitney’s cotton gin, which was created in 1793, revolutionized the plantation of the South. Similarly, McCormick’s reaper had the same effect on the North. The reaper had much of the same effect on wheat that the gin had on cotton, allowing wheat field to be picked in a fraction of the time after its use became widespread years after its creation for a neighboring farm in 1831.
Cotton was the most important crop in south. The cotton gin is important to the south because it saved a lot of time. Furthermore, He Invented interchangeable parts and the concept of mass production in 1798. Eli signed a contract to the Government to make 10,000 guns in two years. Previously guns took a long time to make.
He did this in secrecy in hopes of making a fortune with the textile industry in America. He gained the name “Slater the Traitor” because of the bringing of the British technology and modifying it for the use of America. Several people emigrated before him with textile experience, but Slater was the first person who could build and operate the machines. Due to this achievement, Slater received funding from investors and had help building the machines from local artisans. In 1793, the first successful water powered textile mill was completed in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
I also believe that the reason he is considered a “Great Inventor of the Industrial Revolution” is because the Sewing Machine is still used to this day. Elias Howe changed everything. Howe, who has had a fascination with machinery since he was a little child, acquired the machinist skill while working at a cotton machines firm in Lowell, Massachusetts, and then Cambridge.
Cotton's story, as Rivoli sees it, is an endeavor to press business sector strengths - particularly work business sector hazard - out of the mathematical statement of cultivating. Since picking cotton is unfathomably troublesome work, obliging many workers, every one of whom need to work at precisely the same time on the grounds that cotton all sprouts immediately, ranchers require a hostage work pool. Southern ranchers fulfilled this first by utilizing slave work, then by making sharecropping, a manifestation of obligated servitude. As these techniques got to be legitimately unfeasible, cotton creation moved from the US southeast to Texas, where a sturdier type of cotton could be picked by machine, evacuating work chance by expelling work from the
This Chapter discusses the Americas and the molding of the National Economy from 1790 to 1860. Events that assisted the molding of the National Economy were the Cotton Gin, Know-Nothing Party, and Pony Express. In 1793, Eli Whitney invented the Cotton Gin; this was a machine that cleaned cotton by separating the seed and fiber of the cotton. This invention was very useful due to it cleaning one thousand pounds of cotton a day rather than one pound a day by man. The effects of the Cotton Gin include profits of cotton going up six thousand percent, the South giving four hundred million pounds of cotton to the North, and slavery doubling from seven hundred thousand to one point five million.
One of the big inventions during this time period was interchangeable parts. The invention of interchangeable parts was first thought up by Eli Whitney, who also invented the cotton gin. Which was was an important machine that separates cotton seeds from the cotton. Eli Whitney was a very intelligent man that was an inventor during the Revolution.
With the more abundant amounts of cotton being harvested, this helped the industry by creating jobs for cotton mill workers. Tariffs were levied in order to increase the costs of imported goods. This was done to help stimulate the economy. Industry caused the northern states to be prosperous. Meanwhile, slavery gave the south an opportunity to flourish
With this new invention, a person could yield eight times as much cotton in one day versus the traditional method. It also made the Southern people more dependent on slavery than ever before. As more cotton could be produced in one day the need for slaves grew higher. No longer could the South due
It revolutionized the cotton industry by making it more profitable. A machine was now used to remove seeds from cotton rather than having to remove them by hand. This allowed more cotton to be processed quicker which made production of cotton more efficient for farmers. Prior to the invention of the cotton gin, slavery was actually dying out in the southern United States due to how labor intensive the removal of seeds from cotton had become.
Following the War of 1812, America entered a period known as the Antebellum Era, meaning "before the Civil War," which lasted from 1815 to 1861. This period was characterized by the Market Revolution, which saw the birth of American capitalism and caused major social and economic change. From the year 1815 to 1850, slavery remained an established institution, economic change in the North East led to industrialization which in turn caused other economic and social changes, and a shift in America's social climate caused the growth of the abolitionist movement. One change that transformed American society was industrialization. Prior to the War of 1812, American society was mostly comprised of yeoman farmers who subsisted through trade and barter,
The cotton gin reduced the need for slaves to pick the seeds out of the cotton by hand. However, it did not decrease the need for slaves to grow and pick the cotton. The gin made growing cotton extremely profitable in the South.
Throughout history, people have been inventing things to make their lives easier. That drive has produced huge changes in the American life several times over. In the 1700’s, life in America was very difficult. Transportation infrastructure was lacking, which pushed the delivery of goods to be almost exclusively down rivers. Military technology was roughly unchanged since America began, leaving the country open to attack from other nations.
The use of the cotton gin had a major impact on slavery by expanding the use and population of slaves. “This machine revolutionized the process of separating cotton from its seed, making it dramatically faster and less expensive to turn picked cotton into usable cotton for textiles” the author said. Harvesting the cotton fields was intense work and the more cotton that was being produced lead to more fields causing more slaves to be needed to work those fields. All the large cotton plantations that the south maintained, by 1850 the slave population increased tremendously. “Southern wealth had become reliant on this one crop and thus was completely dependent on slave-labor.”
There were many complications at first. The machines had problems with making good quality raw cotton, and the machines often broke down. The machines were also too slow in producing enough cotton for the demanding