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    NATURAL RESOURCESRAW MATERIALSTREE INDUSTRIESThe Logging IndustryThe Lumber IndustryThe Paper IndustryThe Timber IndustryMINERALS AND THE MINING INDUSTRYCoal MiningIron Ore MiningLimestone MiningNational InfrastructureSteam and FireNatural Gas TOOLBOXHow did natural resources lead to the Industrial Revolution?How did an abundance of natural resources contribute to?What natural resources are important to the Industrial Revolution?What was there an abundance of during the Industrial Revolution?
The Supply of Raw Materials in the Industrial Revolution

The Economic History Review

New Series, Vol. 15, No. 1 (1962)

, pp. 1-16 (16 pages)

Published By: Wiley

https://doi.org/10.2307/2593286

https://www.jstor.org/stable/2593286

Journal Information

The Economic History Review publishes articles based on original research on all aspects of economic and social history. The Review is edited on behalf of the Economic History Society by leading scholars. It has been published since 1927 and is one of the world's leading journals in the field. The Review welcomes contributions based on the full range of methodological approaches used by economic and social historians and is pleased to publish high quality research on the economic and social history of any area of the world. The emphasis is on broad coverage of themes of economic and social change, including their intellectual, political and cultural implications. In addition to regular papers, some issues contain contributions to a series of 'Surveys and Speculations' which are more reflective survey articles. For many years past a comprehensive annual list of publications on the economic and social history of Great Britain and Ireland has been published. Each issue also contains a substantial number of book reviews. JSTOR provides a digital archive of the print version of Economic History Review. The electronic version of Economic History Review is available ://www.interscience.wiley.com. Authorized users may be able to access the full text articles this site.

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Industries were developed precisely where natural resources were available.

Explanation:

Industries whether in Europe or in America would always bloom where natural resources(coal in the Appalachians or Northern England for instance) were plenty especially coal.

DIRECTIONS:  Remember, the Lesson Mission is what you, the student, will be able to do after the lesson is over.  Begin today's Lesson Chronicles Entry by heading your paper with your name and the date and the Lesson Title.  Write down today's essential question.  Answering the essential question the end of the lesson is your Lesson Mission!

Set up your Lesson Chronicles for today like the example below.

DIRECTIONS: Remember, accomplishing your lesson mission is your purpose for reading.  To accomplish your mission, you must be able to answer the essential question(s).  We will continue to work on answering essential questions by identifying information from key text structures to make a skeleton outline of the text. 

Set up the Skeleton Outline for today like the example below.

DIRECTIONS:  Now that you have a purpose for reading, and you have identified the key elements of the reading, we will take turns reading the passage below as a class.  

As you read, if a certain part of the reading makes you think of a text to text, text to self, or text to world connection, write it in the bottom row.

Recall the text to text, text to self, and text to world strategy:

Text to text references:  When a certain word, phrase, or sentence reminds you of something else that you have read.
Text to self references:  When a certain word, phrase, or sentence reminds you of something about your own life.Text to world references:  When a certain word, phrase, or sentence reminds you of a world issue or sự kiện.

The United States not only changed into an industrial nation, but it also improved the machines that were used in industries.

The Industrial Revolution in the United States began when Samuel Slater smuggled in the British textile factory system into the U.S.  In 1861, the Civil War, caused a brief pause in U.S. industrialization, but it took off again after the Civil War ended.  From the time between the end of the Civil War until World War War started in 1914, America changed from a mostly agricultural nation to an industrial nation.  The U.S. completely industrialized.  Even farming became an industry.

There were many reasons that industries in the United States grew rapidly, but five things contributed to industrial growth more than anything else.  The United States had access to raw materials and energy; a large workforce;  a think tank of inventors and innovators; railroad development; and the financial resources to fund industrial growth and expansion.  In the next five lessons, we will learn about each of the five major contributors to the growth and expansion of industry in the United States.  

NATURAL RESOURCES

After the Civil War, the United States was still a young nation.  It had an abundance of land and this land had a wealth of natural resources.  Natural Resources are things that are found in nature that are valuable to humans.  Natural Resources led to industrialization because natural resources provided the raw materials used to build machines and factories, as well as the raw materials to manufacture goods.  

RAW MATERIALS

Saw mills take the natural resource of timber and transform it into lumber, which is a product people use in constructing homes and buildings.

Natural resources helped to bring about industrialization because they provided the raw materials for construction and production.  Construction is the process of building something.  Production is the process of making or growing something for sale or use.  Raw materials are the basic materials used to build something or make a product for people to use.  The United States had vast amounts of natural resources that provided raw materials for constructing factories and producing goods.  The raw materials that were essential to industrialization were trees and minerals.

TREE INDUSTRIES

Trees were the first valuable resource in U.S. industrialization.  Many industries developed because of trees and many industries were built using trees.  An industry is made up of all the companies or factories that make a type of product.  Trees were used to build ships, factories, homes, and furniture.  They were also used to grow and harvest fruit and to produce paper and paper products.  Several industries developed because of the abundance of trees found in the U.S.

The Logging Industry

Logging involves cutting down trees in natural forests

One of these industries was the logging industry.  The logging industry is any company that cuts down trees found naturally in the environment.  Logging companies built camps and brought in work crews to cut down trees in forests.  Most of the cutting was done in the winter when it was easier to move the logs to water.  After the spring melt, the logs were either floated down rivers and across lakes to saw mills or transported by railroads.

The Lumber Industry

A saw mill cutting logs into lumber

Trees were processed into lumber in saw mills. Lumber refers to processed trees, in which the bark of the tree is removed and the tree is cut into boards so that it can be used to build things.  The lumber was even used to build the saw mills where the lumber was processed.  Processing trees into lumber was part of the lumber industry.  The lumber industry involves any saw mill that processes trees into lumber or any company that sells lumber.

The Paper Industry

This is a postcard of a paper mill in Maine in 1906

The paper industry was another industry that resulted from America's trees.  The paper industry is any mill or factory that makes paper or paper products from wood or any company that sells paper or paper products. Before the 1850s, most paper was made using rags.  The rags were old clothing usually made from hemp, linen, and cotton.  In the 1840s, inventors found a new process using chemicals to make paper from wood.  New paper mills began to open near forests. Many of these paper mills were in New England.

The Timber Industry

Gifford Pinchot

As more and more trees were cut down, people felt the need to conserve and renew America's trees.  No man believed more firmly in this than Gifford Pinchot.  Pinchot was a forester before forestry was even a job.  He realized that industry was necessary but felt that taking our natural resources should be done responsibly.  Pinchot created a new industry called the timber industry.  Timber is any type of tree that has been purposely planted and grown to harvest for wood.  The timber industry is any company involved in harvesting trees or planting trees for harvesting.

MINERALS AND THE MINING INDUSTRY

Mining was dangerous work. Dynamite was used to blast tunnels. Men had to crawl into small, tight spaces. Many times the roof of the mines would collapse on the workers.

As more factories popped up and new inventions helped improve industries, minerals began to play a large part in industrialization.  America had a plethora of mineral resources which directly led to the mining industry.     A mineral is any solid substance formed naturally under the ground.  So, the mining industry is made up of all the companies and mills that dig mines, refine minerals, and sell refined minerals products. 

Though many individuals went West for the Gold and Silver Rushes, companies mainly focused on minerals that were needed in production.  Some of these minerals were coal, zinc, copper, limestone, and iron ore.  Coal,  iron ore, and limestone were the three most important minerals during U.S. Industrialization.  

Coal Mining

coal

Coal was used to produce heat and electricity that heated and lit factories.  Coal was burned to run power steam engines and machines used in refining and processing other minerals.  Coal was also used to power steam engine trains that were important in transporting people, raw materials, and finished goods all over the country.

Iron Ore Mining

iron ore

Iron ore was the first metal used in building railcars and railroads, but it really gained importance when a man named Henry Bessemer invented a process for converting iron into steel that he called the Bessemer Process. The Bessemer Process converted iron to steel by blowing oxygen on white, hot, molten iron.  Steel was preferred in the construction business because it was lighter, stronger, more durable, and did not rust as quickly as iron did.  Though steel was used instead of iron, the iron ore industry skyrocketed because iron ore was needed to produce steel.

Limestone Mining

limestone

Limestone was another one of the most important minerals in U.S. industrialization.  It was used to make cement for constructing homes, buildings, sidewalks, bridges, and skyscrapers.  It was also used to produce glass used for windows and building decor.  

National Infrastructure

Tunnels and bridges were two forms of infrastructure made using limestone and helped companies transport their products to more places.

Minerals provided the literal building blocks of industry.  With these materials, Americans not only had items to produce for sale, but they also had raw materials to construct machines for faster and cheaper production; building materials to construct factories; and infrastructure materials to build cities.  Infrastructure is the basic equipment and structures such as tunnels, roads, and bridges that are needed for a country or region to function properly.

ENERGY

Natural resources were used to build industries, make products, and produce energy.

Natural resources were the literal building blocks of U.S. Industrialization.  They played a huge part in building industries and making products, but natural resources played a much more important role in fueling industrialization. 

Some natural resources provided the energy that ran industries.  These natural resources were energy resources.  Energy resources are any natural resources that are used up or consumed in creating power.  Water and trees were the first major energy resources used in industrialization.  If you will recall, waterwheels powered the first mills of the Industrial Revolution.

Steam and Fire

A wood burning stove

Eventually, people learned to use water in a different way to produce power.  They learned to harness steam power using steam engines.  Remember, the steam engine was created by Thomas Newcomen and improved by James Watt.  The steam engine worked when a fire boiled water and produced steam.  For the steam engine to work, another valuable energy resource had to be used.  Trees were that resource.  The trees were cut into wood and burned to heat the water in the steam engine.  Wood was not only used in fueling the steam engine.  It was also burned for heat, cooking, melting things, and for light.

Coal

A man shovels coal into a steam engine

Coal soon replaced wood as an energy resource.  During the first half of the 1800s, steamships and steam-powered railroads were becoming the chief forms of transportation, and they used coal to fuel their boilers.  In the second half of the 1800s, more uses for coal were found.  During the Civil War, weapons factories were beginning to use coal. By 1875, coal was the primary fuel for iron blast furnaces to make steel.  By the 1880s coal was beginning to be used to generate electricity for homes and factories.  Long after homes were being lighted by electricity produced by coal, many of them continued to have furnaces for heating and some had stoves for cooking that were fueled by coal.

Natural Gas

 TOOLBOX

Industrial Revolution:  the time period in history during the 1700s and 1800s when there was so much industrialization going on

Samuel Slater:  the man who stole the textile factory method from Great Britain and brought it to America

factory: a building or group of buildings where products are made

industrialize/industrialization:  
1.) the process of using power-driven machinery to manufacture goods.  2.)  the process by which a country moves from being a society that makes its money mainly by farming to a society that makes its money mainly by manufacturing goods and services

agricultural:  having to do with faming and raising livestock

natural resources: things that are found in nature and are valuable to humans

manufacture: the process of making products especially with machines in factories

construction:  the process of building something

production:  the process of making or growing something for sale or use

raw materials are the basic materials used to build something or make a product for people to use

industry:  all the companies or factories that make a type of product.

logging industry:  any company that cuts down trees found naturally in the environment

lumber:  processed trees, in which the bark of the tree is removed and the tree is cut into boards so that it can be used to build things

saw mill:  a building where trees are processed into lumber

lumber industry:  any saw mill that processes trees into lumber or any company that sells lumber.

paper industry is any mill or factory that makes paper or paper products from wood or any company that sells paper or paper products.

rags: old clothing made from hemp, linen, and cotton used to make paper for the 1850s

paper mills:  mills that made paper from wood pulp

conserve:  the careful use of natural resources (such as trees, oil, etc.) to prevent them from being lost or wasted

Gifford Pinchot:  a forester who believed in using natural resources responsibly so he started the timber industry

timber:   any type of tree that has been purposely planted and grown to harvest for wood

timber industry:  any company involved in harvesting trees or planting trees for harvesting

plethora:  a very large amount or number that is an amount much greater than what is necessary

mineral:  any solid substance formed naturally under the ground

mining industry:  all the companies and mills that dig mines, refine minerals, and sell refined minerals products.

Coal:  one of the most important minerals in U.S. industrialization used to produce energy and heat and eventually burned to generate electricity

refining:  the process of removing unwanted materials or impurities from a substance

Iron ore:  one of the most important minerals in U.S. industrialization used as the main construction metal for the railroads until people learned how to make steel out of iron ore

Henry Bessemer:  invented the Bessemer Process for converting iron into steel

Bessemer Process: a process that converted iron to steel by blowing oxygen on white, hot, molten iron

Steel: a metal alloy created using iron ore that became the  preferred metal in construction because it was lighter, stronger, more durable than iron, and did not rust as quickly as iron
 
Limestone:  one of the most important minerals in U.S. industrialization used to make cement for constructing homes, buildings, sidewalks, bridges, and skyscrapers and glass used for windows and building decor

Infrastructure: the basic equipment and structures such as tunnels, roads, and bridges that are needed for a country or region to function properly.

energy resources: any natural resources that are used up or consumed in creating power

harness:  to control or use something for a particular purpose

steam engine: an engine that produced power using steam that was fueled by wood or coal and provided the first reliable source of power during industrialization

Thomas Newcomen: inventor of the first true steam engine in 1712

James Watt:  improved Newcomen's steam engine and invented the rotary steam engine

manufacturing: the process of making products especially with machines in factories

William Hart:  considered the "father of natural gas" because he dug the first to harness natural gas and form a natural gas company

natural gas industry:  any company involved in the drilling, refining, or selling of natural gas

Edwin L. Drake:  was the first to strike oil its source outside the town of Titusville, Pennsylvania in 1859

oil industry:  any company involved in the drilling, refining, or selling of oil 

Spindletop:  one of the largest and most important oil strikes in history that led Texas to become the leader in U.S. oil production

internal combustion engine:
a type of engine that is used for most vehicles in which the fuel is burned within engine cylinders

Benjamin Franklin:  first American to begin experimenting with harnessing electricity as a power source

Thomas Edison:  inventor and innovator who was the first to manufacture light bulbs and invent the electric lighting system

innovation:  a new idea, method, or process or an improvement to something already invented

patent:  legal papers that give an inventor all the rights to produce and sell their invention

effective:  producing the result that is wanted

efficient:  capable of producing desired results without wasting materials, time, or energy

secondary energy source: energy that is converted from primary sources to store, move, and deliver energy in an easy to use form

primary energy source: energy created directly from a natural resource

hydroelectricity:   electricity converted using water as the primary energy source

world power:  a country that is powerful enough to affect the entire world by its influence or actions

Natural gas was another one of America's natural energy resources.  Like wood and coal is burned to produce energy for heat, light, cooking, and running machinery.  In 1821, William Hart dug the first natural gas well outside the town of Fredonia, Tp New York.  Hart then formed the nation's first natural gas company, Fredonia Gas Light Company, in 1858. William Hart is considered the "father of natural gas" in the United States.  When Hart's gas light company led many other places to dig natural gas wells and build pipelines, the natural gas industry was born.  Soon, many factories began using natural gas to power their machines and light their factories so that factory work could continue even after dark.

On August, 27, 1859, Edwin L. Drake was drilling a well and struck oil outside the town of Titusville, Pennsylvania.  It was the first time oil was found its source.   It was not long before oil wells popped up all over Pennsylvania.  In 1901, Texas became the leader in the American oil industry when one of the largest and most important oil strikes in history occurred on a mound called Spindletop.  Oil was only used for lighting kerosene lamps first, but the invention of the internal combustion engine in automobiles and airplanes increased the need for oil. Though oil was not an important energy resource until the internal combustion engine, it became one of the most needed energy resources after it.  

In the mid 1700s, Benjamin Franklin performed many experiments with electricity.  Many men worked to turn electricity into a power source.  These men paved the way for Thomas Edison, an inventor and innovator who would change the lives of Americans and the world forever.  Thomas Edison did invent many things but a good many of his successes were actually innovations.  One of these innovations was the electric light.  Many people give credit to Thomas Edison for inventing the electric light, but in reality, he simply innovated it.  He made it better by making changes to it.

Edison was also able to make his light bulb inexpensively by manufacturing it.  It was the fact that Edison was able to make large amounts of light bulbs, quickly, and inexpensively that was the true innovation because it led to Edison's greatest accomplishment, electric lighting system!  Edison was able to create electric lighting for whole towns by using light bulbs, electricity generators, wires to get the electricity from the power station to the homes, plugs for lamps, wall sockets, switches for the light bulbs, and many other things.   Edison’s first electric lighting infrastructure was the Pearl Street Station in Tp New York City’s financial district.  It sent electricity to lights in 25 buildings on September 4, 1882.

During his life he patented 1,093 inventions.  Edison created the first research and development lab in the world in Menlo Park, New Jersey.  He called this lab the "invention factory."  His inventions earned him the nickname "The Wizard of Menlo Park."  His inventions, many powered by electricity, improved industries and allowed for more effective and efficient production.  Electricity not only became the most important energy resource in powering industrialization, it also changed everyday life for people all over the world.

Electricity is a secondary source of energy.  A secondary energy source is energy that is converted from primary sources.  They are used to store, move, and deliver energy in an easy to use form.  So, electricity is produced by converting a primary energy source.  A primary energy source is energy created directly from the actual resource.  Coal was the primary energy resource used to produce electricity but wood, oil, and natural gas were also used.  After the Civil War, hydroelectricity was introduced for the first time.  Hydroelectricity is electricity converted using water as the primary energy source.  Solar power, wind power, and nuclear power  all developed in the twentieth century.  Natural resources and the knowledge to convert resources to energy helped the United States to fly through industrialization and gain status as a world power.

In this activity, your group will play Industrialization Jeopardy.  Each small group will be a team playing against other small groups to win the trò chơi.  It is played almost like the real Jeopardy.  We will draw numbers to see which team opens the board. The number 1 player from each team will come to the buzzer.  I will ask the question under the category and points amount that the selecting team chooses.   The first team to press the buzzer will have 15 seconds to answer the question.  If the team is correct, they gain the number of points that the question is worth and will choose the next category.  If they are incorrect, they lose the points and another team may answer.  If no team answers correctly, the team that answered the last question correctly will make the next trò chơi board choice.  You will go through 2 trò chơi boards and final jeopardy.  In final Jeopardy, I give you a category of what the question will be about.  The teams all wager points on how well they believe they will answer the question.  After the wager, I ask the question and each team has 30 seconds to answer the final question and turn it in.  When all answers are in, I will read the answer and add and subtract points from each team according to their wager.  The team with the highest points the end of the trò chơi is the winner.  I will move your trophies above each winning teams table.

Any questions?

A Lesson Chronicles Activity is an individual activity where you prove that you accomplished the lesson mission.  Lesson Chronicles require you to keep a notebook or journal with a table of contents.  Each entry should be dated.  First, you write the lesson mission.  Then you prove you "can do" whatever the mission says by answering the essential question of the lesson in PQA format.  Remember PQA format means "Put the Question in the Answer".

DIRECTIONS:  Work by yourself to prove you have completed today's mission successfully by answering the essential question for today.  Answer the question on the first page of your Lesson Chronicles under your Lesson Mission.  Refer to the example below.  The example shows you what all you are expected to have for your portfolio check on this lesson.

Remember, you have homework every night in Social Studies.  Your homework is to show your Lesson Chronicles to your family and tell them what you learned today.  Not only will this give you quality time with your family but it will help you review for your unit test.  Go over your lesson chronicles entry from today everyday to help you study for the Topic Quiz and Unit Test.

If you did not complete any assignments from today, they are homework.  You never know when I am going to check portfolios, so make sure you are keeping up!

Congratulations!  You have Completed the Unit 3 Lesson 3 Module!

If you'd like to learn more about natural resources and energy and how they impacted U.S. Industrialization, click on the icon below Scholastic Energy, Light and Sound Interactives.  You may do any of the inter actives on the page, but you must use your headphones.  You may do these home as well!

How did natural resources lead to the Industrial Revolution?

Natural Resources led to industrialization because natural resources provided the raw materials used to build machines and factories, as well as the raw materials to manufacture goods.

How did an abundance of natural resources contribute to?

How did an abundance of natural resources contribute to economic growth in the United States in the late 1800s? Agriculture became a huge industry and farmers began to make money and this stimulated the economy. Farming created several jobs and the US began exchanging/importing/exporting goods with different countries.

What natural resources are important to the Industrial Revolution?

People found an extra source of energy with an incredible capacity for work. That source was fossil fuels — coal, oil, and natural gas, though coal led the way — formed underground from the remains of plants and animals from much earlier geologic times.

What was there an abundance of during the Industrial Revolution?

However, in the 1700s, everything started to change with the onset of the Industrial Revolution. Now, people found an extra source of energy that could work for them. That source was fossil fuels—coal, oil, and natural gas. Tải thêm tài liệu liên quan đến nội dung bài viết How did abundant natural resources contribute to the industrial revolution

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