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Mostly known for their impact on the gunmaking industry, it allowed for a largely unskilled labor force to assemble products much faster and at a lower cost than before and in case of damage, made repair and replacement of parts endlessly easier.
# The process of shifting to factory production with new inventions, major technological changes, making of new industrial labor force and large-scale construction activities taking place in England and later on spread to the rest of Europe is known as industrialization.
A labor agent might be a person who makes sure that a company has enough labor to complete the job at hand. A labor agent might also be a person who deals with a particular union for an industry.
Depreciation is not a manufacturing labor rather it is manufacturing overhead as machines used in manufacturing is not part of labor rather it is part of overhead.
A lot of the farmers moved to cities to work in factories. Most of them gave up farming for factory work.
As with many practical inventions, the demand for manual labor was greatly reduced and the working class was displaced, the value of the laborer decreased, and the nation was changed from the Jeffersonian Dream to an urban and industrialed nation.
Inventions such as Eli Whitney's cotton gin, John Deere's steel plow, and Cyrus McCormick's reaper made a direct impact on the agrarian lifestyle by means of increased convenience of harvest. As far as production of goods go, advancements in industrial factories increased the amount and speed of production (certain things such as mattresses, once only owned by the excessively wealthy, were now commonplace.) Also there were the textile mills' contribution to production methods and labor management.
Cyrus McCormick's reaper was a horse drawn machine that was used to cut down fields of hay. It saved from having to labor in the fields with a sickle. or to put it in simpler words it picked the cotton for the settlers and the settlement of the great plains
The mechanical reaper mechanized the harvest of grain products making it possible for a single person to harvest acres of grain as opposed to a large labor force.
Cyrus Hall McCormick of Virginia invented the mechanical reaper in July, 1831. By 1847, Cyrus McCormick began to mass manufacture it in a Chicago factory.The independent invention of two successful reaping machines - one by Obed Hussey in Ohio, who obtained the first patent in 1834, and by Cyrus McCormick in Virginia - brought about an end to tedious handiwork and encouraged the invention and manufacture of other labor-saving farm implements and machinery.The first reapers cut the standing grain and, with a revolving reel, swept it onto a platform from which it was raked off into piles by a man walking alongside. It could harvest more grain than five men using the earlier cradles. The next innovation, patented in 1858, was a self-raking reaper with an endless canvas belt that delivered the cut grain to two men who riding on the end of the platform, bundled it. Meanwhile, Cyrus McCormick had moved to Chicago, built a reaper factory, and founded what eventually became the International Harvester Company. In 1872 he produced a reaper which automatically bound the bundles with wire. In 1880, he came out with a binder which, using a magical knotting device (invented by John F. Appleby a Wisconsin pastor) bound the handles with twine.
The slave trade, though most popular in the Indies, did prosper in the deep South of America due to the shortage of workers. Thanks to Cyrus McCormick (inventer of the mechanical reaper) and Eli Whitney (inventer of the cotton gin), fewer slaves were needed.
The farming inventions increased efficiency and reduced the need for manual labor on farms, leading to a surplus of agricultural workers. This surplus population moved to cities in search of new job opportunities in emerging industrial sectors. Urban areas offered higher wages and access to amenities, leading to a shift in population from rural to urban areas.
-Urbanization -Labor rights for humans -New inventions
Made farming more efficient, and resulted in a global shift of labor from farmlands to cities.
The opening of new markets and availability of labor created the demand for inventions that sparked industrialization in Europe.
Railroads impact on the U.S. economy, making possible the transition to an urban industrial nation with high finance BY ps ms 219 students 7th grade students John , in 2012 to 2013
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