True
The amount of "manufacturing" in the United States more than doubled between 1860 and 1900.
South enslaved North no
Slavery had been outlawed in the North by 1860. Some slave-states were fighting for the North in the Civil War (1861-65), but they were not strictlyNorthern states.
From Texas up to North Carolina and some in Virginia
The North had 11 principle manufacturing sities, while the South had only 2. The huge copper, iron, and coal deposits in the North provided abudant resources for manufacturing, while the more extensive railroad system helped ditribute resources and products.
In 1860, Northern states had 110,000 manufacturing establishments. In contrast to this the South had only 18,000.
cotton textile manufacturing
Go to school and learn.
$41,782,731
While factories were built all over the North and South, the vast majority of industrial manufacturing was taking place in the North. The South had almost 25% of the country's free population, but only 10% of the country's capital in 1860. The North had five times the number of factories as the South.
Textile manufacturing
cities
The Midwest developed agriculturally, and its earliest important industries processed natural resources. Both a large absolute and percentage increase in manufacturing employment occurred in cities between 1860 and 1920; all levels-the nation, belt, and each section of the belt-participated
north
True
The amount of "manufacturing" in the United States more than doubled between 1860 and 1900.