steam engine
COAL :)
why
The factories should be built away from cities.
an industrialist a person/individual who is in possession of large industrial enterprise. Many industrialists are opposed to current measures to cut the amount of CFC's their factories create because it could have a negative impact on profit ect.
invention of the steam engine allowed factories to end their dependence on the waterwheel and thus, ended the need to be located next to streams or rivers.
Provided people with abundent work force and also created greater demands for the consumer goods manufactered by factories
(Apex) More American workers relocating to urban centers.
Generally speaking, the slavery in the South and its agrarian economy led to its downfall. The North had good farmland and did not depend on slave labor.
The Industrial revolution in the U.S. first began in New England- Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont, and New Hampshire, because they were close to resources such as coal, iron, and especially rushing rivers and streams. The rivers and streams provided the waterpower necessary to run the machinery in the new factories. They also had many ports coming from the South shipping goods such as cotton and cloth to New England factories.
Commercial geography is geography with a particular concern for the locations of goods and the methods and paths by which they are transported. This kind of geography would be important for industrialists to be aware of because it directly concerns their business. They would need to know where the raw materials are that help them manufacture their goods, the best paths to get them to factories, and the best routes to get finished products out to the markets.
Firstly, the responce given to the steam engine was not good. The industries had not started using it as soon as it was improved by James watt. But gradually the invention and its benefits came into news and the industrialists started buying the steam engines for their factories
Ronald Packman is an author known for writing books on creativity, leadership, and innovation in organizations. Some of his notable works include "The Creativity Imperative" and "The Innovation Formula." Packman's writings often focus on practical strategies for fostering creativity and advancing innovation in the workplace.