Sam Patch the famous jumper written by Paul E. Johnson and published in 2003 not only follows the story of the first American daredevil but also the story of American Industrialization. There were many things that changed throughout this period, including transportation, technology, politics, and immigration. The change in America that brought Patch to becoming a daredevil was the rise in new transportation. He did not like how people were destroying something so beautiful just to make traveling easier. The industrialization of transportation included that building of canals, bridges, and railroads. All of these made travel so much easier in America. Between 1820 and 1860 the industrialization of transportation helped with urbanization in westward expansion. The population in urbanized areas doubled between these years due to easier, cheaper, and faster travel. Not only was it easier for people to travel, but also goods could travel up to ninety percent faster than before letting people out west send their goods to the major towns for profit. Along with sending goods farther, the new ways of transportation also helped in the transportation of the large amount of immigrants newly arriving in America. Due to an increase in immigrants, the coast was overflowing with people. Thanks to the railroads, canals, and bridges these immigrants can …show more content…
He wanted to show that no matter how much heads of companies wanted people to look like each other and do the same things every day, they could never take away a person’s individualism. Towards the middle of his jumps he began gaining money and fame. This shows that no matter who one is, the gain of money affects everyone. Once someone becomes famous, they want even more glory and money to go along with their career. Due to the bringing up of Patch, a poverty stricken family, he knew how it was to be poor and did not want to return to that
Industrial and Transportation Revolution During the late 1800s, the United States economy changed due to new inventions, remarkably rapid growth, and new forms of communication and transportation. Different factories were being built, and manufacturers had begun to reorganize the way of work. Factories and workers were going from hand production to machinery. The Industrial Revolution marked a turning point.
2. In what ways did development in transportation bring about economic and social change in the United States in the period 1810-1840? Thesis: The developments in transportation in the early 19th century brought about the completion of new canals and roads, these developments linked the east to the west an example of this on page 161 in amsco is “The completion of the Erie canal in New York state in 1825 was a major event in linking the economies of western farms and eastern cities” This is showing that transportation simulates an economic dependency of the cities on the farms in which they are receiving goods from.
Sam Patch, the Famous Jumper. Sam Patch was numerous things in his life, from a famous falls jumper to a poor mill worker to also the first American- born boss spinner. He started his career by jumping off a bridge in Paterson, New Jersey, in which he was objecting of a new bridge in a forest area. Sam patch became a personality in America through his many efficacious jumps. He started to jump not for fame, but to achieve his goals and overcome himself .Sam
In the late 19th century there was a spike in Railroad Construction in the United States. The growth began as a result of congress passing the Pacific Railroad Bill in 1862 which began the construction of the Transcontinental Railroads. In the near future the Transcontinental Railroads would connect both sides of the United States, therefore they would eventually lead up to the settling of the west. Railroads in the late 19th century would affect the settling of the west by allowing people to travel to find work in an efficient manner, by allowing faster and more efficient methods to transport goods to consumers, and improving the economy overall. Starting off Railroads greatly impacted travel time from one place to another.
The 1860-1900 age was lacking transportation, however the sudden spark through technological growth helped solve that issue. Throughout the gilded age there was a lack of technology in the area of transportation. Most goods and resources were taken on horseback and this whole process was tedious and unnecessary. Then the transcontinental Railroad came along, this railroad changed the United States forever it allowed us to transport goods much easier then we were ever able to before. The Transcontinental Railroad was created May 10, 1869 and is 1,912 miles long.
Due to all of this, railroads changed times of transportation immensely . Whether if it was for traveling passengers trying to get from one place to another, or to transport goods . Railroads connecting around United States made it easy to transport goods and especially food that could rot such as fruits, vegetables, milk, and even time sensitive documents and items. Because of the rapid transportation it also increased the market for the items that were being sold . Also the faster transportation of people made traveling easier whether being a tourist or for the people who now had the option to commute to work even if they lived far.
Transportation was getting easier on water and on land. During the Industrial Revolution many canals and roads were built, which connected cities and united the nation more. When the National Road was completed in 1818, the nation was even more united. Travel was made easier and trade increased. The Erie Canal made the Ohio River Valley and Great Lakes Region more available for settlement and trade when it was finished in 1825.
The preface talked about how Sam Patch didn’t have many records to retell his tell. Patch’s family weren’t famous they never appeared in newspapers or keep diaries. Patch never made a bibliography, but there were records such as tax lists and church records. So this made it hard to for the author to tell the beginning of Patch’s story. However, Sam Patch once became one of the first daredevils in America and became a famous celebrity there was much more evidence during his career.
Factory workers started to produce more consumer goods and transport them because they became in high demand. Another way the new transportation effected the economy is it made it easier for people to travel from one place to another. This is how people started moving towards the East coast to the West coast. Many of these people were immigrants from Germany and Ireland which started to lead to tension and violence between one another. (pg. 264)
Sam Patch the Famous Jumper written by Paul E. Johnson, who is a professor at University of South Carolina. Sam Patch was an ordinary factory worker who became not the hero the common man needed, but the one they deserved and brought forth many impacts towards the people of America during the Jacksonian Era. The novel focus on the idea of a common citizen escaping the fixed social expectations that society has set forth and earning the rank of a beloved celebrity amongst America. Sam Patch was born in 1800 and was brought to this world in poverty with no land in Rhode Island. As he was growing up, he worked at a factory mill as a talented mule spinner.
In “Sam Patch, the Famous Jumper” Sam Patch is a man that is known for being a mill worker for Pawtucket, who turned in to a celebrity by being a professional daredevil jumper. Patch was raised poor and uneducated, but despite this he had a very special talent that led him to be titled as an American hero. Patch was a factory worker; therefore he understood the way American industrialization worked, the way things started changing in America and how it affected the country. The American Industrial Revolution in the Early Republic Period (1800-1837), was the time America started changing.
Throughout American History, revolutions in transportation have affected the American society politically, socially and economically. Soon after the war of 1812, American nationalism increased which leads to a greater emphasis on national issues, the increase in power and prevalence of the national government and a growing sense of the American Identity. Railways, canals, and Turnpikes began to increase making many people employed. The era of 1830-1860 represents a shift from agrarianism to industrialism. Overall, during the transportation revolution, construction of turnpikes, roads, canals, and railroads led to the market economy expansion, an increased population in America and alternations of the physical landscape of America.
With the advent of the railroad, many of these issues disappeared. Railroads had a major impact on advancing the American economy, transforming America into a modern society, and improving an antiquated transportation system. The building of railroads created rapid economic growth in America. Railroad companies employed more than one million workers to build and maintain railroads. At the same time, coal, timber, and steel industries employed thousands of workers to provide the supplies necessary to build railroads (Chapter 12 Industrialization).
I want you to close your eyes and imagine, think to yourself, have you ever made an impact on society, what was it? Today, I’m hear to speak to you about how _Lizzie _, and _Sam Berns_, have made a positive impact on society and the the characteristics I need to improve on to make a positive impact on society/the characteristics I possess that are overlooked but are making a positive impact on society To begin Sam Berns represents someone who is very brave and confident. For example, Sam Berns he is very weak and can 't lift that much weight. But Sam was brave and confident enough to create a new snare drum harness so he could fulfill his dream of playing in the marching band.
The building of roads, canals and railroads played a large role in the United States during the 1800s. They served the purpose of connecting towns and settlements so that goods could be transported quickly and more efficiently. These goods could be transported fast, cheap and in safe way through the Erie Canal that was built to connect the Great Lakes to New York. Railroads were important during Civil War as well, because it helped in the transportation of goods, supplies and weapons when necessary. These new forms of transportation shaped the United States into the place that it is today.