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- Transportation in the 19th Century
-
- During the first half of the 19th century, improvements in transportation developed rather quickly.
- Roads, steamboats, canals, and railroads all had a positive effect on the American economy. They
- also provided for a more diverse United States by allowing more products to be sold in new areas
- of the country and by opening new markets.
-
- Copied from ideas begun in England and France, American roads were being built everywhere. In
- an attempt to make money, private investors financed many turnpikes, expecting to profit from the
- tolls collected. Although they did not make as much money as expected, these roads made it
- possible for cheaper (not cheap) domestic transportation of goods. It still cost more to transport a
- ton of freight a few miles over land than it did to send it across the Atlantic Ocean. But because of
- turnpikes, for the first time, goods were able to make it over the formidable Appalachian
- mountains.
-
- The steamboat was the first economical means of inland transport. It was faster and cheaper then
- the rafts used before them. Additionally, the steamboats made it possible to travel back up the
- Mississippi, allowing farmers and lumbermen to come down by raft, and travel home in the
- luxurious comfort of a steamboat after selling their goods. This also made the northwest less
- self-dependent because it was now able to purchase southern goods.
-
- While steamboats sparked the economy on the western frontier, canals became increasingly
- popular on the east coast. Although expensive ($25,000 per mile), and difficult to build, canals
- were an important source for those farmers and merchants who needed a cheap method of inland
- transportation. The water allowed horses, once only able to pull a ton of materials, to now pull
- over a hundred tons with the same amount of work.
-
- These canals were not only economical for exporters, but also for the state. Tolls alone collected
- from the Erie Canal had, by 1825, already paid for the entire project ($7,000,000), and now was
- making a substantial amount of profit.
-
- Even though it had not totally expanded yet, the cheapest, most economical method of
- transportation was the railroad. Speed, durability, and safety all contributed to the success of it.
- State legislatures and the national government all provided aid to the railroad companies by
- decreased the tax on rail iron.
-
- During this time period, manufacturing also boomed. New ideas and inventions made it faster to
- produce products. However, it is because of these new modes of transportation that this was ever
- able to occur. The cotton gin, invented by Eli Whitney, would never have been able to develop
- fully if the transportation system did not make it easy to obtain cotton from the south.
-
- With these new technological breakthroughs, American economic growth was significantly
- increased. By allowing cheaper importation and exportation of goods, manufacturers were able to
- produce more of these products. Also, it opened new markets to different places. In the
- northwest, where coffee was an expensive luxury (costing almost seventeen cents per pound), it
- was now a common item. The steamboat reduced the price by over thirteen cents. Also, our new
- transportation system helped other regions work together. And aside from material items, our
- country benefited economically from tourism. Any tourist to the New York area would not miss
- "The Great Western Canal."
-
- So although manufacturing did have a significant role in developing the American economy, it is
- because of transportation that manufacturing could have ever improved.