| WORK, EXCHANGE, & TECHNOLOGY | PEOPLING | POLITICS & POWER | IDEAS, BELIEFS, & CULTURE | IDENTITY |
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1810 | Congress approves funds for a National Road (1806) First American textile factory opens in Waltham, Massachusetts (1814)
| | Struggle to expand the suffrage begins with Maryland reformers Martin Van Buren creates first statewide political machine (1817–1821) Missouri crisis (1819–1821) over slavery
| In rural areas, people of different ranks share a common culture Upper-class women sponsor charitable organizations
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1820 | New England shoe industry expands Erie Canal completed (1825) Henry Clay’s “American System” of government-assisted development Market economy expands nationwide
| | | Benevolent reform movements Emerson champions transcendentalism Charles Finney and others advance revivalist religion Industrialism fragments society into more distinct classes and cultures
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1830 | U.S. textiles compete with British goods Canal systems expand trade in eastern U.S. Financial panic of 1837 begins six-year depression Boom in cotton output Increase in waged work sparks conflict between labor and capital
| | Tariff battles (1828, 1832) and nullification Whig Party forms (1834) Jackson destroys Second Bank, expands executive power
| Temperance crusade expands Joseph Smith and Mormonism Middle-class culture spreads Slavery defended as a “positive good” Urban popular culture (sex trade and minstrelsy)
| W. L. Garrison’s American Anti-Slavery Society (1833) Female Moral Reform Society (1834) defines gender identity Texas gains independence (1836)
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1840 | | | Log cabin campaign (1840) Second Party System flourishes Lawyers emerge as political leaders
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1850 | Severe recession cuts industrial jobs (1858) Railroads connect Midwest and eastern ports Cotton production and prices rise, as does the cost of enslaved laborers
| | | American Renaissance: Melville, Whitman, and Hawthorne Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852)
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