Goal 7.04: Examine the impact of technological changes on economic, social, and cultural life in the United States.

I.Electricity

  1. Widespread use of electrical power meant that factories could operate around the clock, producing huge numbers of cheap consumer goods
  2. It also meant that new electric appliances, such as ______and ______, were in demand for use in wealthier homes

II.Refrigeration

  1. Electricity also ushered in the age of refrigeration
  2. Allowed food to be preserved longer
  3. Fewer diseases from consuming spoiled food (especially meat)

III.Henry ______(1863 – 1947)

  1. Originally worked for Thomas Edison, but left after Edison dismissed automobiles as a “fad”
  2. Built his first car in 1896
  3. Founded Ford Motor Company in 1903
  4. Sold over 15,000,000 ______between 1908 and 1927
  5. "I will build a car for the great multitude. It will be large enough for the family, but small enough for the individual to run and care for. It will be constructed of the best materials, by the best men to be hired, after the simplest designs that modern engineering can devise. But it will be so low in price that no man making a good salary will be unable to own one—and enjoy with his family the blessing of hours of pleasure in God's great open spaces." --Henry Ford
  6. Use of ______lines
  7. Ford trained each worker to do one specific job; this led to greater efficiency
  8. Cars moved down the line from worker to worker having individual parts added along the way
  9. This led to faster production and greater production volume, thus lowering the cost of Fords
  10. $5 a day wages
  11. Ford also saw his workers as potential customers, wanted them to be able to buy cars themselves
  12. Offered the unheard of pay of $5 per day (as a minimum wage – some workers made more!), forcing wages to rise across US

IV.Airplanes

  1. Wilbur & Orville Wright, two Ohio bicycle mechanics developed their Wright Flyer
  2. First successful powered flight took place at ______, NC in 1903
  3. Charles ______(1902 – 1974)
  4. Rose to fame by becoming the first man to fly a non-stop solo trip across the Atlantic Ocean in 1927 in his plane Spirit of St. Louis
  5. In many ways, he demonstrated the commercial practicality of the airplane
  6. Airlines
  7. First commercial air travel in the US began in 1914
  8. Didn’t become profitable until the 1920s when Ford began producing it ______aircraft that could carry 12 passengers

V.Movies

  1. First “movie” was the 12-minute 1903 Edison film The Great Train Robbery
  2. Quickly became one of America’s favorite forms of cheap entertainment
  3. First “hit” movie was the 1915 film Birth of a Nation which earned over $10 million despite being over 3 hours long and portraying the ______as heroes
  4. First purpose-built movie theater opened in New Orleans in 1896 – seated about 90 people and showed travel films
  5. Movie theaters quickly became a “must” for any town – thousands had opened by 1920s

VI.Radio

  1. After 1913, technology allowed long-range radio transmissions
  2. 1926: National Broadcasting Company (NBC) formed
  3. 1928: Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) formed
  4. Radio programs became a staple of household entertainment; by 1929, 10 million radios were in use in the US
  5. ______Music
  6. Music that reflected the hectic pace of city life
  7. Scott ______(1867 – 1917) became known as the “King of Ragtime”

VII.Mass Culture

  1. US cultural trends became national rather than local – what was fashionable in dress, music, food, books, etc. was now more consistent across the country
  2. New consumer goods introduced
  3. Electric razors
  4. Disposable tissues
  5. Frozen foods
  6. Hair dye
  7. Washing machines
  8. Gas stoves
  9. Deodorant
  10. mouthwash
  11. ______
  12. Introduced in 1886 as a patent medicine
  13. Name came from its two primary ingredients: cocaine (from the coca plant) and caffeine (from the kola nut); cocaine dropped after 1903
  14. ______Cameras
  15. George Eastman introduced the first camera for amateur use in 1885 and expanded the market in 1900 with the introduction of the “Brownie” box camera
  16. The key element was the development of cheap film to capture photographic images rather than the heavy, expensive glass plates that cameras had used