Slater Mill and the Blackstone River-Birthplace of the American Industrial Revolution
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Slater Mill and the Blackstone River-Birthplace of the American Industrial Revolution
Slater Mill-original machinery (1830's); Wilkinson Mill-late 19th century version of David Wilkinson's screw lathe
Slater (1793) and Wilkinson (1810) Mills
You Say You Want a Revolution...
7/30/2014 - I come from a mill family. My father’s parents (Mémé and Pépé) worked in Rhode Island mills as children. So I’m not sure why-or maybe that’s why-I never visited the birthplace of the American Industrial Revolution and “The Rhode Island System”, in which families lived in mill towns and worked in the mills together. As an adult regularly coming back to visit family and “the old country” around Christmas, my only defense is that the Slater Mill Museum is only open March-October.
Samuel Slater not only worked in an English textile mill, but was a superintendent. Still, he wanted more. In a time when he could have been convicted of the crime of leaving England-they wanted to maintain their monopoly- he brought his expertise to a new state with money looking for expertise. He recreated the basic machinery for separating (carding) and spinning cotton into thread. He and his financiers built a mill in Pawtucket in 1793. With Slater’s knowledge and the power of the Blackstone River, the American Industrial Revolution began. Not satisfied with mere production, Slater envisioned a system where workers would live, work, and shop together- wives and children included-in a company owned village. Slater mill used his machinery to turn 500 pound cotton bales delivered practically to its door into cotton thread which was then sold to households and other mills to spin into fabric. My discovery of the day, this “Rhode Island System”, and child labor, were used until The Fair Labor Standards Act was enacted in 1938, which by the way, excludes manual agricultural work. The mill town system was used to company advantage in manufacturing and mining industries. Mill houses still exist in Rhode Island and other states. One end of my paper route as a kid was a row of mill houses, small dwellings cheaply made which sat across Manton Avenue from Atlantic Mills, which produced wool muslin, cotton, and khaki in its heyday.
The Slater Mill site was home to other mills. While Slater and his brother owned three mills at the site, one neighbor, the Wilkinson Mill, made machinery, hardware, and repair parts for Slater. David Wilkinson constructed a beautiful three story fieldstone building next to the “old mill” in 1810. Slater and Wilkinson shared a ditch to draw water from the Blackstone, powering water wheels under their factories. Wilkinson was a brilliant engineer and machinist. His screw lathe (1798) and threading lathe (1806) allowed mass manufacture of tools, weapons, and screws, which it is hard to imagine were once made individually, by hand, for each project. He created a grinder to make thread spindles for Slater Mill. He built and sailed a small steamboat down the Providence River in 1793. Although brilliant, his lathes didn’t sell, his ideas for steam powered machinery and boats were eclipsed (stolen?) by Robert Fulton, and his bad luck continued when he went broke in a textile depression and financial crisis.
Today I discovered a new appreciation for Rhode Island inventors, innovators, and generations of laborers, including my own family, that made this state the manufacturing powerhouse it once was. I wonder if any of them would appreciate a state that is tied for the highest unemployment rate and leads not in innovation, but government mismanagement, and where people keep inventing ways to take taxpayers’ money.
Samuel Slater: The Man Who Started a Revolution
Back in the good ol' days of the late 1700s, England had a well-evolved factory system, and they didn't want America to have anything to do with it. So, naturally, Americans put out bounties to English citizens saying that if they bring over the knowledge and start factories here, they would be rewarded immensely.
This offer caught the eyes of many poor factory workers; one of them was Samuel Slater.
As a young boy, Slater learned all about the process of manufacturing cotton yarn and was an extremely eager and attentive student, wanting to absorb all the information that he could before making his journey to America. Since it was illegal to export textile technology, such as parts, designs, and sketches, Slater memorized all the construction plans for the Arkwright factory.
Let that sink in for a second. This young boy memorized how to create a functional factory and every single detail that would have to be recreated perfectly! Most people can barely remember what they ate for breakfast.
After a few years in America, he had created a successful and modest factory with almost identical designs to British factories and produced yarn for many states. Curious investors saw his factory and designs and replicated them. In a few short years, there were many new companies popping up, and the American Industrial Revolution had begun.
The Industrial Revolution was the cause behind the production of railroads, canals, highs scale urbanization — or the creation of big cities — and an urban lifestyle. All the success of an industrious economy made America rich and united. This was all due to Samuel Slater and his pioneered factory.
He was the spark that ignited one of the most influential eras of American history.
For more information on Slater and the Industrial Revolution, check out the YouTube video posted below.