1 / 15

Chapter 7, Lesson 1 An Industrial Nation

Chapter 7, Lesson 1 An Industrial Nation. Mr. Julian’s 5 th Grade Class. Essential Question. How did new inventions change life in the United States?. Places. Detroit, Michigan Los Angeles, California. People. Henry Ford Guglielmo Marconi David Sarnoff Frank Conrad. Vocabulary.

kylar
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7, Lesson 1 An Industrial Nation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7, Lesson 1An Industrial Nation Mr. Julian’s 5th Grade Class

  2. Essential Question • How did new inventions change life in the United States?

  3. Places • Detroit, Michigan • Los Angeles, California

  4. People • Henry Ford • Guglielmo Marconi • David Sarnoff • Frank Conrad

  5. Vocabulary • Assembly line • Mass production • Mass media

  6. Ford’s Model T • Few inventions impacted life more than Henry Ford’s Model T. • At the time cars were all hand made and very expensive. • Ford could sell cars at a low price because he used an assembly line to build his cars. • In this process a car could be built in just 90 minutes.

  7. Ford’s Model T • Ford built his first assembly line in Detroit, Michigan. • By 1920, ½ of all the cars on the road were Model T’s. • In all, more than 15 million cars were made, all painted black.

  8. A Nation of Drivers • By 1929, there were 26 million cars on the road. • This led to better roads and traffic tickets for bad drivers. • The increase of cars led to the growth in other industries. • More jobs meant more money for more Americans. • The car gave freedoms that we never before available.

  9. The Age of Radio • Ford’s assembly line spread to other businesses. • Mass production is making large number of goods that are exactly alike. • The inventor of the radio, Guglielmo Marconi, sent the first radio message across the Atlantic Ocean in 1901. • David Sarnoff suggested that the radio could be used to broadcast news, entertainment, and sports.

  10. The Age of Radio • Frank Conrad developed the technology to make commercial radio possible. • The first radio station opened on November 2, 1920 in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. • People started listening to the radio for comedies, drams, and music.

  11. Mass Media • Radio companies needed a way to raise money. • They started to advertise products on the radio. • Many soap companies paid for the romantic dramas on the radio, they got the nickname “Soap Operas.” • Mass media are ways to reach a large audience.

  12. Mass Media • Families gathered around the radio to listen to their favorite programs. • People started buying the same products, which encouraged a common American culture.

  13. Going to the Movies • Radio was not the only form of entertainment in the U.S. • Movies were originally made without talking and they were only a few minutes long. • Hollywood, part of Los Angeles, California, became the center for movie making. • Movies also encouraged a common culture.

  14. Timeline • 1901 – Guglielmo Marconi sent the first radio message across the Atlantic Ocean. • 1908 – Henry Ford introduced the Model T automobile. • 1920 – The world’s first licensed radio station, KDKA in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania began broadcasting.

  15. Writing Response • In 6 sentences or more answer the essential question: How did new inventions change life in the United States? • You may use your book or notes to assist you. Use your best writing style!

More Related