How Did The West Affect The Industrial Revolution

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The West was mostly affected in the Industrial Revolution with the new types of transportation. The first of two major machines was the boat. Instead of hoping to get good wind for sailing, Robert Fulton invented the First steam-powered boat, which meant that boats could constantly be moving no matter what the wind is doing. But people had problems with boats. To get to the soon-to-be California you have to go under South America and back up. That can take weeks so people started making canals, which is when they cut through land almost like a shortcut. People would use canals for many years. Some famous canals were the Erie canal, which connects to the Erie lake, and the Panama canal, which was the hardest canal ever to be built, which made it easy to travel to the far west of America versus going all around the South American border, and the Suez canal which was the first canal to ever be made. …show more content…
Many steel companies like Peter Cooper wanted to use the steel to make not only the body of the train but also the train tracks that the trains need to move. Now, people could travel anywhere. (except it could only go on land and they would always need a massive surplus of steel) There was two ways people used trains, travel and transportation. For travel, people could move around faster than ever before. They even made a railroad that traveled from one end of the U.S to the other. And for transportation, people could now send say, oil or lumber from Georgia by railroad to New York where they used oil and lumber and they can do it faster and cheaper than ever. But there was one more invention that would change the world