The Path to Mechanized Shoe Production in the United StatesIn 1800, shoes in the United States were made by craftsmen, each trained to create an entire shoe. A century later, shoes were mass-produced in factories employing dozens of machines and specialized workers. Ross Thomson describes this transition from craft to mechanized production in one of the largest American industries of the nineteenth century. |
Contents
Markets and the Evolution of Production | |
New Means of Production and the Manufacturing Dynamic | |
Prospects | |
Potential Usage | |
The Birth of the Sewing Machine | |
The Virtuous Circle of Failure | |
Repeat Inventors | |
The Goodyear Machine | |
18621901 | |
Estimates of Annual Shoe Output 18591899 | |
Internal versus External Determinants | |
Inventive Leadership and Integration | |
Two Results | |
Old Paths and | |
The Path of Sewing Machine Development | |
Ongoing Mechanization and New Sectors | |
Agencies 1862 1866 1872 and 1882 | |


