Why did many English families decide to abandon farms to work in factories?

a) If an entire family, including children, worked in a mill, they could earn a better living than on a farm.
b) New schooling requirements put in place by many landlords meant that families lost their children’s farm labor, whereas factories had no such restrictions.
Consider This: Factory families might be able to afford sugar, tea, shoes, and other items. See 7.3: Manufacturing Marvels.
c) Farmers were wary of working in factories, but the owners offered them stock in the companies, so many eventually agreed to change jobs.
Consider This: Factory families might be able to afford sugar, tea, shoes, and other items. See 7.3: Manufacturing Marvels.
d) English farm production had increased to the point where many fewer workers were needed in the countryside, making factory jobs essential for laid-off farmers.
Consider This: Factory families might be able to afford sugar, tea, shoes, and other items. See 7.3: Manufacturing Marvels.


a) If an entire family, including children, worked in a mill, they could earn a better living than on a farm.

History

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Which statement best characterizes how the increase in immigration changed the U.S. economy in the mid-1800s?

a. Immigration hindered economic growth because immigrants came in such large numbers that there were not enough resources for everyone. b. Immigration slowed down the Industrial Revolution because immigrants launched frequent and effective labor protests. c. Immigration boosted the economy because immigrants provided much of the capital that was needed for infrastructure and entrepreneurship. d. Immigration boosted the economy by providing the skilled labor that was desperately needed in the labor force. e. Immigration accelerated the Industrial Revolution by providing a large pool of cheap factory labor.

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________ outlived Abelard by twenty years and devoted herself to reforming the rules of women's cloisters

A. Eleanor B. Héloïse C. Sorbonne D. Louise

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The chief legal counsel to the president, and the man who linked Richard Nixon to the Watergate cover-up, was John Mitchell

a. True b. False Indicate whether the statement is true or false

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The Smoot-Hawley tariff of 1930 was

a. a tax on raw materials for industrialization. b. a means to supply the USSR with machines for the Lend-Lease program. c. an economic embargo imposed by the European Allies against German imports in retaliation for suspension of reparations payments. d. a protective tariff on imported goods applied by the United States to stimulate the domestic economy. e. a plan to tax participants in the League of Nations to pay for rebuilding the European economy.

History