[Image: Library of Congress]
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The War of 1812 concluded in 1815, and in the decades to
come, the United States developed a vast transportation system, a national
bank, and interstate trade. The economy blossomed, and canals, roads, cities,
and industrialization expanded.
England’s defeat in the War of 1812 also removed barriers
to westward expansion and, tragically, accelerated Native American removal.
Two hundred years ago, the United States stood at the edge
of a frontier — both literally and figuratively. So what was life like at that
exciting time?
Population: By
1815, the United States had grown into a country of 8,419,000 people, including
about 1.5 million slaves. (Official estimates are available for the entire
population in 1815, but slave counts were conducted during the censuses of 1810
and 1820. In the 1810 census, there were 1,191,362 slaves; by the 1820 census,
there were 1,538,022 slaves).
While a population of less than 10 million seems
small compared to today’s count of over 320 million people, the population in
1815 had more than doubled since the country’s first census, taken in 1790,
when there were 3,929,214 people. The population would continue to increase by
more than 30 percent each decade for much of the 19th century.
Almost all of this growth was due to high birth rates, as
immigration was low in 1815, slowed by European wars that raged from 1790 to
1815. Only about 8,000 per year entered during this period. The 1820 census
counted 8,385 immigrants, including one from China and one from Africa.
Food: Because these
innovations in transportation were still in their infancy in 1815, however,
most Americans ate what they grew or hunted locally. Corn and beans were
common, along with pork. In the north, cows provided milk, butter, and beef,
while in the south, where cattle were less common, venison and other game
provided meat. Preserving food in 1815, before the era of refrigeration,
required smoking, drying, or salting meat. Vegetables were kept in a root
cellar or pickled.
For those who had to purchase their food, one record notes
the following retail prices in 1818 in Washington, D.C.: beef cost 6 to 8 cents
a pound, potatoes cost 56 cents a bushel, milk was 32 cents a gallon, tea 75
cents to $2.25 a pound. Shoes ran $2.50 a pair. Clothing expenses for a family
of six cost $148 a year, though the record does not indicate the quality of the
clothes.
Life Expectancy: The
boom in native population in the early 19th century was even more remarkable
considering the low life expediencies of the time. By one estimate, a white man
who had reached his 20th birthday could expect to live just another 19 years. A
white woman at 20 would live, on average, only a total of 38.8 years. If
measuring from birth, which counted infant mortality, life expectancy would
have been even lower.
A white family in the early 19th century would typically
have seven or eight children, but one would die by age one and another before
age 21. And, of course, for slaves, childhood deaths were higher and life expectancy
was even lower. About one in three African American children died, and only
half lived to adulthood.
Disease was rampant during this time. During the War of
1812, which concluded in 1815, more soldiers died from disease than from
fighting. The main causes of death for adults during this period were malaria
and tuberculosis, while children most commonly died from measles, mumps, and
whooping cough, all preventable today.
Housing: More
than four out of every five Americans during the early 19th century still lived
on farms. Many farmers during this time also made goods by hand that they’d
use, barter, or sell, such as barrels, furniture, or horseshoes. Cities
remained relatively small and were clustered around East Coast seaports: New
York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Boston, and Charleston, South Carolina. In the
1810 census, New York, the largest, was home to 96,373 people. By 1820, the
population would reach 123,706.
Employment: Industrialization
would soon accelerate urbanization. In England, the Industrial Revolution had
begun in the mid-18th century, and despite attempts made to restrict the export
of technology, in 1789, a 21-year-old Englishman memorized the plan for a textile
mill and then opened a cotton-spinning plant in Rhode Island. By 1810, more
than 100 such mills, employing women and children at less than a dollar a week,
were operating throughout New England. By the 1830s, textile production would
become the country’s largest industry.
Wages for other industries during the time ranged from $10
to $17 a month for seamen. Farm laborers after the end of the War of 1812
earned $12 to $15 dollars a month. A male school teacher earned $10 to $12 a
month; a female teacher earned $4 to $10. In Massachusetts, a tailor and
printer could both expect to earn $6 a week, while a servant might earn only 50
cents a week.
Transportation: Industrialization
affected the country in other ways, of course. In 1815, there were no steam
railroads in America, so long-distance travel was by horseback or uncomfortable
stagecoach over rutted roads. Cargo moved by horse-team was limited to 25-30
miles a day. But in 1811, Congress signed a contract for the construction of
the National Road, the first highway built by the national government. By 1818,
it had crossed the Appalachian Mountains, fostering westward expansion.
In 1815, Americans were also discovering steamboat travel.
In 1807, Robert Fulton had opened the first steamboat ferry service, between
Albany and New York City. By 1815, advances in technology allowed a rival to
ferry arms and ammunition to General (later President) Andrew Jackson at the
Battle of New Orleans, the last battle of the War of 1812, and then to steam
back up the Mississippi and then the Ohio to Pittsburgh, proving the
feasibility of steamboat navigation of the mighty river.
Entertainment: For
recreation, horse racing became increasingly popular by the time of the War of
1812. Singing and sheet music became widely popular, particularly “broadside
songs,” or lyrics printed on a sheet of paper and sold for a penny. The sheet
had no music, but instructed the purchaser which popular, well-known tune the
words could be sung to. The songs often had to do with current political or military
events. At the other end of the artistic spectrum, the Boston Handel and Haydn
Society, formed in 1815, performed Handel’s “Messiah” in its opening concert.
Finally, singing played a large part in one of the most
significant social movements of the time — and in all of America’s history —
the Second Great Awakening. From 1790 to 1830, wave after wave of Protestant
evangelism swept across the country. Tens of thousands of people would attend a
single camp meeting, marked by enthusiastic preaching and audience singing and
participation. These more informal services, led by itinerant preachers, also
helped tie settlers on the Western frontier to the cultural life of the rest of
the country. The Second Great Awakening also fostered greater participation by
women and African Americans, who continued developing their artistic
traditional of spiritual music during this period.
By: Sandie
Angulo Chen
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