Industrialization #2

Download Industrialization #2 Lesson Plan

Industrialization Lesson Plan 2 (PDF)

Summary

In this lesson plan, originally published on the Craft Revival website, students will interpret photographs and artifacts as representations of western North Carolina’s economy at the turn of the century. They will also analyze historical census data and produce a visual web that will represent the changing nature of the economy of western North Carolina.

BY PATRICK VELDE

Summary of activities

Students will:

  • interpret photographs/artifacts as representations of western North Carolina’s economy at the turn of the century
  • analyze historical census data as it relates to the evolution of the economy of Western North Carolina (increased industrialization, concentration of farm land, etc.)
  • produce a visual web that will represent the changing nature of the economy of Western North Carolina

Background information

Students will gain an understanding of the changing nature of the economy of western North Carolina during the Craft Revival. This was a period of serious disjuncture in the South, and the country as a whole, as small time farming shrank and industry grew. This change occurred throughout the nation. A series of factors contributed to the reduction of family farms in the Southern Appalachians. Corporations purchased large tracts of land, driving up property prices and taxes. Laws were enacted requiring livestock to be fenced, ending the era of free grazing in the mountains. Manufacturing centers took hold in many mountain counties and especially in piedmont area, drawing struggling farmers to wage labor. The draw of cash income was significant in an area that was based upon a barter system up to the Civil War. There were drastic social, cultural, and economic effects associated with this change.
The Craft Revival was a reaction to this process, an attempt at creating work that would allow mountaineer families to stay on their farms. Students will utilize critical thinking, creative processing, and factual styles of knowledge and learning. Students will also examine the complexity of utilizing an object or material culture as a historical source.

Learning outcomes

Students will

  • develop an understanding of the changing nature of the economy of western North Carolina during the Craft Revival
  • identify the industries affecting the farmers of southern Appalachia
  • evaluate the elements of industrial growth that Revival leaders reacted to
  • evaluate material artifacts as historical evidence

Teacher preparation

  • TIME REQUIRED FOR LESSON: This lesson can be completed in two block schedule days or four 45-minute class periods.
  • TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES: This lesson requires computer access with units for each student or sufficient for small groups.
  • MATERIALS/RESOURCES: Students will need poster board and other materials for creating visuals (markers, magazines, scissors, glue, etc.).

Pre-activities

Teacher preparation time will include exploring the Craft Revival website, particularly the profiles of Revival leaders in The People section and the Revival in Context and The Southern Highlands sections of The Story. The instructor will also need to explore the historical census search options from the University of Virginia and define the searches that students will conduct.
Students will need to explore The Story section of the website to gain an understanding of the context of the Craft Revival movement. Students should be instructed to focus on the People and Story sections.

Activities

Students will design a “visual web” that shows the representative nature of the object/image/activity chosen from the website. This visual will display the chosen item (which will be related to agricultural work or lifestyle) at the center of a web. They will then show branches out to a variety of other related activities with the student providing a visual representation of these activities. Taken as a whole, this visual web should provide a comprehensive understanding of the workings of the economy of western North Carolina during the Craft Revival. These branches will relate the processes examined in the historical census searches (manufacturing, extractive industries like mining/forestry, etc.). The instructor may wish to lead a discussion of the different industries moving into the area and other factors that affected the number of small family farms.

Students will explore the Craft Revival website and identify five objects/images/photos that they feel are representative of the primary culture and economy of western North Carolina at the time of the Craft Revival. An example may be a picture of a loom on the porch of a cabin. Students will explain how this photograph represents the economic lifestyle of the region. Or, a student may select a product to explain how they believe this object is representative of the area’s economic situation.

Students will write a brief explanation describing the relevance of each of these objects/images to what they believe is the economic basis of this region.

Along with consultation with the instructor, students will choose the one object/image that they feel is the best representation of western North Carolina’s economy and discuss it in greater detail in a journal entry or short essay. The focus of their writing will answer the question “What does this object or photograph tell us about western North Carolina’s economy?” Other questions for the student to consider include the following: How was this object made and what is the significance of that practice? What was the function/purpose of the object/activity? Does the object/activity reveal any sort of cultural or economic change taking place within western North Carolina communities?The expectation is that students will describe an image of the southern Appalachians as a backwards/isolated agricultural region. This is partly due to the “story” that the images and objects from the Craft Revival tell. Agriculture was a huge part of the economy, but it was not the sole economic means in this era. This would be an excellent opportunity to discuss historiography with students. As the Craft Revival leaders had a particular end in mind (the preservation of a pre-industrial society that they felt was beneficial to the people of Appalachia), the products and images produced under their direction perpetuated the story they wanted to tell. Students can wrestle with whether this was actually representative of the area or a construct of the middle class urban reformers.

Have students analyze information from the Historical Census Browser. This is a fairly comprehensive census search tool that allows for searches according to year as well as categorical searches. The instructor will need to look at the site before class to gain a familiarity with the search options and decide which search categories to utilize. Have students identify counties in western North Carolina and conduct searches for agricultural and manufacturing statistics for these counties. The instructor will need to define the searches students will conduct. Excellent options include the decrease in small farms at the expense of large concentrations of agricultural centers. This mirrors the national trend of the squeeze put on small time farmers. Another option is the growth of extractive industries in mountain and piedmont counties. As farming was less productive, many mountain families went to work in manufacturing facilities. Another option is a search for the number of wage laborers throughout the period.

Assessment

  1. Photo/object selection with explanations
  2. Journal entry
  3. Visual web
  4. Test (information from this lesson may be incorporated into a unit test)

Supplemental information

Comments

This lesson can easily be adapted to other states of the southern Appalachians. Historical census searches can be conducted by state and further broken down by county. Instructors may wish to highlight coal mining areas of Kentucky or other developments.

Further Resources

North Carolina Essential Standards - SOCIAL STUDIES Grade 8

8.H.1 Apply historical thinking to understand the creation and development of North Carolina and the United States. 8.H.1.1 Construct charts, graphs, and historical narratives to explain particular events or issues.
8.H.1.2 Summarize the literal meaning of...
8.H.3 Understand the factors that contribute to change and continuity in North Carolina and the United States. 8.H.3.1 Explain how migration and immigration contributed to the development of North Carolina and the United States from colonization to contemporary.