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The American Manufacturing Frontier, 1870-1940

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2012

Robert F. Severson Jr.
Affiliation:
Faculty Adviser atUniversity of Illinois

Abstract

Difficult statistical problems notwithstanding, it is possible to trace the course in time and place of a gradual transition from agrarian to industrial pursuits. On occasion, this transition was slowed or reversed by cyclical influences, but the long-term trend of manufacturing concentration was away from the East. As the manufacturing frontier shifted, the service industries moved in and currently employ much of the capital and labor of the old industrial centers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1960

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References

1 Walker, F. A., Superintendent of Census, Department of Interior, A Compendium of the Ninth Census (June, 1870), U. S. G. P. O. (Washington, 1872)Google Scholar.

2 United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Census, U. S. Census of Manufactures, 1954, and Annual Report on the Labor Force, 1954, Series P-50, No. 59, and U. S. Census of Mineral Industry, 1954, and U. S. Census of Agriculture, 1954, U. S. G. P. O. (Washington, 1955)Google Scholar.

3 Thorp, W. L. and Mitchell, W. C., Business Annals, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. (New York, 1926)Google Scholar.

4 Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Annual Report, 1955, Growth and Prosperity in Five Midwest Cities, F. R. B. (Chicago, 1955)Google Scholar; and Annual Report, 1956, Big Thriving Economies: Indianapolis and Milwaukee, F. R. B. (Chicago, 1956)Google Scholar.