The mounting conflict
between the colonies and England in the 1760s and 1770s reinforced a growing conviction
that Americans should be less dependent on their mother country for manufactures.
Spinning bees and bounties encouraged the manufacture of homespun cloth as a substitute
for English imports. But manufacturing of cloth outside the household was associated
with relief of the poor. In Boston and Philadelphia, Houses of Industry employed
poor families at spinning for their daily bread.

Such practices made
many pre-Revolutionary Americans dubious about manufacturing. After independence
there were a number of unsuccessful attempts to establish textile factories. Americans
needed access to the British industrial innovations, but England had passed laws
forbidding the export of machinery or the emigration of those who could operate
it. Nevertheless it was an English immigrant, Samuel Slater, who finally introduced
British cotton technology to America.
Slater had worked
his way up from apprentice to overseer in an English factory using the Arkwright
system. Drawn by American bounties for the introduction of textile technology,
he passed as a farmer and sailed for America with details of the Arkwright water
frame committed to memory. In December 1790, working for mill owner Moses Brown,
he started up the first permanent American cotton spinning mill in Pawtucket,
Rhode Island. Employing a workforce of nine children between the ages of 7 and
12, Slater successfully mechanized the carding and spinning processes.
A generation of
millwrights and textile workers trained under Slater was the catalyst for the
rapid proliferation of textile mills in the early 19th century. From Slater's
first mill, the industry spread across New England to places like North Uxbridge,
Massachusetts. For two decades, before Lowell mills and those modeled after them
offered competition, the "Rhode Island System" of small, rural spinning
mills set the tone for early industrialization.
By 1800 the mill
employed more than 100 workers. A decade later 61 cotton mills turning more than
31,000 spindles were operating in the United States, with Rhode Island and the
Philadelphia region the main manufacturing centers. The textile industry was established,
although factory operations were limited to carding and spinning. It remained
for Francis Cabot Lowell to introduce a workable power loom and the integrated
factory, in which all textile production steps take place under one roof.
As textile mills
proliferated after the turn of the century, a national debate arose over the place
of manufacturing in American society. Thomas Jefferson spoke for those supporting
the "yeoman ideal" of a rural Republic, at whose heart was the independent,
democratic farmer. He questioned the spread of factories, worrying about factory
workers' loss of economic independence. Alexander Hamilton led those who promoted
manufacturing and saw prosperity growing out of industrial development. The debate,
largely philosophical in the 1790s, grew more urgent after 1830 as textile factories
multiplied and increasing numbers of Americans worked in them.