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America was home to thousands of businesses and industries, ranging from small family-owned shops to giant undertakings such as coal mining and the timber industry. Many American businesses caught the attention of British writers for being... well... different! Here's a look at some of the businesses that thrived in Victorian America, from the manufacturer of sugar to the raising of alligators!
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- The First Century of the Republic #6: Progress in Manufacture, by David Wells
(Harper's Monthly, 1875A)
- A historical look at manufacturing and imports before and after the American Revolution and concludes with an interesting look at manufacturing statistics for a variety of industries in the US as of 1870. (Read the complete series.)
- The First Century of the Republic #9: Commercial Development, by Edward Atkinson
(Harper's Monthly, 1875B)
- (Read the complete series.)
- An American Enterprise
(Harper's Monthly, 1875B)
- The history of the express forwarding business of the US.
- Broken Banks and Lax Directors
(Century Magazine, 1882A)
- Why so many US banks were insolvent.
- Decorative Pottery of Cincinnati
(Harper's Monthly, 1881A)
- Pottery in the United States
(Harper's Monthly, 1881A)
- King Coal's Highway
(Harper's Monthly, 1882A)
- Transporting coal up the Mississippi.
- Some American Tiles
(Century Magazine, 1882A)
- Something About Cleveland "Pigs" [pig iron], by J.W. Steel
(Cassell's Family Magazine, 1882)
- Alligator Farming, by C.F. Gordon Cumming
(Cassell's Family Magazine, 1883)
- A Visit to a Canning House [in Baltimore], by Catherine Owen
(Cassell's Family Magazine, 1884)
- The Flour-Mills of Minneapolis, by Eugene V. Smalley
(Century Magazine, 1886B)
- Great American Industries: A Printed Book, by R.R. Bowker
(Harper's Monthly, 1887B)
- Great American Industries: A Sheet of Paper, by R.R. Bowker
(Harper's Monthly, 1887B)
- Labor and Capital: A Connecticut Experiment, by Washington Gladden
(Century Magazine, 1887B)
- The Seaside Institute in Bridgeport, Connecticut was built for the use and benefit of the female employees of the Warner Brothers Corset Company. It was designed as a dining, lecture and meeting hall with library, music and reading rooms for the benefit of these female employees, as well as a rooming-house.
- Landscape Gardeners Needed for America
(Century Magazine, 1887B)
- Sugar-Making in Louisiana, by Eugene V. Smalley
(Century Magazine, 1888A)
- The Alligator Hunters of Louisiana, by Andrews Wilkinson
(Century Magazine, 1892A)
- Meeting the demand of the alligator hide industry, particularly in Paris.
- American Railways and American Cities, by Henry J. Fletcher
(Atlantic Monthly, 1894)
- In and About a Lumber Camp, by Sara R. McIsaac
(Demorest, 1894)
- The Marvels of Bicycle-Making, by Cleveland Moffett
(McClures, 1897)
- A visit to the works of the Pope Manufacturing Company.
- Timber Titans, by George Dollar
(The Strand, 1897B)
- The California redwoods, and other noteworthy "timbers," plus a look at the American logging industry and the "Joggins Raft," a method of transporting large quantities of timber by water.
- A Common Crystal, by John R. Watkins
(The Strand, 1899A)
- A look at how salt is gathered and processed in Salton, California.
- Breaking Wild Horses for the Army
(Strand, 1901A)
- The largest firm of horse-breakers for the military was W.R. Grace and Co. of San Francisco, which provided horses for the British army.
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