Abstract
Early textile enterprises faced no trends with greater reluctance than the integration of operations within a single factory and, considerably later, the assignment of formerly family-dominated, entrepreneurial functions to hired factory agents. Samuel Slater, the classic pioneer of factory production of textile yarns, was slow to accept these trends, and only the obvious inability of either him or his family to cope with a rapidly growing and changing industry in the 1820s and 1830s forced him to integrate spinning, weaving, and finishing operations and to turn over broad responsiblity in individual factories to what is perhaps the earliest example of the professional manager.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Business and International Management
Reference34 articles.
1. The Saco-Lowell Shops
2. Chandler Alfred D. Jr. , “Samuel Slater, Francis Cabot Lowell and the Beginnings of the Factory System in the United States” (unpublished paper, Harvard Business School, 1977), 23.
Cited by
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