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  1. 17 de abr. de 2024 · Samuel Slater (born June 9, 1768, Belper, Derbyshire, England—died April 21, 1835, Webster, Massachusetts, U.S.) was an English American businessman and founder of the American cotton-textile industry.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. How Industrial Espionage Started America’s Cotton Revolution. To the British, Samuel Slater was ‘Slater the traitor,’ but to the Americans, he was the father of the American industrial...

  3. The New England mills and their labor force of free men depended on southern cotton based on slave labor. Slater also brought a Sunday school system from his native England to his textile factory at Pawtucket. In 1798, Samuel Slater split from Almy and Brown, forming Samuel Slater & Company in partnership with his father-in-law Oziel ...

  4. Samuel Slater introduced the first water-powered cotton mill to the United States. This invention revolutionized the textile industry and was important for the Industrial Revolution.

  5. 29 de may. de 2018 · Samuel Slater (1768 – 1835) was an English-born manufacturer who introduced the first water-powered cotton mill to the United States. This invention revolutionized the textile industry and paved the way for the Industrial Revolution .

  6. With the support of a Quaker merchant, Moses Brown, Slater built America's first water-powered cotton spinning mill in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

  7. 5 de oct. de 2019 · Slater defied the British law against the emigration of textile workers in order to seek his fortune in America. He arrived in New York in 1789 and wrote to Moses Brown of Pawtucket to offer his services as a textile expert.