#1: Pioneers were attracted to the vast, open lands of the west and brought with them new agricultural techniques. There were 563 universities and colleges in the United States by 1870 and nearly a thousand by 1910. Everyone wanted the goods and services this educated industrial nation produced. Literary traditions in colonial America sped up to keep up with dynamic progress. The nation achieved vital technological ability through the teachings of engineering and science.
#2: Americans combined their inherent skills with expanding knowledge to create a better life for themselves and future generations. This is known as the Century of Change, and it was a bumpy road to the progression of a perfect life. Numerous techniques and inventions like the sewing machine helped the vision to become real. Even though there were hardships and injustice among Americans, the contrast between social progress and laws was critical to George Washington’s Great Experience. Each new generation of American people took up the challenge to maintain and improve this Constitutional balance.