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Manufacturing Advantage
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Manufacturing Advantage

Lindsay Schakenbach Regele on war and the origins of American industry

Originally published on April 3, 2019 (Episode 105)

Introduction

George Washington enjoyed designing uniforms, both his own and those of other soldiers. But during the Revolution he mostly despaired at the lack of cloth and shoes for his men. That revolutionary struggle for supplies shaped American industrial policy for decades.

In Manufacturing Advantage: War, the State, and the Origins of American Industry, 1776–1848 (Hopkins, 2019), Lindsay Schakenbach Regele argues that military needs for textiles, guns, and ammunition forged a de facto partnership between government and industry. This “military-industrial” relationship long predated the twentieth century.


About the Guest

Lindsay Schakenbach Regele is Associate Professor of History at Miami University (Ohio). Her research explores the connections between politics, war, and industry in the early United States.


For Further Investigation


Listen & Discuss

  • How did wartime needs shape early American industry?

  • Does Regele’s argument change how we think about the origins of the “military-industrial complex”?

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