SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 5 Section 3.

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SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 5 Section 3

Transcript of SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 5 Section 3.

Page 1: SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 5 Section 3.

SOCIAL IMPACT OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

Chapter 5 Section 3

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• The I.R. brought wealth to the entrepreneurs who set it in motion.

• For the millions of workers who the I.R. brought poverty, harsh living conditions and unsafe work environments.

SOCIAL IMPACT

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SOCIAL IMPACT CONTINUED

• Over time, the standard of living improved and people at all levels of society benefited from industrialization.

• Another benefit was that over time wages increased.

• Changes in farming, soaring population growth and an increasing demand for workers led masses of people to migrate from farms to cities to work in the factories. (Urbanization)

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SOCIAL IMPACT CONTINUED

• The I.R. created a new middle class along with the working class. • They owned and operated the new factories,

mines and railroads and lived a comfortable lifestyle and had money. • Middle class women did not work, but focused

on raising their families.

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SOCIAL IMPACT CONTINUED

• In contrast, working class families lived in poverty, packed into tenements with no running water or sewage system.

• Waste and garbage was thrown into the streets and rivers and led to the spread of disease.

• Many working class families found comfort in religion and specifically in Methodism, which helped angry workers focus on reform not Revolution.

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• Factory work was completely different than working on a farm. Workers faced a rigid schedule set by the factory whistle.

• Working hours were long (12-16 hrs day/six days a week.)

• Exhausted workers suffered accidents from machines without safety devices.

• Sick and injured workers lost their jobs. ( In textile factories/mills, workers breathed air filled with lint, which damaged their lungs.)

LIFE IN THE FACTORIES AND MINES

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LIFE IN THE FACTORIES AND MINES Cont.

• The majority of factory workers were women, because they thought they could manage them easier and could pay them less.

• Labor unions were illegal during the I.R. but secret unions existed and their frustration often led to violence.

• Textile workers known as Luddites smashed machines & burned factories to protest.

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LIFE IN THE FACTORIES AND MINES

• The I.R. increased demand for iron and coal and miners.

• Miners were paid more than factory workers but their working conditions were worse!

• They worked in the darkness and coal dust destroyed their lungs.

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LIFE IN THE FACTORIES AND MINES

• Children had horrible and dangerous jobs. Child labor laws were passed in the early 1800’s but rarely enforced.

• In the 1830’s & 1840’s however, British inspectors enforced the labor laws.