The Industrial Revolution
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Transcript of The Industrial Revolution
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The Industrial Revolution
1700-1900
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Living From the Land
Part 1
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Living From the Land
Industrial Revolution: During the 1700s and 1800s, agricultural and industrial innovations led to profound changes in society. e.g. cloth making
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A Harsh Way of Life
Pre-Industrial Revolution: farming = main source of income
Death rate – very high London – largest city
in Europe in 1750
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Village Life
Wealthy control village land, families rent in small stripsFair land distribution amongst peasantsSubsistence farming
Coordinated farming No fences – village commons
Graze livestock
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Village Life (cont’d)
Self-sufficiency – minimal trade from village to village
Rich landowners own all the land in the village
Poorer villagers (land renters) – small, dank cottages
Center of life = farming Whole family contributed
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Early Industries
Making wool – domestic system (or “cottage industry”)Merchant buys raw fiber Women and
children clean, sort, spin Merchant collects yarn, pays, takes it to weaver Men weave Merchant pays and picks up woven cloth takes it to the fuller Fuller shapes and cleans Dyer…dyes Merchant sells finished cloth or clothing
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Early Industries (cont’d)
Mining coal Coal fields = under
farmland Labor = Women and
children $$$ from mining used to
buy small luxuries
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The Beginnings of Change
Part 2
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The Beginnings of Change
Landowners want to end open-field system – need more space for raising sheep (wool prices are high) – increase efficiency, productivity
Enclosure Movement Mixing soils, crop
rotation
Carrot…
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Great Britain Leads the Way Success in farming Capital to invest Capital: $ to invest in labor, machines, and
raw materials Parliament passes laws to encourage
investment, growth of businesses *Natural resources – harbors,
rivers, coal, iron The climate – damp, cool
good for textiles *Iron to make STEEL
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Great Britain Leads the Way
Better farming = more food = more people with longer lives
Farm machinery less farming jobs; farmers look for work in cities
Entrepreneurs: businesspeople who set up industries by bringing together capital, labor, and new industrial inventions
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Growing Textile Industries
Advances in machineryJohn Kay – “flying shuttle”James Hargreaves – spinning jennyRichard Arkwright – water frameSamuel Crompton – spinning jenny + water
frame = “spinning mule”
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Growing Textile Industries (cont’d)
Producing more clothEdmund Cartwright – power loomEli Whitney – cotton gin
Invention of the cotton gin prolongs and expands slavery in the USA
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The Factory System
Cloth production moved out of homes (domestic system) and into large buildings
(factories) near major waterways More sources of energy needed to run
factoriesJames Watt – steam engine*Set Industrial Revolution in full motion*
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SteamEngine
TextileFactory
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Industrial Developments
Henry Bessemer – cheap method to convert iron to steel
Improvements to railways and all-weather (paved) roads
Canals Robert Fulton – created the first
steamboat Richard Trevithick – steam locomotive
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George Stephenson’s “The Rocket”
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The Growth of Industry
Part 3
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Spread of Industry Great Britain – “the workshop of the world” Industrialization spreads to Europe and the USA France – lots of scientists, but very slow-paced
industrialization, few entrepreneurs, no gov’t support Napoleonic Wars
Germany – successful industrialization United States – Northeast industry Three most industrialized nations: Britain,
Germany, United States
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Growth of Big Business Adam Smith – The Wealth of Nations (1776)
Free enterprise (capitalism) Industrial capitalism – continually expanding
factories or investing in new businesses Mass production
Eli Whitney – interchangeable parts: machine-made parts that are exactly alike
Frederick Taylor – division of labor: each worker performs a specialized task on an assembly line
Later…Henry Ford: Model-T assembly lines
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Growth of Big Business (cont’d)
Organizing businessCorporations – large-scale businesses owned
by shareholders Stockholders and shares
Like “joint-stock companies” – was a way to reduce risk and raise capital
Unlike “joint-stock companies” – was not JUST focused on trade. More were involved in manufacturing, railroads, etc.
Became the best way to manage new businesses
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Science and Industry
CommunicationsSamuel Morse, telegraph; James Clerk
Maxwell, electromagnetic waves; Guglielmo Marconi, wireless telegraph/radio; Alexander Graham Bell, telephone
ElectricityThomas Edison – phonograph,
incandescent light bulbs
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A New Society
Part 4
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The Rise of the Middle Class
Before industrialization: bankers, lawyers, doctors, merchants
After: ↑ as well as owners of factories, mines, railroads, stockbrokers, middle management of companies
Education = very important but not yet available to all
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The Rise of the Middle Class (cont’d) Middle-class lifestyles – gender gap
Men = sole providers for familyWomen – hired servants, educated children,
sewed, planned meals Growth of magazines
Boys – went to schoolGirls – learned domestic tasks marriage
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Lives of the Working Class
At the mercy of machineryDivision of labor – same tasks over and overLost limbsRigid schedules – 10-14 hours per dayVery low wages
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Lives of the Working Class
Workers’ livesChildren – high possibility of becoming
crippled or ill as a result of factory conditionsWomen – gained some independence – “Mill
girls” Upon marriage, many were fired
Cold, crowded tenements with high rent Poor hygiene – cholera, typhoid
High infant mortality rate
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Lives of the Working Class Workers unite
Labor unions – associations dedicated to representing the interests of workers in a specific industry
Union tactics Strikes, sit-down strikes Opposed by employers
Parliament – Combination Acts of 1799 and 1800 prohibited the formation of labor unions
1820s – workers can meet to discuss working hours, wages. 1871 – trade unions/strikes made legal.
Collective bargaining – union leaders and an employer meet to discuss problems and reach an agreement
Membership continued to grow in Europe, U.S.