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Industrial Revolution Chapter 9 1700-1900

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Title: Industrial Revolution Chapter 9 1700-1900


1
Industrial RevolutionChapter 91700-1900
  • Standard 10.3 Students analyze the effects of the
    Industrial Revolution in England, France,
    Germany, Japan and the United States

2
Introduction to Industrial Revolution
  • When ?
  • Began in England in 1750
  • By the late 1800s Germany, U.S., Japan and
    Russia were industrialized

3
Introduction to Industrial Revolution
Where ?
4
Introduction to Industrial Revolution
What ?
  • The shift from making goods by hand to making
    them by machine.

5
Introduction to Industrial Revolution
Why ?
Agricultural Revolution
Enclosure Movement
More food
Rise in population
Migration to cities
6
Introduction to Industrial Revolution
How ?
  • Machines in Factories!!!!
  • New inventions in Communication and Transportation

7
Introduction to Industrial Revolution
Who ?
  • Philosophers
  • Smith
  • Malthus
  • Ricardo
  • Bentham
  • Mill
  • Marx
  • Scientists
  • Watt
  • Whitney
  • Bessemer
  • Pasteur
  • Edison
  • Darwin
  • Pavlov
  • Freud

8
Legacy of the Industrial Revolution
  • The Industrial Revolution affected all classes of
    society in several different ways-
  • Politically
  • Socially
  • Economically

9
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10
Sec. 1 Beginnings of Industrialization
  • Industrial Revolution
  • Begins in England in 1700s but another
    revolution had to occur first!!
  • Agricultural Revolution
  • Enclosures

11
Agricultural Revolution
  • Enclosure movement has 2 major effects
  • Land owners experiment with new methods
  • Small farmers forced to become tenant farmers or
    migrate to cities to look for work
  • New Methods
  • Crop rotation
  • Livestock breeding

Increase in food production
Increase in population
12
Crop Rotation and Breeding
Why was crop rotation and Livestock breeding so
important to the industrial Revolution?
13
Why the Industrial Revolution began in England!
  • Natural resources- coal, iron ore, rivers,
    harbors
  • Labor supply
  • Capital
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Transportation
  • Markets
  • Political Stability
  • Factors of Production- land, labor, capital

14
Inventions Spur Industrialization(Textiles)
Power Loom
Flying Shuttle
Eli Whitney
Spinning Jenny
Cotton Gin
15
Textiles
  • The new textile machines were large and expensive
  • Making clothes now moved from the home to
    factories

16
Why is transportation so important to the success
of the Industrial Revolution?
17
Improvements in Transportation
Robert Fulton
The Clermont
James Watt
Steam Engine
18
Railroads Revolutionize Life in Britain
  • Cheap Transportation
  • Created new jobs
  • Helped Englands
  • agricultural and fishing industries
  • Encouraged country people to take city jobs

19
Section 2 Industrialization
  • A Mixed Blessing
  • Negatives
  • unhealthy working
  • conditions
  • pollution
  • child labor
  • class tensions
  • Positives
  • more jobs
  • economic opportunities

20
Urbanization
  • City building and the movement of people to
    cities
  • Why were so many people migrating to the cities?
  • Londons population
  • 1800 - 1 million
  • 1901 3 million

21
Urbanization and Living Conditions
22
Urbanization and Living Conditions
23
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24
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25

26
Urbanization
  • What problems would occur as a result of so many
    people moving to the city?
  • Whose responsibility is it to improve the living
    conditions in the city?
  • What steps can be taken to improve the living
    conditions?

27
Sec. 2 Class Tension Grows
Why did the landowners have little or no respect
for factory owners?
  • British Social Classes
  • Upper class- landowners, aristocrats, factory
    owners, bankers
  • Upper middle class-managers, merchants, doctors,
    lawyers
  • Lower middle class- factory overseers, skilled
    workers
  • Working class- laborers, unskilled workers

28
Sec. 2 The Luddites
  • Ned Ludd- destroyed machinery and attacked
    factories
  • Why?

29
Sec. 2 Positive Effects of Industrialization
  • List the positive effects
  • Created jobs, wealth
  • Technology, inventions
  • Production of goods increased leading to lower
    prices
  • Higher wages leads to healthier diets, better
    housing
  • Educational opportunities
  • Overall, higher standard of living

30
The Mills of Manchester
  • Why was Manchester the perfect city for a
    factory?
  • Access to waterpower
  • Labor
  • Outlet to the sea at Liverpool
  • How was Manchester an example of the best and the
    worst of the Industrial Revolution?
  • Child labor, dangerous working conditions,
    pollution
  • Creates wealth, standard of living rises

31
Child Labor
Child Labor

32
Section 3 Industrialization Spreads
Technological Boom!!
  • United States Expansion
  • Natural resources- oil, coal, iron
  • Inventions- lights bulb, telephone
  • railroads

33
Industrialization in United States
  • Britain forbids engineers to leave
  • 1789 Samuel Slater immigrates to U.S.
  • Lowell, Massachusetts- 1st major industrial city
    in U.S.

34
Section 3 Rise of Corporations
  • How do you raise enough money to start a
    business?
  • Sell shares of stock in order to form corporations

John D. Rockefeller
Andrew Carnegie
35
Sec. 3 Continental Europe
  1. How was Belgium able to industrialize quickly?
  2. Why was Germany slow to industrialize?
  3. Give some specific examples of why other European
    nations did not industrialize.

36
Sec. 3 The Impact
  • To keep factories running, industrialized nations
    needed raw materials. Where are they going to get
    these resources?
  • From poor non-industrialized nations.
  • How do you think industrialized nations chose the
    areas they would colonize?
  • On the basis of their natural resources!

37
The Impact, continued
  • The need for both additional resources and
    markets ultimately led to Imperialism
  • Imperialism- a policy in which a strong nation
    seeks to dominate other nations politically,
    economically, or socially
  • What do you think was the most significant effect
    of the Industrial Revolution? Why? (p.299)

38
Section 4 Reforming the Industrial World
  • Socialism, Capitalism, and Labor Unions

39
How Do You Solve the Problems of
Industrialization?
  • Standard 10.3.6 Analyze the emergence of
    Capitalism as a dominant economic pattern and the
    responses to it including Utopianism, Social
    Democracy, Socialism, Communism

40
Sec. 4 Philosophers of Industrialization
  • Capitalism- an economic system in which the
    factors of production are privately owned and
    money is invested in business ventures to make a
    profit.
  • Laissez faire- the economic policy of letting
    owners of industry and business set working
    conditions without interference
  • Economics- the study of how society chooses to
    use scarce resources to satisfy its unlimited
    wants and needs

41
Adam Smith- The Wealth of Nations
  • 3 natural laws
  • Self-interest
  • Competition
  • Supply and demand
  • Government should stay out of business!

42
Thomas Malthus- An Essay on the Principle of
Population (1798)
  • What are these 2 charts telling us
  • about the relationship between population and
    resources?
  • 2. What is the consequence of this relationship?

43
Laissez faire philosophers(what are the effects
of population growth?)
  • David Ricardo- Principles of Political Economy
    and Taxation
  • If there were more workers than jobs available
    what would be the result?
  • If there were more jobs than workers what would
    be the result?

Conclusion Wages would go lower as a population
increased
44
Laissez fair philosophers believe
  1. That government should resist the idea of helping
    poor workers
  2. Passing laws would upset the free market system
    and result in less wealth!

45
Utilitarianism- the government should try to
promote the greatest good for the greatest number
of people
John Stuart Mill Reforms in education, Law and
prisons
Jeremy Bentham
46
Utopian Ideas- Robert Owen
New Lanark, Scotland
New Harmony, Indiana
47
Socialism the factors of production (land,
labor, capital) are owned by the public.
  • Government should plan the economy
  • and consequently control factories mines,
    railroads, etc.
  • Public ownership would promote
  • equality and end poverty.

48
Karl Marx The Communist
Manifesto
Workers of the World Unite!
Zedong
Castro
Lenin
49
Communist Manifesto
  • Bourgeoisie vs. Proletariat
  • (Employers) vs. (Workers)
  • Prediction the proletariat would revolt and take
    over the factories.
  • In Communism, all means of production (land,
    mines, factories, businesses, etc.) would be
    owned by the people. No private property and all
    resources are shared equally!
  • Consequently, poverty disappears.
  • dictatorship of the proletariat

50
Marx was wrong (on a few things!)
  1. Economic forces do not completely dominate
    society. Religion, Nationalism, Democracy are
    strong forces as well.
  2. Wages and the standard of living has increased.
  3. Legislation passed to protect workers.

51
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52
Communism continued
  1. What is the difference between capitalism and
    communism?
  2. Describe how Karl Marx was wrong in his
    predictions. (page 304)
  3. Which nations are communist today?(p.304)

53
Labor Unionsand Reform Laws
  • What were the main problems faced by the unions
    and how did they overcome them?

54
Labor Unions
  • Unions- an association of workers formed to
    bargain for better working conditions and higher
    wages
  • Collective Bargaining- negotiations between
    workers and factory owners.
  • If factory owners refused the demands of workers,
    how would the workers respond?
  • Strike- refuse to work
  • Combination Acts- British Parliament outlaws
    unions and strikes

55
  • How does a strike effect
  • Workers?
  • Employers?
  • Public?

56
Reform Laws
http//www.nationalchildlabor.org/
  • Factory Act of 1833
  • Mines Act of 1842
  • Ten Hours Act of 1847
  • National Child Labor Committee
  • How would Adam Smith respond to these
    Parliamentary laws?
  • How would Karl Marx respond?

57
Reform Spreads
  • Slavery- abolished in British territories (1833)
  • Slavery ends in the United States after the Civil
    War (1865)

William Lloyd Garrison
William Wilberforce
58
Womens Rights
Hull House
  • Jane Addams
  • Settlement houses
  • International Council of Women

http//www.icw-cif.org/
59
If we do not prepare children to become good
citizens, if we do not enrich their minds with
knowledge, then our republic must go down to
destruction
Education
Horace Mann
60
Chapter 10 An Age of Progress 1815-1914
  • Section 4 19th century progress

61
Thomas Edison
62
Alexander Bell and Guglielmo Marconi
63
Henry Ford
64
Assembly Line
  • How did the assembly line affect
  • Workers?
  • Prices?

65
Wilbur and Orville WrightDecember 17, 1903- 59
seconds
66
Louis Pasteur
Pasteurization is the process that purifies milk
and helps it stay fresher, longer. Milk is
pasteurized by heating it to 72C for 16 seconds
then quickly cooling it to 4C. Pasteurization is
named after Louis Pasteur, the famous scientist
who discovered that the process destroyed
bacteria that naturally develops in raw milk. By
destroying the bacteria, milk becomes safe to
drink and holds its delicious flavor for much
longer.
67
Joseph Lister
68
Charles Darwin
How can we explain the tremendous variety of
plants and animals on earth?
Theory of Evolution
69
Gregor Mendel
Genetics
70
John DaltonDmitri Mendeleev
71
Marie and Pierre Curie
Radioactivity
72
Ivan PavlovSigmund Freud
73
Review 1
  • What are the 3 factors of production?
  • Land
  • Labor
  • Capital

74
Review 2
  • I destroyed factories and machines!

Luddites
75
Review 3
  • A policy in which a strong nation dominates a
    weaker nation politically, economically, and
    socially
  • Imperialism

76
Review 4
  • I wrote the Wealth of Nations. I explained the 3
    laws of economics.
  • Self-interest
  • Competition
  • Supply and demand

77
Review 5
  • I wrote the Communist Manifesto. What did I
    predict?

Karl Marx
78
Review 6
  • Collective bargaining
  • Before a union decides to go on strike.The
    employers and employees meet to discuss wages and
    working conditions. This process is called ?

79
Chapter 8
  • Sec. 4 Revolutions in the Arts

Standard 10.3.7 Describe the emergence of
Romanticism in art and literature(poetry of
William Blake and William Wordsworth), social
criticism, (novels of Charles Dickens)
80
Romanticism
Mary Shelley
  • Emphasized inner feelings, emotion
  • Focused on mysterious, supernatural, horrifying
  • Love beauties of nature
  • Glorified heroes
  • Cherished folk traditions, music, stories
  • Valued common people, the individual
  • Promoted radical change, democracy

Standard 10.3.7 Describe the emergence of
Romanticism
81
Romantic Writers- nature is the true source of
beauty . Celebrate rebellious heroes, passionate
love, mystery of nature.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
John Keats
82
She Walks in Beauty 1She walks in beauty, like
the nightOf cloudless climes and starry
skiesAnd all that's best of dark and
brightMeet in her aspect and her eyesThus
mellow'd to that tender lightWhich heaven to
gaudy day denies. 2One shade the more, one ray
the less,Had half impair'd the nameless
graceWhich waves in every raven tress,Or softly
lightens o'er her faceWhere thoughts serenely
sweet expressHow pure, how dear their dwelling
place. 3And on that cheek, and o'er that
brow,So soft, so calm, yet eloquent,The smiles
that win, the tints that glow,But tell of days
in goodness spent,A mind at peace with all
below,A heart whose love is innocent!
Lord Byron
83
My Heart Leaps Up
William Wordsworth
84
Composers Emphasize Emotion
Beethoven
Chopin
Wagner
Liszt
85
Realism
Courbet
86
Charles Dickens
Oliver Twist
Social criticism
A Christmas Carol
What is the focus of realist literature?
87
Impressionism
Claude Monet
88
Impressionism
Renior
89
Industrialization Review
  1. Why was Britain the 1st nation to industrialize?
  2. What was the Agricultural revolution?
  3. Describe the main points of the Communist
    Manifesto.
  4. What idea did Louis Pasteur contribute to
    science?
  5. What is the theory of evolution?
  6. Describe how Romanticism was a reaction against
    the Industrial Revolution and the Enlightenment.

90
Ch. 9 sec. 1
Copy Questions, answer in complete sentences, use
pen
  1. Define Industrial Revolution
  2. What are enclosures?
  3. What were two results of the enclosure movement?
  4. What is crop rotation?
  5. What contributed to Englands population boom?
  6. List Englands natural resources
  7. Define factors of production
  8. What was the first industry to be affected by the
    Industrial Revolution?
  9. Why were the first factories built near rivers?
  10. Which invention helped to increase U.S. cotton
    production?
  11. How did James Watt contribute to the Industrial
    Revolution?
  12. What is an entrepreneur?
  13. What was the Clermont?
  14. Who built the worlds first railroad line?
  15. How did the invention of the locomotive
    revolutionize life in Britain?

Standard 10.3.1,10.3.2, 10.3.5
91
Ch. 9 sec. 2
  • What is urbanization?
  • Why did factories develop in clusters?
  • Describe the living conditions in Englands
    cities.
  • How long was the average work day?
  • Describe the working conditions in the factories.
  • Why were so many woman and children employed in
    factories and mines?
  • Before the Industrial Revolution, who occupied
    the top position in British society?
  • Which groups made up the upper middle class? The
    lower middle class?
  • Who were the Luddites?
  • Describe the Factory Act of 1919.
  • Answer the following questions in a paragraph
  • What were the positive effects of the Industrial
    Revolution?
  • Why was Manchester the perfect city to build a
    factory?
  • As a factory worker, what could you do to improve
    your working conditions?

Copy questions, answer in complete sentences, use
pen
92
Ch. 9 sec. 3
Copy questions, answer in Complete sentences,
use pen
  1. Which natural resources did the United States
    possess?
  2. How did Britain attempt to keep the secrets of
    the industrialization to itself?
  3. When and where was the first factory built in the
    United States?
  4. Which American city became a model for other
    industrialized cities?
  5. What contributed to the industrial boom after the
    end of the Civil War?
  6. Define stock
  7. Define corporation
  8. How did the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars
    affect the development of industrialization in
    Europe?
  9. How was Belgium able to industrialize?
  10. What factors slowed industrialization in Germany?
  11. How come many European nations did not
    industrialize?
  12. What did industrialized countries require?
  13. What is imperialism?
  14. How did industrialization lead to imperialism?
  15. What was the most significant effect of the
    Industrial Revolution? Explain.

93
Ch. 9 sec. 4
Copy questions, answer in Complete sentences,
use pen
Standard 10.3.6
  • Define laissez faire
  • According to the laissez faire economists, how
    would economies prosper?
  • According to Adam Smith, what are the 3 laws of
    economics?
  • What is capitalism?
  • What was Thomas Malthus main argument in An
    Essay on the Principle of Population?
  • Why did David Ricardo oppose government efforts
    to help poor workers?
  • What is Utilitarianism?
  • According to John Stuart Mill, how should the
    government help the poor?
  • How did Robert Owen attempt to improve the lives
    of the workers?
  • What is socialism?
  • In the Communist Manifesto, Karl Marx describes
    the warring classes. Who are the warring classes?
  • What is Communism?
  • Which world leaders were inspired by the ideas of
    Marx?
  • What did Marx predict would happen to
    industrialized nations?
  • Why were the predictions of Marx incorrect?
  • What are unions? Why would a worker choose to
    join a union?
  • What is collective bargaining?

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