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MODERN ERA: 1750 - 1914

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Title: MODERN ERA: 1750 - 1914


1
MODERN ERA1750 - 1914
  • IMPACT OF TECHNOLOGY

2
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
  • 1780s Breakthrough in productivity
  • Mechanization of factory, labor
  • Production of vast quantities of goods
  • Decreasing costs of goods
  • Preceded by other revolutions and changes in
    attitude
  • Scientific, Commercial Enlightenment,
    Agricultural
  • Change in mindset
  • New Ideas
  • Risk takers
  • Massive markets for products
  • Improved organizational skills
  • Upsurge in technology
  • Inventors apply science to life, work
  • Many new inventions
  • Capitalization and Finance
  • Profits from trade, colonies
  • Invested in Europe
  • Institutional changes
  • Limited government of a constitutional democracy

3
FOUNDATIONS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
  • Coal critical to the early industrialization of
    Britain
  • Shift from wood to coal in 18TH century
    deforestation caused wood shortages
  • Abundant, accessible coal reserves in Britain
  • Overseas colonies provided raw materials, capital
  • Plantations in the Americas provided sugar and
    cotton
  • Colonies also became markets for British
    manufactured goods
  • Grain, timber, and beef shipped from United
    States to Britain after 1830
  • Profits from sugar funded banks, provided
    investment capital
  • Demand for cheap cotton spurred mechanization of
    cotton industry
  • John Kay invented the flying shuttle, 1733
  • Samuel Crompton invented the spinning "mule,"
    1779
  • Edmund Cartwright invented a water-driven power
    loom, 1785
  • James Watt's steam engine, 1765
  • Burned coal, which drove a piston, which turned a
    wheel
  • Widespread use by 1800 meant increased
    productivity, cheaper prices
  • Iron and steel also important industries, with
    continual refinement
  • Coke (purified coal) replaced charcoal as
    principal fuel
  • Bessemer converter (1856) made cheaper, stronger
    steel
  • Transportation improved with steam engines and
    improved steel

4
IMAGES OF INVENTION
5
INDUSTRIAL CAUSE EFFECT
SPINNING lt-------------------------------------gt WEAVING
(EX Spinning Jenny) (EX Flying shuttle)
Machines become heavier, thus
Extra power is needed, thus
Watermills, steam engine invented, thus
Emergence of factory system, replacing cottage industry
Because production must be concentrated near the power source, and machines become too expensive to be owned by workers, thus
Profound social transformations, thus
Urban influx, crowding, unprecedented social problems thus
Workers organize, government passes laws and reforms, unions begin to arise
6
FACTORY SYSTEM
  • The factory
  • Gradually replaced the putting-out system
  • Factory system required division of labor
  • Each worker performed a single task
  • Required a high degree of coordination
  • Work discipline, close supervision
  • Working conditions often harsh
  • Workers lost status
  • Not skilled
  • Just wage earners
  • Harsh work discipline
  • Fast pace of work
  • Frequent accidents
  • Industrial protest
  • Saboteurs
  • Flemish workers throw wooden shoes into machines
  • Shoes were called sabots hence saboteur
  • Luddites in England
  • Struck against mills and destroyed machines, 1811
    and 1816

7
SPREAD OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
  • British industrial monopoly
  • 1750 to 1800
  • Forbade immigration of skilled workers
  • Continental System of Napoleon
  • Abolished internal trade barriers in western
    Europe, sped up process
  • Dismantled guilds
  • Belgium, France
  • Moved toward industrialization by mid-nineteenth
    century
  • Belgium was first as it most resembled England,
    closest ports
  • Germany
  • Bismarck sponsored heavy industry, arms, shipping
  • Built railroads to move German army around,
    benefiting commerce
  • Rails required steel, coal
  • Eventually developed chemicals, electrical
    industries
  • The United States
  • Slow to start few laborers, little capital
  • Cotton and Textiles began revolution
  • British craftsmen started cotton textile industry
    in New England, 1820s
  • Southern cotton was going to England, diverted to
    New England factories

8
MAPPING THE REVOLUTION
9
INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM
  • Mass production
  • Provided cheaper goods for all classes of society
  • Eli Whitney
  • Mass production of interchangeable parts for
    firearms
  • Cotton Gin made cotton harvesting, production
    cheaper
  • Henry Ford
  • Introduced assembly line
  • Applied to automobile production
  • Industrialization
  • Expensive
  • Required large capital investment
  • Structural Changes of Industry
  • Large-scale corporations with investors
  • New laws protected investors from liability
  • Monopolies, trusts, and cartels
  • Competitive associations
  • Vertical organization (Monopoly)
  • One company controls all aspects of production
    within a single industry
  • One company dominates whole market

10
TRANS-SIBERIAN RAILROAD
Cities, industry grew up along railroad
mines farms, opened in area
11
INTERNATIONAL DIVISION OF LABOR
  • Industrialization increased demand for raw
    materials
  • Nonindustrialized societies became suppliers of
    raw materials
  • Cotton from India, Egypt
  • Rubber from Brazil, Malaya, Congo
  • Fueled demand for colonies
  • Economic development
  • Europeans, Americans exported capital
  • Capital went to nations with industrialization
  • Heavy industry, oil, mineral extraction, grains,
    railroads
  • Better in lands settled by ethnic Europeans
  • High wages encouraged labor-saving technologies
  • Strong European immigrant pool with some
    education
  • Countries Benefiting
  • Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand
  • Argentina, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, United States
  • Russia, Japan
  • Economic dependency more common in other
    countries
  • Sub-Saharan Africa, south Asia, and southeast
    Asia
  • Latin America had some industry but largely
    dependent

12
ECONOMIC EXPANSION IN U.S.A. CANADA
  • British capital
  • Crucial for early development of U.S., Canadian
    industries
  • Foreign capital supported textile, iron and
    steel, railroads
  • 40 of all ranches, beef exports owned by British
  • Helped create industrial rival (USA) that
    surpassed UK
  • Railroads
  • Integrated national economy by late 19th century
  • 200,000 miles of railroad in US by 1900
  • Economic stimulus
  • 75 percent of steel went to railroads
  • Supported other industries especially retail,
    transport along lines
  • Encouraged immigrant labor, farmers to settle
    along tracks, in West
  • Changed American landscape by opening west,
    closing it off set time zones
  • Dramatic economic growth between 1870 and 1900
  • New inventions and technologies
  • Thomas Edison was symbolic of the Age
  • Electric lights, telephones, and so on
  • Labor conflicts over wages and working conditions
  • Big business won disputes as they controlled
    courts, government

13
LATIN AMERICAN DEPENDENCE
  • Colonial legacy
  • Prevented industrialization
  • Spain, Portugal never encouraged industries
  • Limited success at industrialization
  • 1820 1850 Economic Stagnation
  • Wars of independence had disrupted economy
  • Most wealth tied to land, agriculture
  • Export of primary, unfinished goods especially
    guano, coffee, hides
  • Too many unsolved social problems retarded
    industrialization
  • Economic growth part of 2nd Industrial Revolution
  • Change grew out of liberalizing effects, reforms
    in late century
  • Entrepreneurs, intellectuals, landowners brought
    in foreign investments
  • Facilitated by new technologies (railroads,
    steamships)
  • Great Boom driven by exports
  • Demand for rubber, copper, tin, silver, beef,
    bananas, oil, coffee, cocoa
  • Capital intensive development of primary product
    exports
  • Trade increased by almost 50 from 1870 1880
  • British initially preeminent Germany and US
    increasingly rivals for area
  • Mexico, Brazil, Argentina

14
JAPAN THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
  • Meiji Restoration
  • US industry, technology amazed, scared Japanese
  • Warships, weapons showed Japanese vulnerability
  • Industrialization in Japan
  • Promoted by government
  • Many monetary incentives
  • Way to avoid Western encroachment
  • Food production subsidized by government
  • Hired foreign experts to build modern industries
  • First models built by westerners, often abroad
  • Next models built by Japanese in Japan
  • Borrowed heavily in knowledge from Great Britain
  • Created new industries
  • Emphasized heavy industry iron, steel, power
  • Light industry clothing followed
  • Opened technical institutes and universities
  • Government-owned businesses privatized (zaibatsu)
  • Old samurai families frequently bought these
    industries
  • Came to dominate transportation, weaponry,
    electronics

15
RUSSIAN INDUSTRIALIZATION
  • Russia experienced the 2nd Industrial Revolution
  • Financed by exportation of minerals, oil, gas,
    grains
  • Development of rail system spurred other
    industries, exports
  • Strongest development in coal, steel areas of
    Ukraine
  • Rise of industrial cities St. Petersburg.
    Moscow, Poland, Ukraine
  • Promoted by tsarist government, French government
  • France needed Russia as a military ally against
    Germany
  • Russia needed a modern economy to compete on
    world stage
  • Formula French loans/investment, sale of Russian
    grain
  • Sergei Witte, Minister of finance, 1892-1903
  • Top-down Management Style
  • Supported railway construction
  • Military rationale to move troops to border if
    attacked
  • But stimulated other industries including exports
  • Remodeled the state bank
  • Protected infant industries with tariffs,
    subsidies
  • Secured foreign loans especially from France
  • Industrial discontent intensified
  • Rapid growth of factories, urban working class

16
IMPERIALISM ECONOMICS
  • Industrialization fueled imperialism
  • Industry needed raw materials, specialized crops
  • Rubber, tea from SE Asia
  • Gold, diamonds, copper, coffee from Africa
  • Cocoa, hemp from Latin America
  • Industry needed cheap laborers
  • Entrepreneurs needed markets
  • Colonies seemed one easy answer
  • Technology applied to colonial problems
  • Infrastructure built up to exploit colonies
  • Railroads and ports were first to be created
  • Bridges, roads also built
  • Technology used to extract minerals from mines
  • Science applied to farming to increase yields
  • Demand for raw minerals, markets produced
    horrible violence
  • British destroy Indian textiles to sell British
    goods to Indians
  • British, Americans, French fight Opium Wars to
    sell opium to Chinese
  • Belgian atrocities in creating the Belgian Congo
  • British Boer War to obtain gold, diamonds of
    Afrikaaners

17
IMPACT OF INDUSTRIALIZATION
  • The world gets smaller, nations come together
  • Technology linked nations that were once distant
  • Technology made people in one nation into a
    community
  • US, Canada, Australia, Russia technology made
    them possible
  • India created by the railroads
  • Rise of a true world system
  • Communication
  • Morse Code, telegraph
  • Telephone, Trans-Atlantic cable
  • Newspaper industry, mail systems
  • Photography
  • Transportation
  • People visit another country, across ocean in
    weeks
  • Railroads, subway, automobile
  • Trans-oceanic ships
  • Riverboats, steamboats, cargo boats
  • Exchanges become almost instant
  • Technology becomes part of life
  • Proliferation of machines mechanizes societies
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