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The Industrial Revolution

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Title: The Industrial Revolution


1
The Industrial Revolution
2
Great Britain
  • Industrialization- Process of developing machine
    production of goods
  • First country to be industrialized, then spread
    to Continental Europe and North America
  • Transformed the way people worked
  • Machines began to do jobs that people used to do
    by hand

3
Agricultural Revolution
  • Wealthy landowners bought up small farms and
    enclosed their land with fences or hedges-
    enclosures
  • Enclosures led to two things
  • 1) Landowners tried new agricultural methods
  • 2) Large landowners forced small farmers to
    become tenant farmers or to give up farming and
    move to the cities

4
New Methods for Farmers
  • Seed Drill- Invented by Jethro Tull and allowed
    farmers to sow seeds in well-spaced rows at
    specific depths
  • Crop Rotation- Farmers would plant different
    crops each year
  • Breeding- Farmers would only breed their best
    pigs, for example, so the food supply increased
    and people were healthier

5
Why It Began in Britain...
  • Extensive natural resources
  • Expanding economy
  • Banking system
  • Growing overseas trade
  • Political stability

6
Natural Resources
  • Water power and coal to fuel the new machines
  • Iron ore to construct machines, tools, and
    buildings
  • Rivers for inland transportation
  • Harbors from which merchant ships set sail

7
Expanding Economy
  • Businesspeople invested in the manufacture of new
    inventions

8
Banking System
  • People were encouraged by the availability of
    bank loans to invest in new machinery and expand
    their operations

9
Trade
  • Economic progress led to the increased demand for
    goods
  • England is an island, so there are many routes to
    import and export

10
Political Stability
  • Gave them a huge advantage over their neighbors
  • Although Britain took part in many wars in the
    1700s, none occurred on British soil
  • Parliament passed laws to help encourage and
    protect business ventures

11
Factors of Production
  • Land, labor, and capital (wealth)
  • Only Britain had all of these factors, which is
    why industrialization began in Britain

12
Textile Industry
  • First industry to be transformed by new
    inventions
  • Flying Shuttle- invented by John Kay
  • Doubled the work a weaver could do in a day
  • Spinning Jenny- invented by James Hargreaves
  • Necessary invention for spinners because they
    could not keep up with weavers

13
Textile Industry, cont.
  • Water Frame- invented by Richard Arkwright
  • Used waterpower from rapid streams to drive
    spinning wheels
  • Spinning Mule
  • Made thread that was stronger, finer, and more
    consistent than earlier spinning machines
  • Water-Powered Loom- invented by Edmund Cartwright
  • Sped up weaving, run by waterpower

14
Factories
  • Water frame, the spinning mule, and the power
    loom were bulky and expensive machines
  • They took the work of spinning and weaving out of
    the house
  • Wealthy textile merchants set up the machines in
    large buildings called factories
  • Needed waterpower, so the first ones were built
    by rivers and streams

15
Cotton Gin
  • Englands cotton came from the American South in
    the 1790s
  • Cotton gin invented by Eli Whitney to speed up
    the chore of removing seeds from cotton (doing it
    by hand was hard work)
  • American cotton production skyrocketed from 1.5
    million pounds in 1790 to 85 million pounds in
    1810

16
Transportation
17
Steam Engine
  • Improved by James Watt in 1765
  • Watt was paid by an entrepreneur to build a
    better machine

18
Steamboat
  • The Clermont was invented by Robert Fulton in 1807

19
Canals
  • Human-made waterways that provided inland
    transportation
  • Slashed the cost of transporting both raw
    materials and finished goods

20
Roads
  • John McAdam improved roads by using large stones
    topped with a layer of crushed rock
  • This prevented wagons from sinking in the mud
  • Turnpikes- Travelers had to pay a toll before
    going farther

21
Liverpool-Manchester Railroad
  • The Rocket- hauled a 13-ton load at 24 mph--an
    unheard-of speed
  • Railway officially opened in 1830 and was an
    immediate success

22
Effects of the Railroad
  • Spurred industrial growth by giving manufacturers
    a cheap way to transport materials and finished
    products
  • Created hundreds of thousands of new jobs
  • Boosted Englands agricultural and fishing
    industries
  • Encouraged country people to take distant city
    jobs

23
Cities
24
Urbanization
  • Mass movement of people to cities
  • Between 1800-1850, most of Europes urban areas
    doubled or quadrupled
  • London became the largest city in Europe
  • Population
  • Reached 1 million by 1800, and the numbers
    exploded after that

25
Living Conditions
  • Cities grew too rapidly
  • No development plans, sanitary codes, or building
    codes
  • Lacked adequate housing, education, and police
    protection
  • Diseases spread
  • Life span was only 17 years for working class
    people

26
Working Conditions
  • Average worker spent 14 hours a day on the job, 6
    days a week
  • Factories were dirty
  • Machines injured workers
  • Children joined the work force as young as 6
    years old
  • They were often beaten by factory owners for
    falling asleep on the job

27
The Middle Class
  • Social class made up of skilled workers,
    professionals, businesspeople, and wealthy
    farmers
  • Usually consisted of factory owners, shippers,
    and merchants
  • Some became just as rich as the top class in
    society

28
The Working Class
  • Unlike the middle class, they saw little
    improvement in their living and working
    conditions
  • These people were slowly being replaced by
    machines and were being put out of work
  • To protest, many would destroy the machines that
    were replacing them

29
Positive Effects of the IR
  • Created jobs for workers
  • Contributed to the wealth of the nation
  • Fostered technological progress and invention
  • Greatly increased the production of goods
  • Raised the standard of living
  • Provided the hope of improvement in peoples lives

30
Positive Effects, cont.
  • Healthier diets
  • Better housing
  • Cheaper, mass-produced clothing
  • Expanded educational opportunities

31
Factory Act of 1819
  • Restricted working age and hours
  • Many factories did not abide by this law

32
Negative Effects
  • Polluted the natural environment
  • Coal blackened the air
  • Textile dyes and other wastes poisoned the rivers

33
Industrialization Spreads
34
U.S.
  • The blockade during the War of 1812 forced the
    U.S. to use its own resources to develop
    independent industries
  • Began in the textile industry

35
U.S., cont.
  • Britain had forbidden engineers, mechanics, and
    toolmakers to leave the country
  • Samuel Slater- British mill worker who emigrated
    to the U.S. and built a spinning machine from
    memory
  • Moses Brown- Opened the first factory in
    Pawtucket, RI
  • Francis Cabot Lowell- Mechanized every stage in
    the manufacture of cloth

36
Mill Girls
  • Young women flocked from rural towns to the
    cities
  • Worked 12 hours a day, 6 days a week
  • Although they went to gain independence, they
    were watched very closely by their employers
    inside and outside the factories

37
Rise of Corporations
  • Corporation- Business owned by stockholders who
    share in its profits but are not personally
    responsible for its debts
  • Stock- Certain rights of ownership

38
Large Corporations in the U.S.
  • Standard Oil
  • Founded by John D. Rockefeller
  • Carnegie Steel Company
  • Founded by Andrew Carnegie
  • Both of these businesses wanted to control all
    aspects of their own industries in order to make
    big profits

39
Rise of Global Inequality
  • Industrialization widened the wealth gap between
    industrialized countries and non-industrialized
    countries
  • Some wealthier countries did use less-developed
    nations for raw materials
  • Imperialism- Policy of extending one countrys
    rule over many other lands
  • This gave industrialized nations even more power
    and wealth

40
Transformation of Society
  • Between 1700-1900, revolutions in agriculture,
    production, transportation, and communication
    changed the way people lived in Western Europe
    and the U.S.
  • Affected everything from daily life to life
    expectancy
  • Emergence of the middle class created great
    opportunities for education and democratic
    participation

41
Philosophers of Industrialization
42
Laissez Faire
  • Economic policy of letting owners of industry and
    business set working conditions without
    interference
  • Favors a free market unregulated by the
    government
  • Stemmed from philosophers of the Enlightenment
    who believed that the economy would prosper from
    free trade

43
Adam Smith
  • The Wealth of Nations
  • Economic liberty guaranteed economic progress
  • Three Natural Laws of Economics
  • 1) self-interest- people work for their own good
  • 2) competition- competition forces people to make
    a better product
  • 3) supply and demand- enough goods would be
    produced at the lowest possible price to meet
    demand in a market economy

44
Capitalism
  • Economic system in which the factors of
    production are privately owned and money is
    invested in business ventures to make a profit

45
Socialism
  • The factors of production are owned by the public
    and operate for the welfare of all
  • Socialist philosophers thought that governmental
    control of factories, mines, railroads, and other
    key industries would end poverty and promote
    equality
  • Workers would no longer be at the mercy of their
    employers

46
Karl Marx
  • Radical type of socialism called Marxism
  • The Communist Manifesto
  • Human societies have always been divided into
    warring classes (haves v. have-nots,
    employers v. workers, bourgeoisie v. proletariat)
  • Believed the Industrial Revolution just made the
    wealth gap worse
  • Predicted that workers would overthrow their
    owners

47
Communism
  • All factors of production (land, mines,
    railroads, factories, and businesses) are owned
    by the people
  • No private property
  • All goods and services would be shared equally
  • Marx defined this in The Communist Manifesto

48
Effects of The Communist Manifesto
  • Marxism inspired revolutionaries such as Russias
    Lenin, Chinas Mao Zedong, and Cubas Fidel
    Castro
  • These leaders adapted Marxs beliefs to their own
    specific situations and needs

49
Unions
  • Voluntary labor associations that speak for all
    workers in a particular trade
  • Collective bargaining- negotiations between
    workers and their employers
  • Unions bargained for better working conditions
    and higher pay
  • Strike- refusal to work if factory owners refused
    workers demands

50
British Reform Laws
  • Factory Act of 1833- made it illegal to hire
    children under 9 years old children ages 9-12
    could not work more than 8 hours a day young
    people ages 13-17 could not work more than 12
    hours
  • Mines Act- prevented women and children from
    working underground
  • Ten Hours Act of 1847- limited the workday to ten
    hours for women and children who worked in
    factories

51
U.S. Reform Laws
  • National Child Labor Committee- wanted to end
    child labor altogether
  • Argued that child labor lowered wages for all
    workers
  • Persuaded union members to join the reformers
  • Pressured national and state politicians to ban
    child labor and set maximum working hours

52
Reform Spreads
  • Affected such areas as improving the workplace,
    extending the right to vote to working-class men,
    helping to end slavery, and promoting new rights
    for women and children
  • Horace Mann- favored free public education to all
    children
  • Alexis de Tocqueville- battled the brutal
    conditions under which prisoners lived
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