Industrial Revolution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 9
About This Presentation
Title:

Industrial Revolution

Description:

Industrial Revolution Pre-Industrial Society Mostly rural Agriculture based on 3 field system w/ one fallow field each year Forces for change Growing population – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:106
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 10
Provided by: Libra171
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Industrial Revolution


1
Industrial Revolution
  • Pre-Industrial Society
  • Mostly rural
  • Agriculture based on 3 field system w/ one fallow
    field each year
  • Forces for change
  • Growing population
  • Need for more food

2
Agrarian Improvements
  • Enclosure movement
  • Fencing around landowners property
  • Landowners gained wealth peasants became poorer
  • Crops could vary without having to conform to the
    rest of the village
  • Crop Rotation
  • Rotate crops among fields to restore nutrients to
    the soil
  • No more fallow fields
  • More crops, more food, more people
  • Advancements in farming tools seed drill
  • New crops corn and potato

3
Dev. Of Capitalism and Early Industry
  • Goal of industrial production
  • lessen the unit cost of production through
    improved technology
  • Capitalism offers incentive to the growing
    industries
  • Cottage Industry/Domestic System
  • 1st seen in textiles
  • Merchants supply the wool cotton Women spin
    that into cloth at home
  • Effects
  • Large income for new merchant class
  • New income for peasants
  • Familiar products now cheaper due to division of
    labor and specialization

4
The Rise of the Factory
  • Cottage Industry couldnt keep up with demand for
    textiles
  • Development of new machines too big to fit in the
    home
  • Dev. Of Water frame
  • water as a source of energy
  • All early factories located on water
  • An entrepreneur gathered hundreds of workers
    under one roof
  • Paid on a single pay scale
  • Worked on a single, repetitive part of the
    production process
  • All decisions in the hands of the employer who
    controlled the factory
  • Other power sources coal and iron

5
Why Britain?-The Birthplace of the Revolution
  • Geography
  • Good climate, natural resources, separate from
    Europe and European conflicts
  • Government
  • Encouraged trade, allowed peasants to move,
    funded canals and roads
  • Social Factors
  • Society less rigid, allowed for elevation
  • Colonial Empire
  • Supplied raw materials and markets for goods
  • Advantages of Industrializing 1st
  • No competition and monopoly on technology
  • Effects of Textile Factories in Great Britain
  • Prices of mass produced items were lower
  • More jobs
  • Increased population
  • Urbanization
  • Immigration

6
Steam Energy
  • James Watt (1760s)
  • Dev. As a response to the need for more power
  • Factories can now be located away from water
  • Requires coal
  • Increased mining, led to more jobs
  • Iron industry develops
  • Machinery, railways
  • Later leads to steel and the modernization of
    building
  • By 1860s, industry had spread to Belgium, France,
    Prussia, Italy, and the U.S.

7
Spread of the Industrial Revolution
  • Industry spread slowly during the 18th early
    19th centuries
  • No other country had Englands combination of
    advantages
  • England protected industrial techniques as state
    secrets
  • Napoleons wars prevented Europe from
    industrializing

8
Advancements
  • Transportation
  • Paved roads
  • Canals
  • Railroads (1829)
  • The result of steam power
  • Effects cheaper transportation, increased
    profit, fueled other industries including coal,
    iron, steel, tourism
  • Engine Daimler (1885)
  • Planes Wright brothers (1903)
  • Communication
  • Telegraph Morse (1837)
  • Telephone Bell (1876)
  • Electricity
  • Edison factories can now run at night

9
Impact of Industrialization on Society
  • Dev. Of a working class
  • Poor factory conditions led to change in labor
    laws
  • Child labor
  • Inequality of labor
  • Dev. of Big Business, Corporations, Business
    Cycle
  • Led to organized labor and labor unions
  • Socialism and Communism
  • Karl Marx history is a class struggle between
    the haves and the have-nots
  • The working class should seize control
  • The society as a whole would own everything
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com