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Industrial Revolution

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Industrial Revolution & Life in the 1800 s Mr. Regan AP European History Agricultural Revolution 1700 s Increased Food Production Technology: dikes to protect ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Industrial Revolution


1
Industrial Revolution Life in the 1800s
  • Mr. Regan
  • AP European History

2
Agricultural Revolution 1700s
  • Increased Food Production
  • Technology dikes to protect farmland from sea,,
    fertilizer to improve soil, seed drill (plants
    seeds deep in rows).
  • Enclosure Movement (taking over land that had
    once been shared by peasant farmers) creates
    large fields and made farming more efficient

Modern Seed Drill
3
Population Explosion
  • Better diet stronger, healthier babies
  • Improved medical care sanitation.
  • 1700s Europe--
  • 120 million to 190 million people

4
Industrial Revolution
  • Definition a period, beginning around 1750, in
    which the means of production of goods shifted
    from hand tools to complex machines and from
    human and animal power to steam power.
  • Results from the introduction of steam-driven
    machinery, large factories, and a new working
    class.
  • Technology developed rapidly and production
    increased.
  • Great changes brought to peoples lives.

5
Guild System
  • Craft guilds had emerged during the late Middle
    Ages
  • The dominated the production quality of
    finished products.
  • They controlled the prices of their finished
    products, so they were generally higher.
  • They controlled / restricted membership into
    their organizations

6
The Domestic, or Putting-out system
  • Used to bypass the strict regulations of the
    guilds in the cities
  • Urban cloth manufacturers gave piecemeal work to
    rural families to complete in their homes.
  • When the work was complete, the finished pieces
    were sold back to the cloth manufacturer.

7
Farm the Domestic System
Factory System
8
Industrial Revolution
  • Began in Great Britain.
  • By the end of the 1800s, Belgium, France,
    Germany, the USA, and Japan would all be
    industrialized
  • In time, it spreads throughout the world

9
British Beginning
  • Natural Resources (coal iron, good harbors,
    Technology, Positive Economic, Political,
    Social Conditions
  • Good harbors
  • Rivers transport gods to markets supply power
    for factories.

10
British Beginning
  • Fewer farm workers needed
  • People move to cities, seeking
  • work in factories
  • British had the capital to invest in new
    ventures, and the overseas markets (colonies) to
    sell the products to

11
Capital for Investment
  • British Empire had made economy strong.
  • Middle Class has money to invest in mines,
    railroads, and factories

12
Population Growth Change
  • Growth in population, resulting from the
    Agricultural Revolution, led to more available
    workers
  • Enclosure movement -- fewer farm workers needed.
  • People move to cities, where the new factories
    were located.

13
Factories Mass Production
  • 1700s, new machines were too large expensive
    to be operated at home.
  • Spinners weavers begin to work in in large
    sheds owned by manufacturers.
  • These sheds became the first factories.
  • When machines became powered by steam fueled by
    coal, factories could be located anywhere.
  • Mass production -- goods produced in large
    quantities at a lower cost

14
New Technology
  • Water wheels power machines in factories
  • Coal used to power steam engines
  • Windmills

15
Effects of Industrial Rev.
  • Rise of laissez-faire economics
  • New Class structure
  • Upper Class (very rich industrial business
  • families)
  • -- Middle Class (business people
  • professionals with a high standard of
    living)
  • -- Lower Class (factory workers peasants.
  • Benefit least from the Industrial
    Revolution.
  • Face harsh living working conditions in
  • overcrowded cities

16
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17
Hardships of Life
  • Distinct upper, middle, and lower classes. Class
    based on .
  • Less variety, more monotony. Unskilled labor
  • Women children work for lower wages
  • Upper class help poor, middle class tend to
    ignore the poor.

18
Other Effects of Industrial Rev.
  • Working Condition (long hours, 12-16 hrs. per
    day, boring work, dangerous machines
  • Changing Social Roles -- For Middle Class, men
    work, women stay at home (cult of domesticity).
    For poor, all members of the family, children
    included,, were expected to work

19
Rising Standards of Living
  • Rich live in pleasant neighborhoods on the edge
    of cities
  • Poor crowded into slums in city centers, near
    factories

By 1900, the ordinary Briton was better paid,
fed, clothed, housed, educated, perhaps amused,
and certainly much better represented in politics
than his forefathers could have dreamed of.
20
Other Effects of Industrial Rev.
  • Improved transportation
  • Roads canals built improved
  • Steam locomotive makes RRs grow
  • Steam engines power ships at sea

21
Thomas Malthus
  • 1798 -- On the Principle of Population.
  • Advocate for birth control
  • Population is outpacing the food supply
  • Run out of food.
  • Poor will continue to suffer as long as the
    population kept increasing

22
David Ricardo
  • Iron Law of Wages
  • Cyclical
  • Wages high, families have more children
  • More children increase labor supply, leading to
    lower wages higher unemployment.

23
Social Darwinism
  • Members of each species had to compete to survive
  • Natural forces select the most able members
  • Successful business people were successful
    because they were naturally more fit to
    succeed than others.
  • War -- stronger nations take over weaker ones.
    Contributes to the rise of imperialism

24
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25
Reformers
  • Jeremy Bentham -- Utilitarianism -- goal of
    society should be the greatest happiness for the
    most people.

26
Reformers
  • John Stuart Mill believed that government should
    improve the lives of the poor.

27
Reform Movements
  • Correct abuses of child labor
  • Formation of trade unions to work for changes in
    factory system reform

28
Socialism
  • Concentrated less on the interests rights of
    individuals and more on the interests of society
  • Industrial capitalism had created a large gap
    between the rich the poor.
  • Under socialism, farms businesses would belong
    to all the people

29
Utopian Socialism
  • Create self-sufficient communities, where all
    property work are shared.
  • Equal wealth, end of fighting
  • Robert Owen set up one of these communities in
    Scotland and one in Indiana

30
Marxist Socialism
  • Karl Marx, 1848, The Communist Manifesto.
  • History is a struggle between the wealthy
    capitalists the PROLETARIAT (working class).
  • Capitalists have taken advantage of the
    proletariat in order to increase profits.

31
Marx
  • Capitalist system must exist for a revolution to
    take place.
  • Proletariat would eventually rise up overthrow
    the capitalist system, creating their own
    society.
  • Proletariat society would establish a classless,
    communist society, in which wealth power are
    equally shared.
  • Soviet Union in 1900s, Marxs ideas would lead
    to a communist dictatorship and a command economy.

32
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