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Mikila Williams

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Mikila Williams Period 4 Prompt: Between 1750 and 1850 more and more Western Europeans were employed in cottage industry and in factory production. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mikila Williams


1
Mikila Williams
  • Period 4

2
Prompt
  • Between 1750 and 1850 more and more Western
    Europeans were employed in cottage industry and
    in factory production. Analyze how these 2 types
    of employment affected employer-employee
    relations, working conditions, family relations,
    and the standard of living during this period.

3
Cottage Industry
  • An industry in which employees work in their own
    homes, often using their own equipment

4
Factory Production
  • The growing demand for textiles led to the
    creation of the world's first factories

5
Employer-Employee Relations
  • Cottage Industry
  • The employer brought materials to the employees
    home
  • Employers sometimes accused employees of stealing
    materials from them because the employees didnt
    make as much cloth as was expected
  • - Employees claimed the employer didnt give
    them enough materials
  • Factory Production
  • Employees worked in the factory instead of at
    their homes
  • Cottage industry workers didnt want to work in
    factories because they had to work at the pace of
    the machine
  • Children were forced to work long hours in
    factories because of the reluctance of the
    cottage workers

6
Working Conditions
  • Cottage Industry
  • Workers set their own pace
  • Worked long and hard, but took breaks whenever
    they felt like it
  • The weeks work was due to the employer by
    Saturday
  • Didnt do work from Saturday night until Tuesday
  • Factory Production
  • Workers had to keep pace with the machine
  • Had to go to work everyday, and work long hours
  • Children were forced to work, and were badly
    treated overworked
  • Later, family units worked in mills
  • - Children worked under their mother or father
  • - This meant the entire family worked 12-hour
    shifts

7
Family Relations
  • Cottage Industry
  • Worked in family units
  • Every family member had something to do to help
  • Women spun the cotton
  • Men wove cotton after their wife spun it
  • Factory Production
  • At first, children were the main workers
  • Eventually, adults came to work in the factories
  • When the working people took the factory jobs,
    they brought with them old working traditions
    from the cottage industry
  • - Came in family units
  • - Children worked under their
  • parents while in the cotton mills
  • - Children sorted coal and worked
  • ventilation equipment when out
  • in the mines
  • - Mothers hauled coal in tunnels
  • under the surface, while fathers
  • hewed with a shovel at the face of
  • the ridge

8
Standard of Living
  • Cottage Industry
  • Worked when they wanted, as long as their work
    was done by Saturday
  • Brought in money, and were able to spend it on
    food items and clothing
  • Factory Production
  • Worked 12-hour days, 6 days a week
  • Except during wartime, workers ate more food with
    a higher nutritional value
  • Their diet became more varied
  • -Ate more potatoes, dairy products,
  • fruits, and vegetables
  • Clothing improved
  • Housing for working people did NOT improve
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