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THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

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Title: THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION


1
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
  • CHAPTER 9
  • 1700 - 1900

2
Industrialism Begins
  • Industrialism
  • New economic system
  • Rely on machinery rather than animal and human
    power
  • Before industrialism most people lived in small
    farming villages
  • Began urbanization
  • Began in the textile industry
  • Woven cloth

3
The Textile Industry
4
Section I The Beginnings of Industrialization
  • Industrial Revolution Begins in Britain
  • Begins in the mid 1700s
  • New Ways of Working
  • The IR greatly increases out-put of machine made
    goods
  • The Agricultural Revolution Paves the Way
  • Enclosures large farm fields enclosed by fences
  • Wealthy landowners buy enclose land once owned
    by village farmers
  • Enclosures allow experimentation with new
    agricultural methods
  • Rotating Crops
  • Crop rotation switching crops each year to
    avoid soil depletion
  • Livestock breeders allow only the best to breed,
    improve the food supply

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Crop Rotation
8
Why did the IR begin in Britain?
  • Britain had all of the factors of production
  • Land, labor, and capital
  • Britain had the necessary natural resources
  • Coal, iron, rivers, harbors
  • Expanding economy encouraged development

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Inventions Spur Industrialization
  • Changes in the Textile Industry
  • Flying Shuttle (1733)
  • John Kay
  • Doubled the work a weaver could do in a day

11
Inventions Spur Industrialization(cont)
  • Spinning Jenny (1764)
  • James Hargreaves
  • One spinner could work eight thread at a time

12
Inventions Spur Industrialization(cont)
  • Water Frame (1769)
  • Richard Arkwright
  • Machines could now be powered by water, not just
    hand

13
Inventions Spur Industrialization(cont)
  • Power Loom (1787)
  • Edmund Cartwright
  • Sped up the weaving process

14
The Cotton Gin and Eli Whitney
15
Inventions Spur Industrialization
  • Changes in the Textile Industry (cont)
  • Cotton Gin (1793)
  • Eli Whitney
  • Multiplied the amount of cotton produced
  • Development of Factories
  • Buildings that contain machinery for
    manufacturing
  • First factories needed to be near rivers for
    water power

16
The First Factories
17
Improvements in Transportation
  • Steam Engine
  • Need for cheap, convenient power
  • James Watt improves the steam engine
  • Water Transportation
  • First steamboat Clermont
  • Robert Fulton in 1807
  • Road Transportation
  • British roads are improved
  • Companies operate toll roads
  • Beginning of the railroad

18
James Watt and the Steam Engine
19
Robert Fulton and the Clermont
20
The Railway Age Begins
  • Railroad Revolutionize Life
  • The Railroad System
  • Spurs industrial growth
  • Creates jobs
  • Provides cheaper transportation
  • Boosts many industries
  • Causes people move to cities

21
The Railway Age Begins
  • First Railroad Line
  • George Stephenson (1825)
  • Liverpool-Manchester Line (1829)
  • Used Stephensons Rocket
  • Worlds best locomotive

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II. Industrialization
  • Industrialization Changes Life
  • Factory Work
  • Pays more than farms
  • Spurs the demand for more expensive goods
  • Rise of Industrial Cities
  • Urbanization movement of people to city
  • Population growth provides work force, markets
    for goods
  • Major cities London, Manchester, Liverpool,
    Birmingham

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The Working Class
  • Living Conditions
  • Rapid Urbanization caused
  • Cities without adequate housing, education, and
    police protection
  • Urban slums
  • Disease and sickness spread quickly
  • Life span is only 17 years
  • Lack of sanitary building codes

30
The Working Class
  • Working Conditions
  • Average workday 14 hours
  • 6 days a week, year round/7 days in the U.S.
  • Dirty, poorly lit factories
  • Numerous injuries and death
  • No health insurance
  • No labor laws
  • Eventually replaced by machines
  • Huge population means large unemployment

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The Rise of the Middle Class
  • The Middle Class
  • Factories helped to create a new group of people
    the middle class
  • Skilled workers, merchants, rich farmers, and
    professionals
  • Had a comfortable standard of living
  • Looked down upon by aristocrats and landowners

34
Positive Effects of the Industrial Revolution
  • Immediate Benefits
  • Creates jobs
  • Enriches nation
  • Encourages technological progress
  • Education expands
  • Cheaper goods, including clothing
  • Long Term Effects
  • Improved standard of living
  • Improved working conditions
  • Increase in taxes lead to urban improvements

35
III. Industrialization Spreads
  • The Rise of Corporations
  • Stock
  • Limited ownership rights for company
  • Sold to raise money
  • Corporation
  • Company owned by stockholders
  • Share profits not debts
  • Large corporations attempt to control as much
    business as they can

36
The Impact of Industrialization
  • Rise of Global Inequality
  • Wealth gap between nations widens
  • Non-industrialized nations fall further behind
  • Imperialism spreads
  • Need for raw materials and new markets
  • European nations US exploit colonies for
    resources

37
The Impact of Industrialization
  • Transformation of Society
  • Europe US gain economic power
  • African and Asian countries lag behind
  • Still based on agriculture
  • Rise of the Middle Class strengthens democracy
    Begins calls for reform

38
IV. Philosophers of Industrialization
  • Laissez-faire Economics
  • Policy of not interfering with business
  • The Wealth of Nations
  • Published by Adam Smith
  • Defended free markets laissez-faire
  • Economic liberty guarantees economic progress
  • Economic natural laws
  • Self-interest
  • Competition
  • Supply and Demand

39
The Economists of Capitalism
  • Capitalism
  • System of privately owned businesses seeking
    profits
  • Malthus and Ricardo
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Believed populations grew faster than the food
    supply
  • Wars, epidemics kill off extra people or misery
    and poverty result
  • David Ricardo
  • Saw a permanent poor underclass that provided
    cheap labor

40
Malthus
Ricardo
41
Utilitarianism and Utopia
  • Utilitarianism
  • Judge things by their usefulness (Bentham)
  • Regulation to help workers and spread wealth (JS
    Mill)
  • Utopian Society
  • Established by Robert Owen
  • Community that improved worker conditions and
    provided cheap housing
  • Located in New Harmony, Indiana

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43
The Rise of Socialism
  • Socialism
  • Factors of production owned by, operated for the
    people
  • Power of the Government
  • Government control can end
  • Poverty
  • Bring equality

44
Radical Socialism Karl Marx
  • The Communist Manifesto
  • Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
  • Fundamental Beliefs
  • Society divided into warring classes
  • The haves
  • Employers or bourgeoisie
  • The have-nots
  • The workers or proletariat
  • Prediction
  • The workers will overthrow the owners

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46
The Future According to Marx
  • Capitalism will destroy itself
  • Inequality would cause workers to revolt
  • This would lead to communism
  • Society where people own and share the means of
    production

47
Labor Unions and Reform Laws
  • What is a union?
  • Association formed by laborers to work for change
  • What do they do?
  • Negotiate for better wages and conditions
  • Who were the first to do this?
  • Skilled workers are the first to unionize
  • How were they able to do this?
  • Movement in US and UK to fight to right to
    unionize

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Labor Unions and Reform Laws
  • Reform Laws
  • Laws were passed to stop abuses of
    industrialization
  • Examples of reform laws
  • Maximum workday
  • Ending or limiting of child labor

50
The Reform Movement Spreads
  • Abolition of Slavery
  • Reformers help to end slavery
  • In British Empire (1833)
  • The Americas (1888)
  • Fight for Womens Rights
  • Pursuit of economic and social rights as early as
    1848
  • Founding of the International Council for Women
    (1888)

51
Other Reforms
  • Free public education
  • Established in Europe by late 1800s
  • Established in US by 1850s
  • Prison reform also sought

52
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • Inventions and Inventors Make Life Easier
  • Thomas Edison
  • Granted over 1000 patents from his research
  • Including the light bulb

53
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • Inventions and Inventors Make Life Easier (cont)
  • Alexander Graham Bell
  • Invented the telephone (1876)

54
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • Inventions and Inventors Make Life Easier
  • Guglielmo Marconi
  • Invented the radio (1895)

55
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • Inventions and Inventors Make Life Easier
  • Henry Ford
  • Lowers the cost of the automobile using the
    assembly line

56
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • Inventions and Inventors Make Life Easier
  • The Wright Brothers
  • Develop the first working airplane

57
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • New Ideas in Medicine
  • Medical research leads to
  • Development of vaccines
  • Improvement in sanitation
  • Louis Pasteur
  • Discovered the bacteria cause disease
  • Joseph Lister
  • Links bacteria to surgical problems
  • Begins the sterilization process of tools

58
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • New Ideas in Science
  • Beginning of numerous branches
  • Archeology
  • Sociology
  • Anthropology
  • Psychology

59
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • New Ideas in Science
  • Charles Darwin
  • Theory of Evolution
  • Gradually over time species evolve
  • Gregor Mendel
  • Discovers patterns to inherited traits
  • Begins the science of genetics

60
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • New Ideas in Science (cont)
  • John Dalton
  • Theorizes that all matter is made of atoms
  • Dmitri Mendeleev
  • Creates Periodic Table of the Elements
  • Marie and Pierre Curie
  • Discover radioactivity

61
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • New Ideas in Science (cont)
  • Ivan Pavlov
  • Human actions are unconscious reactions
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Studied the unconscious mind

62
Ivan Pavlov
63
Nineteenth Century Progress
  • Development of Mass Culture
  • 1800s saw the creation of
  • Movie Theaters
  • Professional Sports
  • Boxing
  • Baseball

64
THE
  • END
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