Title: MOST OF HISTORY: THE FIRST HUMANS
1Berrien ISD World History Seminar Series
Session III Tuesday November 11th 2008
Dr. Craig Benjamin History Department, Grand
Valley State University
2Welcome
- To this final day of our three-day workshop on
the new Michigan World History Content
Expectations for High School teachers - We covered a lot of ground already, mainly
through a series of illustrated lectures on the
content of the new CEs - Each of todays lectures on PowerPoint is also
available for your use in the classroom, or in
preparing your own lessons
3Workshop Program Day Three
- 8.30 9.30 Session 1 - Era 6 An Age of
Global Revolutions, 18th Century-1914 Four
Lectures on the Industrial Revolution - 9.40-10.30 Session 2 Era 6 Organizing CEs for
Instruction Lecture The Industrial Revolution
as a Global Event - 10.35-11.00 Instructional Applications Table
Conversation and Planning ahead Report out - 11.10-11.30 Session 3 Era 7 Global Crisis
and Achievement, 1900-1945 First Lecture on the
20th Century - 11.30-12.10 Lunch
- 12.10 12.30 Second Lect on 20th C
- 12.40-1.30 Session 4 Era 7 Global Crisis and
Achievement, 1900-1945 Two Lectures on the 20th
Century world wars - 1.40-2.30 Session 5 Era 8 The Cold War and
Its Aftermath The 20th Century Since 1945
Overview of four lectures on cold war,
decolonization, 20th C E Asia - 2.35-3.00 Instructional Applications on one
lecture Table Conversation and Planning ahead
Report out
4ERA 6 ORIGINS OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
What was the Industrial Revolution?
Day 3, Session 1A Craig Benjamin
How can we explain it?
Why did it first occur in W. Europe?
5Pt. 1 The Industrial RevolutionAn Overview
- Fear of Statistics
- To understand the Industrial Revolution, we have
to make use of statistics - Take time over statistics, tables and charts and
you will find they contain a lot of useful
information
- Statistics on production show a sharp increase
during the last two centuries - According to Table 13.1 (p. 407), global
industrial potential rose about 85 times between
1750 and 1980 - You can find some of these statistics in the
text, on pp.407-412
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7The Industrial Revolution An Overview
- Economic power shifts from the old tributary
empires of Afro-Eurasia to the Atlantic world - The Old Economic Heartlands decline
- The Atlantic Region becomes the most
- productive region in the world
www.fas.harvard.edu/ atlantic/britatpg.html
8A shift in the Geography of Economic Power
9The Industrial Revolution An Overview
college.hmco.com/.../ chapter14/map_24_02.html
- 3. As the economic balance of power changed, so
did the military political balance - By 1800 States of the N. Atlantic region
controlled c. 35 of the earths surface - By 1914 States of the N. Atlantic region
controlled c. 84 of the earths surface
10The Industrial Revolution An Overview
www.paulmackey.co.uk/
- 4. Within the Industrialized world, leadership
shifted from - Britain to W. Europe and then to the USA during
the 19th century
www.amerika-live.de
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12The Industrial Revolution An Overview
- 5. The Industrial Revolution spread throughout
the world during 5 waves of innovation - From Britain, in the late 18th century
- 2./3. To Europe and Eastern N. America, in the
early and mid 19th century - 4. To Russia, Japan, and more of N. America in
the late 19th century - 5. To much of the rest of the world in the late
20th century
13The Spread of Industrialization 1st Wave Late
18th Century
14The Spread of Industrialization 2nd 3rd Waves
Early-Mid 19th Century
15The Spread of Industrialization 4th Wave Late
19th-early 20th Century
16The Spread of Industrialization 5th Wave Late
20th Century
17Pt. 2 The British Industrial Revolution
- The Industrial Revolution did NOT begin just in
Britain - Many crucial innovations occurred elsewhere
- Early designs for steam engines (France)
- Cotton gin (US)
- Automatic control of machinery (France)
- Manufacture of porcelain (Germany)
- First controlled flight (France Montgolfier
brothers)
18Flight
The first ever controlled flight. At Versailles,
in 1783, the Montgolfier brothers demonstrated
the possibilities of flight to King Louis XVI, by
sending a duck, a rooster and a sheep up in a
balloon. Two months later, their balloons
carried the first human passengers.
19The Cotton Gin
Invented in 1793, by Eli Whitney to clean seeds
and other materials from cotton fibres. Now
one person could do what had taken 50 people
previously The cotton industry was
revolutionized.
20So why start with Britain?
- Contemporaries first noticed the change in
Britain - Britain is where innovation first began to have a
fundamental impactIn 1837, the French
Revolutionary, Blanqui, described changes in
Britain as an Industrial Revolution - The origins of the Industrial Revolution have
been studied most carefully in Britain
21Three interconnected revolutions 1. In
Society 2. In Agriculture 3. In Industry
British Industrial Revolution Three Revolutions
in One
22Pt. 3 A Social Revolution British Society
after 1700
- Gregory King The first real statistician?
- We know a surprising amount about English society
just before 1700 because of Kings pioneering
work - British social structure
- King showed that in many ways, British society
remained quite traditional - At least half of its population was engaged in
agriculture - Agriculture remained by far the most important
sector of the economy - Most aristocrats did not think of themselves as
entrepreneurs
23But in many ways, British society in 1700 was
very capitalistic
- Peasants
- Losing land Enclosures-gt50 of people had too
little land to support themselves?earned wages,
often moving to towns - Urbanization
- 10 of Britains population lived in London alone
- Incomes
- Half of all incomes from industry, commerce,
rents and services - Elite groups
- Most landlords treated their estates as
businesses - Governments
- Drew most revenues from commerce, actively
protected commerce and colonies, if necessary
with navies and armies
24A surprisingly capitalistic class structure
- Most ordinary people dependent on wages
- Elite groups engaged in commerce
- Governments that support commercial activity
- PLUS
- Britain lay at the
- center of the
- largest, most
- dynamic, systems
- of exchange that
- had ever existed
British Empire
home.12move.nl/ sh829487/London/hop.htm
25Exchange networks before Columbus
26Exchange networks after Columbus
27Pt. 4 An Agricultural Revolution
- Changes in Britains social structure
revolutionized agriculture - As in all traditional economies, agriculture was
- The most important economic sector
- The key to economic change
English agricultural heartland
www.focus-cornwall.co.uk/ environment.htm
28Two approaches to Agriculture
- Traditional Farming A Cartoon-gt 90 on land
- Most farms were small
- Self-sufficiency peasants produce own food, do
not buy - Elite groups skimmed off their surpluses
- Farming was not treated as a business The goal
was to produce enough to eat and pay taxes. It
was not worth producing more. - Capitalist farming A Cartoon-gt 10 on land
- Farms large Landlords lease to farmers to work
land profitably - Farmers work the land using wage labor
- They sell most of what they produce
- The goal is to make profits, not to eat what they
grow they must produce as much as possible and
sell cheaply - I.e. they must produce efficiently INNOVATION is
vital
29Peasant Agriculture
- Small-scale
- Based on household labor
- Aimed mainly at subsistence
- A variety of crops grown
- Little investment
- Little incentive to innovate
30Commercial Agriculture
- Large-scale
- Based on wage labor
- Aimed mainly at making profits, not at feeding
the farmer - Often based on a single crop
- Investment in equipment
- Innovation is vital to success
31British farming was rapidly becoming capitalistic
- Between 1700 and 1800 the average size of farms
rose rapidly, and the number fell. Why - Enclosures Most traditional peasants squeezed
out - They had to become wage-earners and
- They had to buy the food they used to produce for
themselves - Their former landlords controlled more and more
land - They began to farm the land commercially
- Hiring former peasants as wage laborers
- Selling food to the growing numbers who could no
longer produce it themselves because they had no
land - Similar changes are occurring in many developing
world countries today
32The impact of commercial agriculture on
productivity?
- Techniques for raising productivity
- had been around for a long time
- Breeding superior livestock
- Planting special fallow crops such as legumes or
turnips - Improved forms of irrigation or drainage
- Introducing improved machinery
- But only commercial farmers had the incentive and
the capital to implement more productive methods
33Turnip Townshend, 2nd Viscount of Raynham
(1675-1738)
A typical entrepreneurial aristocrat, he
advocated the planting of turnips to increase
productivity.
34The Results of Innovation? Agricultural
Productivity Soared
- 1700-1850
- Total production of British agriculture rose 3.5
times - Yet the numbers employed fell from 61 to 29 of
the populationi.e. 30 of the population was now
feeding the other 70 - Increasing numbers of wage earner provided a
rapidly growing market for agricultural produce - By 1840, British agriculture was extraordinarily
efficient
35Pt. 5 Industrial RevolutionTwo types of
industry
- Traditional
- Most industrial production took place within
households or in small workshops - Production was small scale
- Innovation was unusual (and sometimes frowned
upon) - Capitalist
- Most industrial production takes place in large
factories - Production is large-scale
- Innovation is vital to success
36A traditional industrial workplace
Pinturicchio, The Return of Ulysses (1509), set
in Siena, in Italy. It portrays a typical
traditional workshop based in a domestic household
37Domestic manufactures in 17th C Britain
- Maxine Berg There were wood turning, carpentry
and tanning in the Needlewood Forest, coal in
south Staffordshire, as well as iron and metal
goods including locks, handles, buttons, saddlery
and nails, coal and iron in Cannock Chase.
Kinver Forest in the southwest had scythesmiths
and makers of edge tools, and there were
glassworkers on the Staffordshire-Worcestershire
border at Stourbridge. Bursham in the northwest
had a pottery industry, and there was ironstone
mining in the northeast. Leather working and
textile weaving in hemp, flax and wool were
scattered throughout the country.
38Preserving ancient craftsA modern Blacksmith
Bristol, Rhode Island
39Traditional and Modern
www.wearfiberart.com/ about.html
- Traditional forms of production had changed
little since the time of Sumer - Modern methods of production were
- On a larger scale
- Depended mainly on wage labor
- Produced in large amounts
- Depended on innovation to survive
40A 19th century steel factory
Modern industrial workplaces are more often large
scale, depend on large-scale production, and
technological innovation
41Entrepreneurs began to invest in industry Why?
- Agricultural Revolution ?
- More people seeking wage work
- More people needed to buy food and produce
- Food was becoming cheaper
- Government support?
- Protected markets in the colonies
- Efficient banking system based on the Bank of
England (above 1890) - Geography? Europe at the hub of new ideas
- Results? An Ideal situation for entrepreneurs
- Labor costs falling
- Demand rising
- Capital cheap
- New ideas abundant
42Two crucial sectors of manufacturing
- Coal
- Coal was vital because Britain was running out of
wood, the main fuel in pre-modern societies - Textiles
- After agriculture, the second largest sector in
most pre-industrial societies
www2002.stoke.gov.uk/. ../pages/coal.htm
Coal mine, Derbeyshire
www.staffs.ac.uk/.../ boxing/textile.htm
Textiles mill, Staffordshire
43Innovations appeared in both sectors
- Textiles
- Fewer people make their own clothes, demand
expands, entrepreneurs begin to innovate - Productivity increases
- Traditional Indian hand-spinners took about
50,000 hours to spin 100 lb of cotton - In Britain by the 1790s, it took 300 hours
- By the 1830s, with the addition of steam power,
it took c. 135 hours
44Hand Spinning
The traditional hand spinning wheel was probably
invented in India, c. 500 BCE.
45The Flyer Spinning Machine
First introduced in 1769 by Richard
Arkwright. The machine is powered by the drive
wheel at the bottom, which can be driven by water
power or steam power.
46Coal and Steam
- Coal
- Early steam engines were used to drain coalmines
from early in the 18th century - James Watt invented a more efficient version in
the 1760s that could be used as a prime mover
in other industries, such as textiles
www.150.si.edu/ chap4/4gin.htm
A new energy source For the first time, it was
commercially feasible to exploit the energy of
fossil fuels
47Todays dead white male is
James Watt (1736-1819) Inventor of the modern
coal-fired steam engine, key to the fossil fuels
revolution.
48The Watt Steam Engine
49Factories also raised productivity
Early British factory, 19th Century
www.rain.org/.../ literature/images/
- By bringing many workers together in large
factories .. - Labor Discipline could be increased
- More efficient methods could be introduced
- All machines could be powered by a single prime
mover (e.g. a watermill or steam engine)
50As Adam Smith argued, dividing up tasks can raise
productivity
51An early American textile factory, using steam
engines
52Innovation in other sectors Iron
Completed 1779. The first large structure made
from cast iron.
Ironbridge, Shropshire, England
53Wedgewood Pottery
Josiah Wedgwood (1730-95), established the first
industrial potteries, at Stoke-on-Trent in
Britain. His goods were sold to middle class
consumers as well as to the wealthy. (Wedgwood
was the grandfather of Charles Darwin.)
54Steam engines on wheels transformed land
communications
55Increasing production 1770-1830
56Unprecedented Rates of Growth!
- These are rates of growth that were completely
novel - TAKE OFF!
- We have entered the modern era!