Title: Chapter 20 - The Industrial Revolution Begins
1Chapter 20 - The Industrial Revolution Begins
- Section 3 Hardships of Early Industrial Life
2- Setting the Scene
- The Industrial Revolution brought great riches to
most of the entrepreneurs who helped set it in
motion. For the millions of workers who crowded
into the new factories, however, the industrial
age brought poverty and harsh living conditions.
Working people could look forward only to lives
marked by dangerous working conditions unsafe,
unsanitary, and overcrowded housing and
unrelenting poverty.
3I. The New Industrial City
- The Industrial Revolution brought rapid
urbanization, the movement of people to cities
4I. The New Industrial City
- Changes in farming, soaring population, and an
increasing demand for workers led to this
migration
Population Explotion
Seed Drill
5I. The New Industrial City
- The poor workers struggled to survive in urban
slums
Londons Poor
Slum Neighborhood in London
6II. The Factory System
- The heart of the industrial city was the factory,
which imposed a harsh new way of life on workers
7A. Rigid Discipline
- Workers faced a rigid schedule - shifts lasted up
to 16 hours and they were exposed to constant
danger
8B. Women Workers
- Many employers hired women - they were easier to
manage could be paid less than men
9C. Child Labor
- Factories and mines hired boys and girls as young
as 5 years old, or used orphans as a source of
labor
Child "hurriers" working in mines
10C. Child Labor
Some were killed or crippled and others were
stunted in growth or had twisted limbs
Cripples in the yard of children's home in London
11C. Child Labor
In the 1830s and 1840s, Parliament began to pass
laws to regulate child labor in mines and
factories
12III. The Working Class
- A. Protests - Some skilled workers resisted the
loss of their jobs by smashing machines and
burning factories the Luddites
The Luddites 1811-1816 Today the word 'Luddite'
is used to mock someone who dislikes new
technology like computers...
Machine-breakers or 'Luddites', 1812
13A. Protests
- Protests met harsh repression, workers were
forbidden to organize and strikes were outlawed
1839 Manchester protests
14B. Spread of Methodism
- John Wesley founded the Methodist Church and
tried to rekindle hope among the working poor and
work for social reform
In 1729, Wesley went into residence at Oxford.
There he joined the Holy Club, a group of
students that included his brother Charles
Wesley. The club members adhered strictly and
methodically to religious practices, and were
thus derisively called Methodists by their
schoolmates.
15IV. The New Middle Class
- Those who benefited most from the Industrial
Revolution were the entrepreneurs who set it in
motion
16IV. The New Middle Class
- Middle-class families lived in fine homes,
dressed and ate well, and gained influence in
Parliament
17IV. The New Middle Class
- The middle class valued hard work and "getting
ahead
18IV. The New Middle Class
- They felt little sympathy for the poor, who they
thought were responsible for their own misery
19V. Problems and Benefits
- Problems included low pay, dangerous working
conditions, unemployment, and dismal living
conditions
20V. Problems and Benefits
- Benefits included new laws to improve working
conditions and labor unions won the right to
bargain with employers