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Industrial Revolution Vocabulary (Chapter 18)

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Title: Industrial Revolution Vocabulary (Chapter 18)


1
Industrial Revolution Vocabulary (Chapter 18)
  1. Industrial Revolution
  2. Entrepreneurs
  3. Capitalism
  4. Agricultural Revolution
  5. Crop rotation
  6. Seed drill
  7. Domestic system
  8. Spinning jenny
  9. Steam engine
  10. Cotton gin
  11. Urbanization
  12. Liberalism
  13. Utilitarianism
  14. Socialism
  15. Means of production
  16. Utopian socialism
  17. Trade unions
  • Strike
  • Transportation Revolution
  • Locomotive
  • Internal combustion engine
  • Corporations
  • Financiers
  • Monopoly
  • Trust
  • Separate spheres
  • Charles Darwin (and Darwinism)
  • Natural selection
  • Social Darwinism
  • Marxism
  • Proletariat
  • Romanticism
  • novel
  • Realism
  • impressionism

2
Starter (November 16)
  • Roman numerals practiceIdentify the number the
    following Roman numerals represents. You must
    write the Roman numeral and your answer.
  • X
  • V
  • I
  • IV
  • XIV
  • IX
  • XXIIV

3
  • Group Grading

4
The Industrial Revolution(1700-1914)
  • Chapter 18
  • Vocabulary is due on test day.
  • Your test is planned for November 22.

5
Introduction
  • The Industrial Revolution occurred as a reaction
    to changes in production.
  • It first occurred in Britain. Overtime, it
    spread throughout Europe and then to North
    America.
  • Developments of the Industrial Revolution include
    increased population, improved food production,
    new demands for manufactured goods, and new
    technologies.
  • We often break the Industrial Revolution into two
    distinct parts
  • First Industrial Revolution (1700s-mid 1800s)
  • Second Industrial Revolution (last half of 1800s)

6
First Industrial Revolution
  • Essential Questions
  • Why did the Industrial Revolution begin in
    Britain?
  • What were some of the consequences of the
    Agricultural Revolution?
  • How did rising demand and new technology affect
    the textile industry?
  • What were the basic elements of the first
    Industrial Revolution?

7
Origins of the Industrial Revolution
  • Asset of water for protection, power, and
    transportation
  • Canal networks were built in the late 1700s
  • Coal was in abundance
  • A stable political system developed after the
    Glorious Revolution in 1688.
  • Laws protected property rights
  • The large empire allowed access to many trade
    routes and provided raw materials.
  • Capitalism use of private money or goods to
    produce a profit of more money or goods
  • Banking system allowed for savings for new
    investments
  • Growing demands for manufactured goods
  • Essential Question 1 Why did the Industrial
    Revolution begin in Britain?

8
Commercialization of Agriculture
  • In the early 1700s, Britain experienced a
    revolution in agriculture due mainly to their
    American colonies.
  • Crops from the Americas included potatoes and
    corn.
  • New farming methods included use of animal manure
    for fertilizer and using crops to revitalize
    nutrients in the soil (turnips and clover).
  • Crop rotation alternating the type of crop
    grown in an area to preserve soil nutrients
  • Jethro Tulls invention of the seed drill planted
    seeds at the right depth in regular rows.
  • Essential Question 2 What were some of the
    consequences of the Agricultural Revolution?

9
Textile Industry
  • Cloth had been developed in the home since the
    Middle Ages (this was called the domestic
    system).
  • Higher demands for cloth around the turn of the
    18th century threatened to end the domestic
    system.
  • Cotton plantations from the Americas increased
    the need for quickly woven cloth. New inventions
    helped meet the demand
  • James Hargreaves developed the spinning jenny.
  • Richard Arkwright developed the water frame.
  • Eli Whitney developed the cotton gin. (The cotton
    gin increased the demand for slaves in the
    southern US.)
  • Essential Question 3 How did rising demand and
    new technology affect the textile industry?
  • Essential Question 4 What were the basic
    elements of the first Industrial Revolution?

10
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11
Review as time permits
12
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13
Starter (November 17)
  • Read Britains First Factories on page 488 in
    your textbook.
  • Answer the Linking Geography and History
    questions no page 489.
  • Based on the map, answer the location question
    Where were most of Britains cotton textiles
    produced?

14
Consequences of the first industrial revolution
  • Essential Questions
  • What were some of the social consequences of
    industrialization?
  • What political theories emerged in the industrial
    era and how did they differ from another?
  • How did many workers respond to industrialization?

15
Social Changes
  • Steam-powered machinery changed the way people
    worked.
  • Working in factories instead of at home
  • Men, women, and children
  • Long hours (usually 6 days a week)
  • Adjustments for seasons were no longer made (use
    of time clocks)
  • More food was available due to improved tools
  • From 1801 to 1851, the population of Britain
    doubled.
  • Urbanization
  • More jobs were available for the working class
  • Many jobs were industrial
  • Job stability increased for non-industrial
    workers (primarily domestic servants)
  • TERRIBLE CONDITIONS
  • Tenement housing (slums)
  • Sanitation issues
  • Answer ES 1 What were some of the social
    consequences of industrialization?

16
New Political Theories
  • Many people reacted differently to
    industrialization.
  • New ideas developed about how to structure
    society and the state.

17
Liberalism, Utilitarianism, and Socialism
  • In your seated section, you will form concise
    bullet notes on one of the different theories
    that emerged due to the Industrial Revolution.
  • Each group will create a poster to display the
    information for their classmates.
  • Be clear in your information, but be concise.
  • Identify key words/people
  • Write legibly on the poster
  • All members must have their own notes written on
    notebook paper IN THEIR NOTE section.

18
Gallery Walk of Theories
  • Each group will rotate and read the notes for
    each different theory.
  • Students will be able to ask questions of expert
    groups once the activity is complete.
  • Answer ES 2 What political theories emerged in
    the industrial era and how did they differ from
    another?

19
Workers Movements
  • Many workers began to seek membership in trade
    unions (organizations of workers from all over
    the country who collectively bargain).
  • Strikes were often used as a way to stop
    production.
  • Britain, France, and Germany had laws outlawing
    workers associations in the early 1800s.
  • Answer ES 3 How did many workers respond to
    industrialization?

20
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21
Starter (November 18)
  • Write a one, grammatically correct paragraph in
    response to the following statement. Your
    paragraph must prove comprehension through the
    use of historical evidence and be free of
    fluff. (Agree/Disagree)
  • Life improved for workers who moved from rural
    areas into industrial cities.

22
The Second Industrial Revolution
  • Essential Questions
  • How did the steam engine affect transportation?
  • What were the foundations and the consequences of
    the second Industrial Revolution?
  • What were the results of new business practices
    in the late 1800s?
  • How did industrialization in France, Germany, and
    Russia differ from industrialization in Britain?

23
Transportation Revolution
  • Water Travel
  • 1807, Robert Fultons Clermont (steamboat) was
    successful on the Hudson River (NY).
  • By 1870, steamships were replacing sailing ships.
  • Land travel
  • In the early 1800s, early steam-powered carriages
    emerged.
  • Locomotives were developed in 1829 (by George
    Stephenson) to pull trains at 30 mph.
  • Railways were built across Europe and the US
    making trade and travel much easier.
  • Answer ES 1 How did the steam engine affect
    transportation?

24
Second Industrial Revolution
  • In the second half of the 1800s
  • The 1st Industrial Revolution was based upon
  • The 2nd Industrial Revolution was based on
    electricity, steel, and oil.

steam, coal, and iron.
25
Electricity
  • Electric generators were developed in the 1830s
    revolutionizing communication.
  • The telegraph was invented in 1837.
  • Samuel Morse (of the US) developed Morse code to
    communicate over the telegraph.
  • Alexander Graham Bell (of the US) invented the
    telephone in 1876.
  • Electric motors began to replace steam engines in
    the 1870selectric motors were cleaner, smaller,
    and cheaper.
  • Thomas Edison invented the light bulb in 1879.

26
Steel
  • The Bessemer process (discovered by Andrew
    Carnegie) made steel production easier and
    cheaper.
  • The process purifying low quality iron ore into
    steel.
  • The cheap steel created a boom in the railroad
    industry.
  • Cities drastically changed with the skyscraper
    (and later, the elevator).

27
Petroleum
  • Oil replaced coal in the 1870s.
  • In 1876, Nikolaus August Otto (of Germany)
    invented the internal combustion engine which ran
    on gasoline.
  • In 1885, the Mercedes Benz was the first car
    developed.
  • The Orville Wright glider used in 1903 at Kitty
    Hawk was gas-powered.
  • Answer ES 2 What were the foundations and the
    consequences of the second Industrial Revolution?

28
The Growth of BIG BUSINESS
  • The new industries of the 1800s were expensive to
    start and maintain.
  • Corporations developed in which large numbers of
    people owned shares of the company and shared the
    profits.
  • Financiers often bought companies as investments
    in order to gain profits. (Example JP Morgan
    bought out Carnegie Steel and created the US
    Steel Corporation in 1901.)

29
  • Competition in business was harshtaking out the
    opponent was the goal to control production and
    sale of a good or service.
  • Vertical integration buying all companies who
    contribute to the final product (suppliers)
  • Horizontal integration buying out competitors
    or smaller companies
  • Monopoly sole control of the production and the
    sale of a product or service in order to dominate
    a particular market
  • Trusts combinations of similar businesses under
    the direction of a single group
  • Answer ES 3 What were the results of new
    business practices in the late 1800s?
  • Answer ES 4 How did industrialization in
    France, Germany, and Russia differ from
    industrialization in Britain?

30
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31
Starter (November 21)
  • Turn in signed progress reports to the correct
    tray for your class.
  • Create a T-chart titled Causes and Effects of the
    Industrial Revolution.

32
Changes in Western Culture and Society
  • Essential Questions
  • How did the wealth provided by the Industrial
    Revolution affect the middle class?
  • What new advances were made in science, and how
    did these developments affect social sciences?
  • What were romanticism and realism, and in what
    ways were they reactions to the industrial era?

33
Separate Spheres
  • With industry, work was separated from the home.
  • Men were public figures in business and
    government
  • Women ran the household
  • Queen Victoria of Britain became the example of
    how women should behave in the middle
    classdevoted to her husband and was a dedicated
    wife.
  • ES 1 How did the wealth provided by the
    Industrial Revolution affect the middle class?

34
New Scientific and Social Ideas
  • Darwinism
  • Developed by Charles Darwin (an English thinker
    of the 1800s)
  • Published On the Origins of Species by Means of
    Natural Selection
  • Natural selection is the theory that life forms
    evolved over time in a constant struggle for
    survivalthe stronger would survive.

35
  • Physical Sciences advanced in fields such as
    medicine, physics, and chemistry.
  • Gregor Mendel discovered laws of heredity.
  • The use of chloroform as an anesthetic for
    surgery developed.
  • Laws of magnetism and electricity were developed
  • Social Sciences
  • New fields of study were introduced including
    sociology, psychology, economics, anthropology,
    and archaeology.
  • Scientific research (such as heredity) often
    helped justify negative prejudice (such as racism
    and sexism).
  • Many used anthropology in attempts to prove that
    some races were inferiorit failed.
  • Eugenicsan attempt to improve genes through
    breeding
  • Social Darwinism applied Darwinism to
    humansthe wealthy were more fit than the poor

36
  • ES 2 What new advances were made in science,
    and how did these developments affect social
    sciences?
  • Marxism Developed by Karl Marx, this political
    theory applied scientific research to government
    creating scientific socialism
  • The Communist Manifesto published by Marx and
    Friedrich Engels
  • Argued that industrial capitalism created a
    proletariat (working class) who were exploited by
    capitalists
  • Overtime, Marx felt that the proletariat would
    rise against the capitalists through revolution
    establishing a communist government (government
    owns all means of production and there is no
    private property).

37
Independent Reading Page 505 Movements in
Literature and ART
  • Create concise bullet notes directly in your
    class notes.
  • ES 3 What were romanticism and realism, and in
    what ways were they reactions to the industrial
    era?
  • Review games as time permits

38
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39
Starter (November 22)
  • Gather and organize your work packet. You will
    have a maximum of 3 minutes after the bell to
    turn in all assignments to prevent point
    deductions.
  • Your packet MUST be in this order
  • Vocabulary
  • Notes (with essential question answers included
    and any notes assigned in small
    groups/independent)
  • Writing Starter from 11/18 (agree/disagree Life
    improved)
  • T-chart Starter 11/21 (causes and effects)
  • If you are missing any components, you should
    write a note and staple it to the front of your
    packet explaining why. Failure to do so will
    result in not being able to make up the missing
    component.
  • BE SURE YOUR NAME IS ON THE FRONT AND PLACE YOUR
    PACKET IN THE TRAY FOR YOUR CLASS PERIOD.
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