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Industrial Revolution

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Title: Industrial Revolution


1
Industrial Revolution
  • Discuss the origins of the Industrial Revolution
    and the impact that it had upon European society.

2
Origins-Great Britain
  • Agricultural Revolution of the 18th c. led to an
    increase in food production feed more people
    with less labor at lower pricesenabled people to
    purchase manufactured goods and led to surplus
    labor supply for the new factories
  • Capitalprofits from trade and the cottage
    industry, along with an effective central bank
    and credit facilities
  • Entrepreneurspolitical power rested in the hands
    of a group of people who favored innovation in
    economic matters
  • Mineral Resourcescoal and iron ore minerals
    could be transported fairly easily along rivers
    and new canals, roads, and bridges to new
    industrial centers.
  • Governmentstable government and favorable laws
    created a favorable business climate
  • Markets-Britain had a vast colonial empire
    created through 18th c. wars (Americas, Africa,
    the East domestic market)

3
Coalbrookdale by Night, 1801, Philipp Jakob
Loutherbourg the YoungerBlast furnaces light the
iron making town of Coalbrookdale
4
Manchester from Kersal Moor, by William Wylde
in 1857. Manchester acquired the nickname
Cottonopolis during the early 19th century owing
to its sprawl of textile factories.
5
Technological Changes
  • Cotton Industry-flying shuttle, James
    Hargreavess spinning jenny, Richard Arkwrights
    water frame spinning machine, Samuel Cromptons
    spinning mule, and Edmund Cartwrights power loom
    increased production.
  • Entrepreneurs bring workers to the machines and
    organize labor collectively in factories.
    Factories then bring families to live in the new
    towns.
  • Steam engine-revolutionized the production of
    cotton goods and allowed the factory system to
    spread to new industriesiron.
  • Transportation-Richard Trevithick pioneered the
    first steam-powered locomotive on an industrial
    rail line, and George Stephenson and his son
    improved upon it.
  • Factories-system of time-work discipline
  • Great Exhibition of 1851-first industrial fair at
    Kensington in London in the Crystal Palace
    (structure made of glass and iron that was a
    tribute to British engineering skills) housed a
    variety of products created by the Industrial
    Revolution. It displayed Britains wealth to the
    world and was a symbol of success.

6
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7
Spread of Industrialization
  • Spread to Belgium, France, and the German states
    (1815-1850 mainly coal and iron), along with the
    U.S (1860).
  • Continental countries lagged behind due to the
    lack of good roads and problems with river
    transit toll stations and customs barriers along
    state boundaries increased costs and prices of
    goods. Guild restrictions and fewer
    entrepreneurs existed, and Napoleonic wars
    disrupted developments.
  • Governments-promotion of protective tariffs and
    joint-stock industrial banks

8
Social Impact
  • Population growthcensus taking began in 19th c.
    The key to expansion is a decline in death rates
    due to a drop in major causes such as famines,
    epidemics, and war and an increase in food supply
    (better fed and disease resistant)
  • - exception-Ireland with the Great Famine in
    1845
  • Emigration and urbanization

9
Living Conditions
  • Rapid urbanization intensified problems
  • Unsanitary conditions
  • Small, overcrowded living quarters in row houses
  • Lack of municipal directioncity streets used as
    sewers and open drains
  • Coal blackened towns
  • Deathly conditions
  • Edwin Chadwick-secretary of the Poor Law
    Commission investigated living conditions of the
    working classes and advocated a system of modern
    sanitary reforms-result, Britains first Public
    Health Act created the National Board of Health

10
London through the haze, ca. 1910
11
Gustave Dore Over London-By Rail, 1870
12
Industrial Workers
  • 1st half of 19th c. the artisans/craftspeople
    constituted the largest group of urban workers
    along with servants
  • Working conditions for factory workers included a
    12-16 hour workday 6 days a week no minimum wage
    or job security dirty and unhealthy women and
    children
  • Poor Law Act of 1834

13
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14
Poor Law Act
  • In 1834 a new Poor Law was introduced. Some
    people welcomed it because they believed it
    would
  • reduce the cost of looking after the poor
  • take beggars off the streets
  • and encourage poor people to work hard to
    support themselves.
  • The new Poor Law ensured that the poor were
    housed in workhouses, clothed and fed. Children
    who entered the workhouse would receive some
    schooling. In return for this care, all workhouse
    paupers would have to work for several hours each
    day.
  • However, not all Victorians shared this point of
    view. Some people, such as Richard Oastler, spoke
    out against the new Poor Law, calling the
    workhouses Prisons for the Poor. The poor
    themselves hated and feared the threat of the
    workhouse so much that in northern towns there
    were riots.

15
Close-up 1
This is an extract from an anti-Poor Law Poster
drawn in 1837. a) How desperate are the people
trying to get into the workhouse? b) What is the
response of the workhouse master?
16
Close-up 2
This is another extract from the poster a) What
work are these paupers doing? b) The paupers
believe they are treated much worse than slaves
in the West Indies. Why would this statement have
shocked people at this time? c) Why do you think
the paupers' heads have been shaved?
17
Close-up 3
This is another extract from the poster. a) What
has Joe got in the truck? b) What is he going
to do with it?
18
Close-up 4
This is another extract from the poster. a) What
does this part of the poster tell you about the
treatment of the old? b) Why do you think that
the government was keen to make sure that people
in workhouses worked?
19
Close-up 5
5. This is another extract from the poster. a)
According to the poster how long were inmates
expected to work each day? b) How many hours
sleep were they allowed? c) What punishments can
you see in the poster? 6. What does the artist
think about the new Poor Law? 7. What are the
problems of using this poster as evidence of what
the workhouses were like?
20
Efforts at Change
  • 1799 and 1800, British government outlawed labor
    organizations but not trade unions (formed to
    limit entry into the trade and to gain employee
    benefits). Strikes, however, led to the
    government to repeal the Combination Acts in 1824
    and to the tolerance of labor unions.
  • Luddites-skilled craftspeople who attacked
    machines because they believed that machines
    threatened their livelihood (1812).
  • Chartism-aim to achieve political democracy
    named from the Peoples Charter, a doc drawn up
    in 1838 by the London Working Mens Association.
    It demanded universal male suffrage, payment for
    members of Parliament, the elimination of
    property qualifications for members of
    Parliament, and annual sessions of Parliament.
    Significant in its ability to organize millions
    of working class men and women.
  • Government-series of acts Factory Acts between
    1802-1819 limited child labor between 9-16 to 12
    hour days and employment under 9 forbidden
    Factory Act of 1833 workdays for 9-13 limited to
    8 hour days and factory inspectors 2 hours of
    education 1847 Ten Hours Act reduced work day
    for 13-18.

21
  • Leader of the Luddites, 1812

22
The first general laws against child labor, the
Factory Acts, were passed in Britain in the first
half of the 19th century. Children younger than
nine were not allowed to work and the work day of
youth under the age of 18 was limited to twelve
hours.1
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