Title: Industrial%20Revolution
1Industrial Revolution
2Goals of this Unit
- To understand the conditions that existed in
Great Britain that allowed for the beginning and
development of the Industrial Revolution. - To identify the social, political and economic
changes that were necessitated by the Industrial
Revolution. - To be able to explain the development of new
political theories in response to the realities
of the Industrial Revolution. - To recognize the science, technology and cultural
responses to the Industrial Revolution.
3Introduction
- Western Europe and America dominated globe in
19th century - Individuals improved tools, adopted better
methods - Industrialization brought greater productivity
- Scientists made advances, businesses discovered
new opportunities - Middle classes dominated, controlled
industrialization, economic transformation
benefited from social, legal reforms in France,
Britain, U.S.
4The British Phase
5The Revolution in Making Cloth
- Changes in agriculture ? less people needed for
farming - Demand for more cloth ? output increased
- Putting out system ? subcontracting system
- Example cotton merchant makes contract with
village to produce certain amount of cotton
?
?
6The Revolution in Making Cloth
- Solving of practical problems in cloth making set
pattern for all industrial revolutions - Practical people solved these practical problems
- Through invention (and enhancements and redesigns)
7Key Inventions
- John Kay (1733) the flying shuttle
- James Hargreaves (1764) spinning jenny
- Richard Arkwright (1769) water frame
- Samuel Crompton (1779) water mule
- Edmund Cartwright (1785) power loom
8Key Inventions
- Eli Whitney (1793) the cotton gin
9Key Inventions
- James Watt (1775) Perfects steam engine
- Used to make cloth, drive ships, locomotives
10Effects of New Inventions
? Increased industrialization
More efficient inventions
? Transition from rural life to urban life
11Britains Advantages
- Sufficient population, hardworking, inventive
- Risk-taking private sector, government support
- Good communications, transportation, ports,
merchant fleet - Flexible, merit-based social structure, stable
society - Bank of England provided money, financial
stability
12Britains Advantages
- Profited from need for industry during Napoleonic
Wars - Continental system remember?
- Expanded efficiency to iron, steel
- Bessemer process produced hard, malleable steel
in 1850s - Steel prices drop ? production soars
13Britains Advantages
- By 1850, Britain produced
- 67 of worlds coal
- 50 of worlds iron and cloth
- By 1850, half of British population lived in
cities
14The Continental Phase
15The Continental Phase
- Industrialization and banking changes across
Europe - Eastern, southern Europe more limited
- Nobilities, political boundaries, tariff barriers
block growth of industry
16Belgium
- By 1850, only one to compete with British
- Why?
- Belgium had favorable
- Government policies
- Stability
- Good transportation
- Other countries and businesses used spies to copy
Britains secrets - By 1850, whole continent caught up
- New banking systems allow modern investment banks
- Many small investors in new banks rather than a
few great families
17The Zollverein
- Customs union of German states (1819)
- Managed trade and economies between all German
Confederation - Eliminated tolls, tariffs
- Stimulated trade, commerce
- Germany begins to thrive
18The Continental Phase
- Euro population grows during era
- 175 million ? 435 million
- Problems with this?
- Thomas Malthus (British economist)
- Predicts food supply wont keep up with pace of
population growth - Malthus didnt account for
- Improved technology increases production of food
- Why does population grow?
- Decline in death rates
- Better sanitation
- More food
- Earlier marriages
19- Communication and transportation systems vastly
improve - Better roads
- New canals
- Bridgewater, Suez, Panama
20- Communication and transportation systems vastly
improve - Railroads linked markets, brought nations
together, carried people efficiently - U.S. transcontinental (1869)
- Russian Trans-Siberian (1903)
21- Communication and transportation systems vastly
improve - Urban rail lines, trolleys, subways
- Clipper ships, steamships
22- Communication and transportation systems vastly
improve - Better postal systems, telegraph, telephone,
typewriter
23The Workers of the Industrial Revolution
24The New Type of Labor
- Labor force went from
- Agrarian work
- Work 2/3 of year, 8 hours a day
- Seasonal, less demanding
- Factory labor
- 14 hours a day, 6 days a week, 52 weeks a year
- No holidays
- Intense, demanding, dangerous
25The Factory System
- Dangers of factory work
- Bad lighting
- Poor ventilation
- Dangerous machines
- No safety standards, no health or disability
insurance until late 1800s - No job security
- Owners vs. Workers
- Owners hold power, workers only have power in
numbers
26Child Labor
- Children often worked the worst jobs
- Mills, mines, etc
- Smaller size benefits factory and mine owners
- Toughest jobs
- that cant be
- done by adults
- Harder for kids
- to organize and
- protest
27- "Two children I know got employment in a factory
when they were five years old.the spinning
men or women employ children if they can get a
child to do their business..the child is paid
one shilling or one shilling and six pence, and
they will take that (five year old) child before
they take an older one who will cost more."
George Gould, a Manchester merchant, written in
1816.
28- "The task first allotted to Robert Blincoe was
to pick up the loose cotton, that fell upon the
floor. Apparently nothing could be
easier..although he was much terrified by the
whirling motion and noise of the machinery and
the dust with which he was half suffocatedhe
soon felt sick and was constantly stooping his
back ached. Blincoe took the liberty to sit down.
But this he soon found was strictly forbidden in
cotton mills. His overlooker, Mr. Smith, told him
he must keep on his legs. This he did for six and
a half hours without a break." John Brown, a
reporter for "The Lion". Written in 1828.
29- "We went to the mill at five in the morning. We
worked until dinner time and then to nine or ten
at night on Saturday it could be till eleven and
often till twelve at night. We were sent to clean
the machinery on the Sunday." Man interviewed in
1849 who had worked in a mill as a child.
30- "Woodward and other overlookers used to beat me
with pieces of thick leather straps made supple
by oil, and having an iron buckle at the end,
drew blood almost every time it was applied."
John Brown quoted in the "Lion" newspaper in
1828.
31- "Sarah Golding was poorly and so she stopped her
machine. James Birch, the overlooker, knocked her
to the floor. She got up as well as she could. He
knocked her down again. Then she was carried to
her house.......she was found dead in her bed.
There was another girl called Mary......she
knocked her food can to the floor. The master,
Mr. Newton, kicked her and caused her to wear
away till she died. There was another, Caroline
Thompson, who was beaten till she went out of her
mind. The overlookers used to cut off the hair of
any girl caught talking to a lad. This head
shaving was a dreadful punishment. We were more
afraid of it than any other punishment for girls
are proud of their hair." An interview in 1849
with an unknown woman who worked in a cotton
factory as a child.
32Women Labor
- Women laborers work in factories
- More organization led to numerous strikes and
workers rights movements - Protested against factory owners for
- Better wages
- Better working conditions
- Better hours
- Etc
33Labor Movement
- Both men and women protest and strike
- Attack machines as protest
- Frustrated skilled craftsman out of work
- Peterloo Massacre (1819)
- Combination Acts prohibited workers associations
- Repealed in 1825
- Paved way for unions
- Become stronger throughout 19th century
34Poor Urban Conditions
- European cities grew massively during Industrial
Revolution - Rapid increase causes many social problems
- Political leaders could not keep up with problems
and demands - Factory system dangerous, spread of diseases
- Bad health conditions, alcoholism, prostitution
- Had to provide security, sanitation services,
schools, housing - Problems could not be fixed for first generation
of workers - Haussmann implements city planning, urban renewal
in Paris - Not until 1900 did most cities start to fix
problems
35Socialism
- System in which the factors of production are
owned by the public and operate for the welfare
of all - Industrialization is leading to selfish
individualism and is breaking down community - Optimistic view of human nature, a belief in
progress, concern for social justice - Planned Economy competition is evil
- Rich poor should be more equal
- Private property restricted or abolished
- Capitalism increases the misery of the working
classes - Ex. Charles Fouray, Henri de Saint-Simon, Robert
Owen
36Utopian Socialism
- Robert Owen (1771-1858)
- Shocked by misery and poverty of working class
- Factory owner who wanted to improve conditions
for his workers - Created a Cooperative Community
- No children under ten could work
- Free schooling
- Built houses for his workers
37Karl Marx and Communism
- Karl Marx (1818-1883)
- German economist, philosopher
- Meets Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)
- Engels had experience in hardships of factory
life - Life-long partnership
- Communist Manifesto (1848)
- Das Kapital (1867)
- Problems with Capitalism
- Factory system exploits the worker surplus
value - Capitalist system leads to greater division in
society
38Communism (Marxism)
- Ideas
- Economy biggest and recurring force in history
- Human societies have always been divided into
warring classes - Based off philosopher Freidrich Hegels theory
- haves (bourgeoisie)
- vs.
- have nots (proletariat)
- The proletarians have nothing to lose
- but their chains.
- They have the world to win.
- Workingmen of all countries, unite.
39Marxs New World Order
- Proletariat is much larger and would use its
numbers to revolt - Workers would create a dictatorship of the
proletariat - Period of cooperative living and education, then
the state or government would wither away and a
classless society would be developed - This allows for Communism
- Elimination of private property, all goods and
means of production owned by the community
everyone equal
40The Labor Movement
- Marx and others create First International in
1864 - Large meeting in London of labor activists,
anarchists, German theorists - Unsuccessful due to arguments, too many different
factions - Ferdinand Lassalle forms Social Democratic
political party - Successful in Germany
- France too divided, England had Fabian Society or
influence of Christianity
41The Labor Movement
- The Second International (1889-1914)
- Golden age of Marxism
- 12 million members, more cohesion
- Goals
- 8 hour workday
- Welfare state
- Universal suffrage
42The Socialist Labor Movement
- Successes
- Strengthened labor unions
- Helped workers gain labor and living improvements
- How?
- Sometimes gained some political power in
government legislatures - Sometimes caused fears of a revolution
43Isms Response to Industrialization
- Capitalism
- Adam Smith The Wealth of Nations Economic
liberty guarantees progress - In Practice? Little to No government
interventionat first - Liberalism
- Freedom of the individual, equal rights for all,
fair competition (heavily supported by the
middle-class) - Utilitarianism
- Jeremy Bentham John Stuart Mill The Greatest
Good for the Greatest Number - In Practice? Not a very direct road map for
legislation but rooted in socialism - Socialism
- System in which the factors of production are
owned by the public and operate for the welfare
of all - In Practice? Government involvement of economy
through the existing political structure - Communism
- The proletarians have nothing to lose but their
chains. They have the world to win. Workingmen
of all countries, unite. - In Practice? Overthrow existing structure
Dictatorship leads to no government
44Utilitarianism
- Utilitarianism - People should judge ideas,
institutions, and actions on the basis of their
utility - Jeremy Bentham
- The greatest good for the greatest number
- John Stuart Mill led the movement
- Cooperative system of agriculture, womens
rights, reforms in legal and prison systems,
education, do away with great wealth differences
45Cultural ResponsesRomanticism 1800-1850Realism
1850-1880Impressionism 1880-1905
46Romanticism - Movement of Revolt
- Heart vs. reason emotion vs. intellect
mysterious vs. rational individual vs. set
formula senses and imagination vs. everything
else - the heart has its reasons which
- reason does not know.
47Romanticism
- Varied from country to country reacts to
movements - Britain industrial society
- France glory of man and liberty
- Germany promotion of national unification
- Spain reaction against Napoleonic rule
- Artists Goya, J.M.W. Turner, Constable,
Delacroix - Authors Emily Bronte, Johann Wolfgang von
Goethe, Victor Hugo, Wordsworth, Coleridge,
Byron, Keats, Shelley - Composers Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Chopin, Liszt
48Liberty Leading the People, Eugene Delacroix, 1830
49John Constable, Salisbury Cathedral from the
Meadows 1831
50Goya, The Third of May 1808 1814
51J.M.W. Turner, Rain, Steam Speed The great
Western Railway 1844
52Realism
- Went against Neo-Classicism and Romanticism
- Life as it was stripped of idealism
- Impact of industrialization
- Focus on working class
53Realism
- Reaction to the fluffy, bizarre, and unrealistic
Romantic era - Demonstrated life the way it was
- Fit with Marx, Bismarck, and critics of bourgeois
society - Artists Millet, Courbet, Ford Madox Brown
- Writers Emile Zola, Honore de Balzac, Charles
Dickens
54The Stone Breakers, Gustave Courbet, 1849
55Millet, The Gleaners 1857
56Ford Madox Brown, Work 1852
57Child Labor, illustration by Frances Trollope,
1840
58Impressionism
- Color and light become the subject of the
painting - Free brush strokes
- Impacted by development of photography -
daguerrotypes - Artists Degas, Manet, Monet, Renoir, Pissaro
59Pont Neuf, Paris, Adolphe Braun, 1855
60Boulevard des Capucines, Paris, Claude Monet, 1874
61Rehearsal of the Ballet on the Stage, Edgar
Degas, 1873
62Cypresses, Saint-Remy, Vincent van Gogh, 1889