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Causes of the Industrial Revolution. . Population Growth. Increasingly larger population in EuropeEx. England and Wales1688 = 5.5 million1801 = 9 million1851 = 18 millionWidespread resistance to disease and more reliable food suppliesCorn and potatoes from the Americas . . Increased food suppl
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1. The Early Industrial Revolution; 1760-1851 Chapter 22
2. Causes of the Industrial Revolution
3. Population Growth Increasingly larger population in Europe
Ex. England and Wales
1688 = 5.5 million
1801 = 9 million
1851 = 18 million
Widespread resistance to disease and more reliable food supplies
Corn and potatoes from the Americas
4. Increased food supply and job opportunities
People married younger
Had more children
Younger population increased the work force
Child labor
Immigration to the colonies in America
5. The Agricultural Revolution Increased food production provided for a working urban class
Potatoes
Yielded two or three times more food per acre than wheat did
Corn (maize), turnips, legumes and clover could also be fed to cattle
Cow manure was used as fertilizer
6. Rural tenant and subsistence farmers could not take a risk on trying something new
Large land owners had the land enclosed and they were given titles to land that had once been common land
“Enclosure” forced small scale farmers to move to the cities or emigrate
7. Trade and Inventiveness Population growth demanded improvements
Roads were improved to allow stage coaches to travel faster
Additional craftsmen were trained
China, silk and carpet production
Cottage industries emerged
Merchants would drop off supplies and pick up finished products
8. Increased trade
Middle class could afford tea, sugar, cotton textiles, iron hardware, and pottery
Science increased production and trade
Inventions to help increase trade
Benjamin Franklin experimented with electricity
Montgolfier brothers created the hot air balloon
Claude Chappe, first semaphore telegraph
Eli Whitney and John Hall, machines that made other machines
9. Britain and Continental Europe Economic growth in the North Atlantic
Great Britain
Rising standard of living, 18th century
Good harvests, growing population, overseas trade
Mining and metal industries willing to experiment
Largest merchant marine, produced more ships
10. Political and social differences
Monarch and nobility held less power than in France, Spain, and Austria; power was not as centralized
Class lines were not sharply drawn
Government contained fewer bureaucrats
Intermarriage between the classes was common
Guilds were weak and could not effectively resist change
Transportation
Navigable rivers and canal system
Coastline with many safe harbors
No tolls
Travel by water was cheaper than overland trade
11. Highly commercial
More people involved in production and trade
Patent system
Financial and insurance institutions
Continental Europe
Higher transportation costs
Rigid social structures
Government regulations
1789-1815 many wars
12. Industrialization began after the revolutionary wars
Belgium and Northern France were first
Britons went to Continental Europe to begin industrialization
Abundant coal and iron-ore deposits
By the 1850’s France, Belgium and the German states were in the middle of an industrial boom based on iron, cotton, steam engines and railroads
13. The Technological Revolution
14. Mass Production Pottery Industry
Necessary because the cost of pottery from China was high
Middle class interest in tea, coffee and cocoa made it necessary
Josiah Wedgewood
Developed the pyrometer
Used division of labor to produce china cheap enough for the middle class
Created identical plates and cups
15. Purchased a steam engine for his factory
One of the first times an engine was used in a factory
Allowed him to lower his costs
Increase quality
Employed several hundred workers
16. Mechanization: The Cotton Industry Largest industry in this period
Due to high costs, Europeans wanted to import cotton fiber and make it into cloth
1764 - Spinning Jenny – turned cotton fibers into thread
1769 - Water Frame – Richard Arkwright, spun stronger fibers, needed water power
1785 – Mule - Samuel Crompton, finest thread available
17. Weaving technology had to keep up
1784 – power loom – perfected by 1815
By the 1830s, large English factories powered by steam engines could turn cotton fiber into printed cloth
The price of cloth fell by 90%between 1782 and 1812
18. Made cotton America’s most valuable crop
1793 - Cotton Gin – Eli Whitney – separated the seeds
Cotton plantations spread through the south
American cotton industry by the 1820s
19. Iron Industry Iron had been used in Africa and Asia for thousands of years
Song China was using cast iron
Iron processing led to deforestation, which drove prices up.
Iron was rare and valuable outside of China before the 18th century
20. In Britain
Experiments with different fuel sources to smelt the iron
Used coke (coal in which the impurities have been cooked out) instead of charcoal
Made wrought iron fairly cheap
Less destructive to forests
Cheap and useful
Used to build the Crystal Palace
21. Cheap iron
Led to mass production of guns, hardware and tools
Manufacturers turned to interchangeable parts
Identical parts
By mid-19th century interchangeable parts were used in firearms, farm equipment and sewing machines
22. The Steam Engine First machine to transform fossil fuels into mechanical energy
1702-1712, Thomas Newcomen; inventor
A substitute for animal, human, wind and water power
More powerful and didn’t tire
Set the Industrial Revolution apart from earlier periods of growth and innovation
23. James Watt, 1769, improved the steam engine
Patented his idea
Used less fuel than the Newcomen engine
Soon used in mines, flour and cotton mills, pottery manufacturing
Used in river boats by 1790
Opened the United States up to movement on rivers and canals
Not used in ocean going ships until the technology improved
24. Railroads First steam locomotive
1825, Great Britain, after much improvement to the engine
First rails connected mines, cities and ports
Soon passenger trains
Railroads were faster, cheaper and more comfortable
Soon, railroads covered Eastern America
Opened the Midwest to settlers
25. Communication over Wires First telegraph
Early 1800s
After the invention of the battery
Samuel Morse developed a code
Railroad companies used telegraphs first, the lines were run along the tracks
Announced the departure and arrival of trains
1851, first submarine cables across the English Channel
Communication increased
26. The Impact of the Early Industrial Revolution
27. The New Industrial Cities Dramatic environmental changes in the cities
Both cities and towns grew quicker than ever
Some individuals became very prosperous
Built homes, churches, museums and theaters in wealthy neighborhoods
28. The largest population increase was among the poor
Unhealthy living conditions in tenements
People lived in overcrowded row houses
Several families were often forced to live in one room
29. Urban problems grew more serious
People threw their sewer and trash out the windows into the streets
The poor kept pigs and chickens while the rich kept horses
Factories caused air and water pollution
People drank water contaminated by sewage and industrial runoff
Railroads brought noise and pollution
30. These conditions brought about diseases
Smallpox, dysentery, and tuberculosis had been there
Rickets – lack of sunshine
Cholera- on ships from India
Average life span in England in the 1850’s was 40
Average life span in Manchester was 24 and only 17 in the poorest neighborhood
31. Municipal reforms bring change in the mid 19th century
Garbage removal, water and sewage systems, parks and schools
32. Rural Environments Almost all had been altered by humans before the industrial revolution in Britain
Pastures, and farmland
Deforestation
Timber to build ships and houses, used to heat homes and manufacture bricks, iron, glass, beer, bread and other items
33. American environment changed even faster
American and Canadian governments seized land from natives
Made it available at low costs to white farmers
Shipped lumber to Britain
Cotton plantations
Cut forests, grew cotton and depleted the soil and moved on
Americans thought of nature as an obstacle
34. Industrialization helps the environment in Europe
Did not rely on wood for building ships or powering industry
New transportation
Governments did not pay attention to roads
Canal systems were built
railroads
35. Working Conditions Carpenters, metalworkers and machinists in great demand
Some workers became engineers
Some took their knowledge to other places
The majority
Worked for low pay
Repetitive and boring jobs
Long workdays with few breaks
Accidents were common
36. Industrial work for women
Away from the home
Women worked in the textile industries
Made 1/3 to ½ of what men made
Left their babies with we nurses (expensive), or brought them to work and drugged them
Domestic services
Another option, but risk of sexual abuse and low pay
Many tried to work at home doing laundry and sewing at home.
37. Child labor
Working parents brought their children to work because there were no schools
Child labor was cheaper
They were better at moving around the machines
Factories often hired orphans
Often worked 14 to 16 hours a day and were beaten if they made mistakes or fell asleep
Children often worked in mines as well because of their size
38. American industry
Textile mills in America tended to hire women, but offered a moral dormitory lifestyle for unmarried women
Soon longer hours, harsher working conditions, and lower wages took hold
Slavery in the south
Continued to grow strong because of the booming textile industry and the demand for coffee and sugar
39. Changes in Society
Business cycles
Recurrent swings from economic hard times to recovery and growth then back to hard times
Handloom weavers became destitute
Factory workers suffered from high food prices and a few years later would be able to afford semi-luxury goods
40. “Hungry Forties;” 1847-1848, potato crops failed in Ireland
¼ of the Irish population died
Workers standard of living really only improved after the 1850s
Cheaper food, clothing and utensils
Some industrialists buy their way into high society
Middle class women became responsible for the home, the servants, the education of the children and the family’s social life.
41. Middle class success stories believed in the power of the individual
Most had worked their way up to wealth
Felt that those that did not succeed should blame themselves
The middle class claimed moral superiority and felt helpless against low class drunkenness, prostitution and child abandonment
42. New Economic and Political Ideas
43. Laissez Faire and Its Critics Laissez Faire = Let Them Do
Adam Smith (1723-1790)
Economist, wrote The Wealth of Nations
If individuals are allowed to seek personal gain, it would increase the general welfare
Government should stay out of business, except to protect private property
Should allow duty free trade with other countries
Capitalism not mercantilism
44. Smith persuaded governments
Reduced trade regulations after 1815
Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo
Blamed the workers troubles on high population
Encouraged later marriage and abstinence
Laissez Faire
Encouraged banks, stock markets and joint stock companies
Popular with business men
45. Positivists and Utopian Socialism Positivism
Scientific method could solve social and technical problems
Concern for the poor
Recommended that the poor, guided by scientists and artists, form workers’ communities
Workers seemed uninterested
46. Utopian Socialism
Charles Fourier (1768-1837)
Imagined an ideal society where groups of workers would live in dormitories and would work together on the land and workshops
They would have pastries and wine
Utopia = “nowhere”
47. Protests and Reforms Workers benefited little from these ideas and reforms
Changed jobs frequently, often absent, and their quality of work was often poor
Periodically rioted or went on strike
Did not change the industries
48. Workers joined together
Formed societies based on getting universal male suffrage
Shorter workdays
Mass movements
Persuaded parliament to look into industrial workers’ lives
49. The Factory Act of 1833
Prohibited the employment of children younger than nine in textile mills
Also limited the working hours of children
The Mines Act of 1842
Prohibited the employment of women and the employment of boys under age 10 underground
Corn Laws – repealed in 1846
Tariffs on imported grain were dropped
50. Industrialization and the Non-Industrial World
51. Non-industrialized regions were selling raw materials to industrialized nations
China no longer had the best manufactured goods
India and Egypt were receiving cheap industrial imports which delayed their own industrialization
52. Great Britain used steam powered, steel warships to attack China
This small island country was ready to expand again