450 likes | 680 Views
How Steam Changed the World. Marion Littlejohn Sovereign Hill Education HTAV Middle Years Conference 24 th October, 2014. YEAR 9 Making a Better World ? (1750 – 1914) Content description
E N D
How Steam Changed the World Marion Littlejohn Sovereign Hill Education HTAV Middle Years Conference 24th October, 2014
YEAR 9 Making a Better World ? (1750 – 1914) • Content description • Students investigate …the experiences of men, women and children during the Industrial Revolution, and their changing way of life • The Industrial Revolution (1750 – 1914) • The technological innovations that led to the Industrial Revolution, and other conditions that influenced the industrialisation of Britain (the agricultural revolution, access to raw materials, wealthy middle class, cheap labour, transport system, and expanding empire) and of Australia • Elaborations • the impact of steam, gas and electricity on people’s way of life • the experiences of men, women and children during the Industrial Revolution • the population movements and changing settlement patterns • changes to the cities and landscape in European countries and Australia as the Industrial Revolution continued to develop, using photos • the short and long-term impacts of the Industrial Revolution, including global changes in landscapes, transport and communication • The Australian Curriculum; Year 9 - History
HORSE POWER A London Knifeboard Omnibus - from 1890-91 London omnibus c. 1820s
A waggonway was a timber track used for transporting coal in the late 18th and early 19th centuries
A wooden railway which carried waggons from collieries to the River Tyne has been unearthed Daily Mail Australia. Thursday, Oct 16th 2014 A waggonway from the former mining town of Tanfield in County Durham Note innovation of flanged wheel.
1707 Abraham Darby The cooking pot that changed the world.
Narrow boats at Tring Flour Mills on the Wendover Arm. The Grand Junction Canal built between 1793 and 1805 ran from Birmingham to London.
CANALS Locks control water levels Narrow barges pulled by horses
The Development of the Canal Network By 1830 there were around 4000 miles of canals. They linked all the main cities and especially the industrial areas of England.
1829 George Stephenson’s Rocket successfully pulled an open carriage carrying 30 passengers at 45 kph. Rocket (with some post 1829 innovations) as preserved in the Science Museum, London.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806-1859)
Brunel’s Great Western railway linking London to Bristol included this two-mile-long Tunnel at Box; then the longest railway tunnel in the world. The first train ran in 1838.
1840 The Penny Post is introduced in Britain The number of letters increased from 82 million in 1839 to 170 million in 1841
By 1846 – 5,000 miles of railway track are laid in Britain 17 years since Rocket’s successful journey
William Powell Frith, Ramsgate Sands or Life at the Seaside 1852-4
The Crystal Palace, Hyde Park, London. 1851 1851 THE GREAT EXHIBITION Queen Victoria opens the Great Exhibition in the Crystal Palace. Hyde Park, London, 1851
Illustration showing the envelope-making machine demonstrated at the Great Exhibition 1851.
Colonization spread Britain’s Industrial Revolution to Australia. Henry O’Neil, The Parting Cheer
George Baxter, News from Australia 1854 [Penny post 1840] Pierre Edouard Frere, Washing Day c. 1837
Black Hill Company established 1861 Battery consists of 60 stampers Last line reads FOUNDRY The Company have a foundry attached to the mine and make all their own castings
Phœnix Company's foundry, Ballarat The Australasian sketcher. April 8, 1882
Ballarat station 1903. A load of Sunshine Harvesters leaving Hugh V. McKay’s Ballarat works for export to Argentina Both train and farm machinery made in Ballarat. http://museumvictoria.com.au/sunshine/intro.htm
Episodes on Brunel’s Great Eastern & 1858 “the Great Stink” Joseph Bazalgette, Chief Engineer of the London Metropolitan Board of Works, creates the world’s first modern sewerage system.
Three part series produced for the BBC on the History of Railways.
Working steam driven machinery at Sovereign Hill Sovereign Hill Education Blog on The Industrial Revolution in Australia http://sovereignhilleducation.wordpress.com/2013/02/06/the-industrial-revolution-in-australia/