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New Technologies and the World Economy. . Railroads. Steam enginesBy 1850, almost every industrializing country had begun to build lines Great Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Russia, Japan The U.S. 1865- 35,000 miles, 1915- 390,000 miles. . Also railroads in countries with Raw materials = Sou
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1. The New Power Balance1850-1900 Chapter 26
2. New Technologies and the World Economy
3. Railroads Steam engines
By 1850, almost every industrializing country had begun to build lines
Great Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Russia, Japan
The U.S. 1865- 35,000 miles, 1915- 390,000 miles
4. Also railroads in countries with
Raw materials = South Africa, Mexico, Argentina
High populations = India and Egypt
Required a lot of land
Used a lot of timber
Caused cities to grow
Opened up new land to agriculture and mining
5. Steamships and Telegraph Cables Improvements made steamships more cost efficient
1830 – initially too costly
steel and iron for hulls, propellers instead of paddle wheels, more powerful engines
average size 1850= 200 tons, 1900= 7,500 tons
shipping lines moved people, mail and goods on scheduled liners
1869 – Suez Canal connected the Mediterranean to the Red Sea
6. 1866 to 1886 – submarine telegraph cables were laid around the globe for communication
the press proclaimed this the “annihilation of time and space.”
7. The Steel and Chemical Industries Steel becomes versatile and inexpensive
Hard and elastic
1850s – William Kelly, of Kentucky, figured out a way to make iron into steel without additional fuel
1856 – Henry Bessemer, of England, improved Kelly’s method
Steel cost 1/10th of what it did before
8. Steel production 1870-1/2 million tons; 1900- 28 million tons
The U.S. produced 10 million
Germany produced 8 million
Great Britain produced 4.9 million
Led to rails, ships, and “tin” cans
9. Chemical industry
late 1700s – chlorine bleach, soda and sulfuric acid were manufactured on a large scale
1856 - aniline purple
synthetic dye made from coal tar
led to the “mauve decade”
10. by the end of the century, German scientists had developed other colors
ruined the economy of indigo plantations
explosives
nitroglycerine made into dynamite
Alfred Nobel - Swedish
used in mining and construction of railroads and canals
Suez Canal – connected the Mediterranean to Indian Ocean routes
Useful to militaries
11. Germany
had the most advanced engineering and science institutes
government encouraged and funded research and cooperation between institutes
by 1900 – the leading producer of dyes, drugs, synthetic fertilizers, ammonia, and nitrates
12. Steel mills
used lots of raw materials, took up a lot of space, polluted the air and ground
Railroad locomotives and other steam engines
railroads took up space and depleted forests, the engines polluted the air
chemical plants – pollutants dumped into rivers
No government environmental regulations
13. Electricity 1870s- efficient generators made based on Englishman Michael Faraday’s design
Easier to use than water power and steam engines
Arc lamps used in public squares, theaters and stores
1879 – Thomas Edison developed an incandescent lamp
1882 – Edison created the world’s first electric distribution center in New York City
Electric streetcars, subways, in industry
Built hydroelectric plants
14. World Trade and Finance World trade increased x10 from 1850-1913
Europe imported
wheat from India and the U.S.
wool from Australia
beef from Argentina
Europe exported
coal, railroad equipment, textiles, and machinery to Asia and the Americas
15. Steamships were efficient and made freight cheap
Economies changed
Europe and North America
Diversified and prospered
Industries mass produced consumer goods like soap, canned and packaged foods, ready made clothes, household items, cosmetics
16. Capitalist economies were affected by each other and depression/recessions were felt globally
1870s-1880s – Germany, the U.S. and other late-industrializing nations raised tariffs to protect their industries from British competition
Great Britain’s unmatched Power
1900 – 2/3 of the world’s submarine cables
over half of the worlds’ shipping
Br. financed industrialization in other nations
17. Non-Industrial nations
suffered from synthetic replacements
new industry created needs for different materials
copper for electrical wires
18. Social Changes
19. Population and Migrations 1850-1914 European population grew from 265 million to 468 million
faster than ever before or since
drop in death rate, fertilizers increased crop production, refrigeration allowed people to store foods
20. European migration
to places like the U.S., New Zealand, Canada, Australia and Argentina
Irish Famine 1847-1848
Persecution of Jews in Russia
Poverty and population growth in Italy, Spain, Poland, and Scandinavia
Steamships and railroads made it cheaper and faster
21. 1850-1910, the population of the U.S. nearly multiplied by four
From 25 million to 98 million
Asian Migration
indentured laborers
Indians went to Africa, Southeast Asia and tropical colonies of G. Britain
Chinese to S.E. Asia and the East Indies
Chinese and Japanese to California – encountered hostility from European Americans
22. Urbanization and Urban Environments Urban populations by 1914
Br. 80%
Gr. 60%
Fr. 45%
Cities grew larger
Population growth, railroads, and industry
Railroads brought goods and allowed people to live farther from the city
23. New government regulations made life better for residents
Pipe in clean water
Pipe out sewage
Electric lighting
Police and fire protection
Sanitation and garbage removal
Health inspection
Garbage removal
Built schools and parks
24. Bigger cities
Healthier conditions
population growth
use of contraceptives
new neighborhoods
middle class moved to the outskirts
divided cities
industrial, commercial and residential zones
25. newcomers
moved in quickly
the cities could not keep up
conditions for these immigrants were as bad as they were in the early industrial era
Pollution
Air pollution
from coal smoke
Horse pollution
yep, you guessed it
Electricity helped end this
streetcars and trains
26. Middle Class Women’s “Separate Sphere” Victorian Age
1850-1901 in English speaking countries
Queen Victoria (r. 1837-1901)
Men=masculine, courageous and strong
Women=beautiful and kind
Home = a loving refuge from competitive capitalism
27. “separate spheres”
Men and women had different responsibilities
Men went to work and relaxed a social clubs
For women, raising children was the most important, running the household and spending the family money to increase the family’s status
Education
Boys prepared for the business world
Girls were taught music, embroidery, and drawing
28. middle class families
at least one servant
Middle class women at work?
Only until they were married
Only certain jobs
Couldn’t get professional jobs until after colleges allowed them to get degrees in the late 1800s
Women could become teachers
29. Some women became activists against alcohol, prostitution and child labor
others were fighting for women’s rights
Emmeline Pankhurst, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony all demanded the right to vote.
U.S. 1914 (12 states)
Great Britain 1918
30. Working Class Women Majority of textile workers
Worked in factories and had to keep the house and the children
girls began working as domestics at 10
worked 16+ hours a day
usually worked 6 ˝ days a week
31. Female factory workers earned 1/3 to 2/3 of men’s wages
If she had children, she had to work from home
many did piecework
children were forced to help
32. Socialism and Labor Movements
33. Marx and Socialism Socialism
against private property
want to help workers
Labor unions formed to protect workers
34. Karl Marx (1818-1883)
German
wrote the Communist Manifesto
saw history as a long conflict between social classes
saw business getting bigger and workers getting weaker
felt this would lead to revolution and overthrow of the bourgeoisie
he wanted a communist society without classes
35. Labor Movements Labor unions
wanted better wages, improved work conditions, insurance against illness, accidents, disability and old age
governments encourage workers involvement in govt.
universal male suffrage in Europe and North America
36. 1875 Social Democratic Party of Germany
became popular
by 1912, had more seats in the Reichstag than any other party
took part in the electoral process rather than revolution
37. Nationalism and the Unification of Germany and Italy
38. Language and National Identity Before 1871 Language
united or divided people of a nation
a means of persuasion
Religion
united or divided a region
governments learned that mass politics could strengthen a nation
39. The Unification of Italy, 1860-1870 Had been separate provinces
Push for unification
Opposition
Pope Pius XI
Opposed modernization
Austria
Controlled 2 Italian provinces
40. Count Camillo Benso di Cavour
prime minister of Piedmont- Sardinia
allied with France and then started a war with Austria
Italian provinces decided to join Piedmont-Sardinia, a constitutional monarchy
41. Giuseppe Garibaldi
tried to start a republic
Instead, Venetia became part of the P-S kingdom
Italy was unified
42. The Unification of Germany, 1866-1871 Most people of Euro. spoke German
Region of small states
Divisions
Austria and SW Germany were Catholic
Prussia and the NE were Lutheran
Prussia had the industrial region of the Rhineland
they were the 1st Euro army to use railroads, telegraphs, breech loading rifles
Prussia was ruled by Otto von Bismarck
Prussia became the North German Confederation
War with France (Franco Prussian War 1870-71), Germany gained more territory
43. Nationalism After 1871 Franco-Prussian War
France more liberal
Italy completed unification
Nationalism
used by leaders to appeal to the public
used the press
public schools
admitted women into public service jobs
tried to turn the poor against foreigners, not industry (anti-socialist)
Often pushed on minority populations
44. The Great Powers of Europe 1871-1900
45. Germany at the Center of Europe Had the most powerful army
Bismarck wanted to focus on peace
loose coalition with Russia and Austria-Hungary
he allowed all men to vote
this put more socialist in the Reichstag
imposed high tariffs on goods
medical, unemployment, and disability insurance; old age pensions
46. Wilhelm II inherits the throne
kicks out Bismarck
wants colonies
47. The Liberal Powers: France and Great Britain France, not the top dog anymore
population not growing much
slow growth of industry
people divided
monarchist/Catholics
republican/anticlerical
48. Great Britain
successful Parliament with different parties
income gap was narrowing
Irish unhappy
No feeling of nationalism because they were Catholic
Economy
Fell behind the U.S. and Germany
preoccupied with empire
too focused on Russia to pay attention to Germany
49. The Conservative Powers: Russia and Austria-Hungary Nationalism weakened these nations
mixed ethnic groups and languages
social differences
both claim the Slavs
the Balkans become “the tinder box of Europe”
50. Russia
only 45% spoke the Russian language
hard to encourage nationalism
hard to enforce laws
1905 – elected a Duma (parliament) and a constitution following a loss to Japan
51. Japan Joins the Great Powers, 1865-1905
52. China, Japan, and the Western Powers, to 1867 China
resisted western influence
became weaker
after the Opium Wars
Empress Dowager Cixi
Opposed railways and other foreign technology
53. Japan
became an industrial and military power
Tokugawa Shogunate had the power (military leader)
Denied foreign access
Lords realized Japan was weak
1853 – American Commodore Matthew Perry
Arrived in Japan
Demanded that Japan open up to the U.S.
The Tokugawan’s gave in
regional lords are angered
54. The Meiji Restoration and the Modernization of Japan, 1868-1894 1868 – rebels overthrew the Tokugawa Shogunate
“Restored” power to the emperor, Mutsuhito
Called the regime the Meiji Restoration
encouraged industrialization, modernization and militarization
western education & dress
industrialization was encouraged through conglomerates
55. The Birth of Japanese Imperialism, 1894-1905 Why the change?
defensive… to protect Japan from western countries
56. Yamagata Aritomo
Meiji leader
thought Japan needed a “sphere of influence” over Korea, Manchuria, and part of China
big supporter of military industrialization
battleships!
57. Sino-Japanese War 1894
Japan forced China to give up territories
Western powers get nervous and help China
China has to grant the west trade concessions like 90 treaty ports
became a colonial power following the Russo-Japanese war in 1910.
Japan gained Korea