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The Spread of Industrialization. I. Continental Europe Industrializes. It took several years for industrialization to spread Lack of raw materials & consumer markets 1789-1815: Fr. Rev. & Napoleonic Era Gap widened betw. G.B. & Euro. . A. Beginnings in Belgium. Belgium led Euro.
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I. Continental Europe Industrializes • It took several years for industrialization to spread • Lack of raw materials & consumer markets • 1789-1815: Fr. Rev. & Napoleonic Era • Gap widened betw. G.B. & Euro.
A. Beginnings in Belgium • Belgium led Euro. • Deposits of iron ore & coal, & waterways • Brit. industrial secrets leaked into Belgium as they did to U.S. • Brit. forbade engineers from leaving country • 1789: Samuel Slater emigrated to U.S. • Built spinning machine from memory • 1790: Moses Brown opened first factory in U.S. to house Slater’s machines (Pawtucket, RI) –ONLY THREAD! • 1813: Francis Cabot Lowell mechanized every stage of manufacturing cloth (Waltham, MA) • Single women migrated to cities to work as mill girls • Worked 12 hours/day, 6 days/week
Country girls were naturally independent, and the feeling that at this new work the few hours they had of everyday leisure were entirely their own was a satisfaction to them. They preferred it to going out as “hired help.” It was like a young man’s pleasure in entering upon business for himself. Girls had never tried that experiment before, and they liked it.
…back to Belgium • William Cockerill illegally emigrated to Belgium (1799) • Had secrets of building spinning machinery • Son built industrial enterprise (E. Belgium) • Mechanical equipment, steam engines, locomotives • Other Brits. came to work
B. Germany Industrializes • Industry grew slowly in German states • No efficient central govt. • Economic isolation & scattered resources • Pockets of industrialization appeared • Ruhr Valley (COAL) • 1835: began to copy Brit. model • Imported Brit. equipment & engineers • Sent children to England to learn industry • Built RRs to link industrial cities w/resources
Railroads and machine shops, coal mines and iron foundries, spinneries and rolling mills seem to spring up out of the ground, and smokestacks sprout from the earth like mushrooms. • Germany’s economic development led to military development (late 1800s) • 1870s: Germany = G.B.
C. Expansion Elsewhere in Europe • Industrialization spread gradually • Bohemia = spinning industry • Catalonia (Spain) = processed more cotton than Belgium • N.Italy = mechanized textile production • Moscow & St. Petersburg = serf labor in factories
After 1830: France industrialized • More measured/controlled b/c ag. economy was strong • Fr. govt. helped industrialization: • 1. imposed high tariffs • 2. built RRs • Mainly agricultural
Some Euros. did not industrialize • Austria-Hungary: mtns. defeated RRs • Spain: lacked roads & waterways
II. Later Expansion of U.S. Industry • Northeast U.S. (late 1800s) industrialized • Mainly ag. until Civil War (1865) • Experienced a boom • National unity • Vast country w/natural resources • Inventions • Growing urban pop. (consumers) • Willingness to take risks in business
Canals & RRs crept west across U.S. • Industry moved w/it • Pittsburgh & Grt. Lakes = steel • Chicago = stockyards • Minneapolis = grain • 1869: Transcontinental RR • Late 1800s: large RR companies
A. The Rise of Corporations • Large businesses = $$$ • Entrepreneurs sold stock • Part ownership of corporation • Late 1800s: • Standard Oil (John D. Rockefeller) • Carnegie Steel Co. (Andrew Carnegie) • Big business = made big profits
III. The Impact of Industrialization • I.R. shifted world balance of power
A. Rise of Global Inequality • Wealth gap widened betw. industrialized & non-industrialized countries • Raw materials • Consumer market • Brits. led in exploitation of colonies • Imperialism: • the ambition of a powerful nation to dominate the political, economic, & cultural affairs of another nation or region • *BORN OUT OF INDUSTRIALIZATION • Latin Amer., Asia, Africa = ag. economies