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The First Industrial Revolution 1760-1820/1840. Prelude: The Population Explosion. Famine War Disease Stricter quarantine measures The elimination of the black rat. Historical Significance of the Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution changed human life drastically
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Prelude: The Population Explosion Famine War Disease Stricter quarantine measures The elimination of the black rat
Historical Significance of the Industrial Revolution • The Industrial Revolution changed human life drastically • More was created in the last 250+ years than in the previous 2500+ years of known human history
What was the Industrial Revolution? • The Industrial Revolution refers to the greatly increased output of machine made goods that began in England in the 1700s
The Industrial Revolution • Machines were invented which replaced human labor • New energy sources were developed to power the new machinery – water, steam, electricity, oil (gas, kerosene) • Increased use of metals and minerals • Aluminum, coal, copper, iron, etc.
Britain Takes the Lead Great Britain’s advantages: Plentiful iron and coal A navigable river system Colonies that supplied raw materials and bought finished goods A government that encouraged improvements in transportation and used its navy to protect British trade
Development of the Domestic System of Production • Domestic system developed in England • Late 1600s-late 1800s • Domestic system could not keep up with demand
The Industrial Revolution • Transportation improved • Ships • Wooden ships → Iron ships → Steel ships • Wind-powered sails → Steam-powered boilers • Trains • Automobiles • Communication improved • Telegraph • Telephone • Radio
Background of the Industrial Revolution • Scientific Revolution • Intellectual Revolution • Encouraged learning and the search for better and newer ways of doing things • Agricultural Revolution • Landowners experimented in their enclosures • Seed drill • Crop rotation • Livestock breeding
Townshend’s Four-Field System crop rotation example Charles “Turnip” Townshend
Factory System • Developed to replace the domestic system of production • Faster method of production • Workers concentrated in a set location • Production anticipated demand • For example: Under the domestic system, a woman might select fabric and have a businessperson give it to a home-based worker to make into a dress. Under the factory system, the factory owner bought large lots of popular fabrics and had workers create multiple dresses in common sizes, anticipating that women would buy them.
England’s Resources: Capital • merchants had the capital to invest in the factory system – money to buy buildings, machinery, and raw materials • Its colonies gave England access to enormous markets and vast amounts of raw materials • possessed the necessary raw materials to create the means of production (coal, iron) • English people could freely travel from the countryside to the cities • World’s largest merchant fleet
England’s Resources: Geography • England is the political center of Great Britain, an island • Great Britain did not suffer fighting on its land during the wars of the 18th century • Island has excellent harbors and ports • Damp climate benefited the textile industry (thread did not dry out) • Government stable • No internal trade barriers
Inventions Spur Industrialization • Weavers work faster-flying shuttles/ spinning jennies • Water frame uses H2O to drive spinning wheels • Power loom- spinning mules speed up production • Move machinery to factories
“Necessity Is the Mother of Invention” • The process of inventing never ends • One invention inevitably leads to improvements upon it and to more inventions
Bell Work January 13, 2014 • Turn your project into the stack at the front • Also, turn your current event into your box • How was your second drawing of the urban village different than your first? • Were you surprised at how fast these towns grew in just 100 years? • What factors did you think about when laying out your town?
These machines were so large. They were placed in large buildings called factories
Development of Steam Engines • Early water power involved mills built over fast-moving streams and rivers • Problems-rivers far removed, not enough power, prone to drying • James Watt, Scotland (1769) • Improved Newcomen’s steam engine to power machinery
Steam Engines • By 1800, steam engines were replacing water wheels as sources of power for factories • Factories relocated near raw materials, workers, and ports • Cities grew around the factories built near central England’s coal and iron mines • Manchester, Liverpool
Transportation Before the Industrial Revolution • Canal barges pulled by mules • Ships powered by sails • Horse-drawn wagons, carts, and carriages After the Industrial Revolution • Trains • Steamships • Trolleys • Automobiles
Steamboats • Robert Fulton invented the steamboat in 1807 • The Clermont operated the first regular steamboat route, running between Albany and New York City • 1819 – the Savannah used a steam engine as auxiliary power for the first time when it sailed across the Atlantic Ocean • 1836 – John Ericsson invented a screw propeller to replace paddle wheels • 1838 – the Great Western first ship to sail across the Atlantic on steam power alone, completing the trip in 15 days
Macadamized Roads • Strong, hard roads invented by Thomas Telford and John McAdam • Improvement over dirt and gravel roads • Macadamized roads have a smooth, hard surface that supports heavy loads without requiring a thick roadbed • Modern roads are macadamized roads, with tar added to limit the creation of dust
Railroads • 1830 – Stephenson’s “Rocket” train traveled the 40 miles between Liverpool and Manchester in 1 ½ hours • 1830-1870 – railroad tracks went from 49 miles to over 15,000 miles • Steel rails replaced iron rails • 1869 – Westinghouse’s air brake made train travel safer • Greater train traveling comfort – heavier train cars, improved road beds, and sleeping cars
Bell Work January 14Review QuestionsPick two to answer thoroughly • What was the Industrial Revolution? • Describe at least three developments of the Industrial Revolution. • Compare and contrast the domestic and factory methods of production. • Why did the Industrial Revolution begin in England? • Explain why one invention or development leads to another.
Review Questions • Explain how developments in the textile industry sparked the Industrial Revolution. • Describe at least three developments in the area of transportation. • Describe at least three developments in the field of communications. • Considering the conditions necessary for industrialization to occur, how well equipped is the undeveloped world for becoming industrialized? Are modern undeveloped nations in a better or worse position than 18th- and 19th-century England?
Industrialization: Section 2 • European cities go through a period of urbanization because of the factory system • This caused living conditions to be terrible • Sickness was widespread (cholera) • Average worker spent 14hours, 6days • Dangerous industry-coal mines
Class Tension • New money-factory owners, shippers, and merchants became middle class • Upper-doctors, lawyers • Lower-factory overseers • Working class-machines replaced them • Luddites-destroyed machines in factories and rioted
Hey, some good things • Created jobs • Money! • Increased production of goods • Hope of improvement • Expanded educational opportunities • Took a while for everybody but eventually conditions improved in the work place
Bell Work January 15, 2014 • What early industries mechanized in the United States? • Why did Belgium lead Europe in adopting industrialization? • How did the Industrial Revolution shift the world balance of power?
Industrialization Spreads Section: 3 • Samuel Slater- built a spinning machine from memory in U.S. • Francis Lowell-mechanized every stage of manufactured cloth in U.S. • Women flocked to mill jobs • U.S. went through Industrialization in late 1800s • Resources, inventions, swelling population were contributors • Railroads played a major role
Corporations • Entrepreneurs sold shares of stock or rights of ownership • These businesses became corporations • Gives the ability to raise large amounts of capital • Standard Oil • Carnegie Steel
Europe Industrializes • William Cockerill made his way to Belgium, his son built large industry there • Germany had pockets of industry • Imported British engineers and build railways • Regions in Europe began to Industrialize (ex. Northern Italy-textile) • Social structure and geography halted it elsewhere
Impact • Industrialized countries exploited overseas markets for resources • Imperialism was born • Gave Europe great power • Developed a middle class • Created a movement for social reform
Philosophers: Section 4 • Adam Smith believed in the term laissez faire • Policy of letting owner of industry and business set working conditions without interference • Wrote about in The Wealth of Nations
Philosophers • Capitalism-economic system in which the factors of production are privately owned and money is invested in business ventures to make a profit • Malthus -An Essay on the Principle of Population epidemics and wars are necessary • Ricardo- Principles of Political Economy and Taxation-a permanent underclass