The Industrial Revolution
Journal:
Modern day invention: | What life was like before it: | What has changed because of it: |
Cell Phone | Verbal communication , only long distance communication was hard line phone | Internet at your fingertips, face to face calling, social media, camera recording. |
| | |
| | |
Britain Takes the Lead
Great Britain’s advantages:
Factors of Production:
Industrial Revolution
Agricultural Revolution:�The Enclosure Movement
In the second half of the 17th century, the English gentry (landowners) passed the Enclosure Acts, prohibiting peasants’ access to common lands.
The enclosure division of the town of Thetford, England around 1760
The Seed Drill
Jethro Tull (1674–1741)
Inventor of the seed drill
The Seed drill made it possible to plant seeds in straight rows.
Townshend’s �Four-Field System
crop rotation example
Charles “Turnip” Townshend
Jethro Wood
| | |
| | |
| | |
Invented a plow with a replaceable blade.
The Importance of Textiles
John Kay invented the flying shuttle
The Spinning Jenny
James Hargreaves’s machine
1760’s
It could produce 8 times more thread than a single spinning wheel.
Richard Arkwright’s Water Frame
Powering the spinning jenny:
The Coming of the Railroads:�The Steam Engine
James Watt’s �Steam Engine
Stephenson’s Rocket
The Liverpool and Manchester Railway
The first widely-used steam train was the Liverpool & Manchester Railway. The L&M incited a boom in railway building for the next 20 years. By 1854, every moderately-sized town in England was connected by rail.
The Growth of the Railroads
Opening of the �Lancaster and Carlisle Railway
Newbiggin Bridge
British Dominance
Rail lines in England
Steam-Powered �Water Transport
In 1807, Robert Fulton attached a steam engine to a ship called the “Clermont.” The steam engine propelled the ship by making its paddle wheel turn.
The Telegraph
Samuel F.B. Morse
Steel
Henry Bessemer-developed a cheaper and more efficient way to make steel
The Bessemer process
Vulcanization
The Great Exhibition at the Crystal Palace
The Great Exhibition of 1851 in London was mounted to symbolize Great Britain’s economic, industrial, and military superiority.
Electricity: New source of power�Michael Faraday: first dynamo (electric generator)
Thomas Edison
Created a bulb that glowed for 2 days before burning out.
Communications
1870’s: Alexander Graham Bell: transmitted the human voice over a long distance by means of an electric current. (telephone)
Guglielmo Marconi: wireless telegraph
Labor Conditions
Laborers often worked in dangerous and hazardous conditions
Women: The Labor �Behind the Industry
19th-century women at work
Child Labor: �Unlimited Hours
Factory children attend a Sunday school
Child Labor: Dangers
“Scavengers” and “piecers”
Child Labor: Punishment
Reformers
Cultural Impact: Literature
Charles Dickens (1812–1870)
Used his novels to attack greedy employers
(David Copperfield, Oliver Twist, A Christmas Carol)
Depiction of a scene from Oliver Twist
Jeremy Bentham �1748–1832
-Utilitarianism: “The greatest good for the most people” or “The greatest good over the least pain”
-Laws should be based on this principle.
-People should be educated
John Stuart Mill
Child Labor: �Movements to Regulate
Ten Hours Act of 1847
Trade Unions
Agricultural laborers who had formed a trade union in the village of Tolpuddle were arrested on false charges and sent to the British colony of Australia.
The Tolpuddle Martyrs
Unions
Labor Unions
The Chartists: William Lovett
The Luddites
“General Ned Ludd” and the “Army of Redressers”
The New Industrial �Class Structure
The New Working Class
The New Middle Class
Middle and Working Class
Middle Class (upper and lower)
Working Class
Lower and Middle Class Housing
Tenements
Middle Class Housing
Travel
Social Mobility
This illustration of a “typical apartment” appeared in a Parisian newspaper in 1845
Methodism
Social Sciences: those branches of knowledge that scientifically study people as members of society.
New Economic Theories�attacked the idea of mercantalism:belief that the world had a fixed amount of wealth.
“the dismal science”
Adam Smith�1723–1790
-Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations
-Founder of economics
-Free enterprise
-2 natural laws govern all business
“laissez-faire”=let it be/leave things alone
Thomas Malthus �1766–1834
-An Essay on the Principle of Population
-Greatest obstacle to human progress: Population
-Moral restraint
-Natural checks (famine, epidemics, wars)
-Food=+
-People=x
David Ricardo �1772–1823
-Principles of Political Economy and Taxation
-Working class poverty is inevitable
-Supply and demand determine wages (Iron Law of Wages)
-When labor is plentiful=wages low
-When labor is scarce=wages will rise.
-As population grows more and more workers become available, and wages drop.
Robert Owen�1771–1858
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels�The Communist Manifesto
“The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles”
Steps of Scientific Socialism
Social Sciences
Archaelogy
Anthropology
Sociology
Psychology
SUMMARY
Was the Industrial Revolution more
beneficial or harmful?
Cultural Impact: Romanticism
The Romantics glorified the divine power of nature as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution’s achievement of controlling nature through technology.
Cultural Impact: Realism
French artist Honore Daumier painted the poor and working classes. In Third-Class Carriage (shown here), he illustrates with great compassion a group of people on a train journey.
Impressionism: vivid impressions of people and places
Claude Monet: “Impression,Sunrise”
British liberal Reforms in its Empire
Reform Bills
Victorian Age (1837-1900)
Two dominant prime ministers�(1868-1894)
Benjamin Disraeli
(Conservative)
William Gladstone
(Liberal)
Women’s rights
Canada
More British Empire!
Australia
New Zealand
France: Revolution and Reform
Louis XVIII and Charles X
Louis Philippe
Revolution of 1848/2nd French Republic
Election of 1848