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The Industrial Revolution
Dawn of the Industrial Age
             (1750-1850)
• In 1750, most people made a living farming the
  land, and most goods were produced by hand
  in a domestic (home) setting.
     • Travel was limited, and few people knew the world
       outside their village.
• By the 1850s, many small towns had become
  large industrial cities.
• Food and clothing were made by machines in a
  factory and were bought in stores in exchange
  for wages earned at a job.
     • This is referred to as the rise of industry and the demise
       of “cottage industries”
The Agricultural Roots of the
             Industrial Revolution
• 1st Agricultural Revolution
  occurred 11,000 years ago
  when man first changed from
  hunter gathering to
  domesticating animals and
                                 -Planting seeds and staying in one place
  farming.                       and open range herding.
_________________________       _________________________________

• About 300 years ago, a
  2nd Agricultural Revolution
  occurred that greatly
  improved the quality and
  quantity of agricultural
  products.                      -Seed culture, enclosure, fertilizer
The Agricultural Roots of the
      Industrial Revolution (continued)
• The British (England) (1700s)
   – Enclosures-fencing in land-
     more productive methods
     used to improve yields-
     displaced small farmers
   – Crop rotation-replaced three
     field system
   – Jethro Tull- the seed drill
     (better than scattering and
     wasting seed)
   – Improved livestock breeding.
Population Explosion!!!
• As food supplies increased and living
  conditions improved     population grew.
• Increased demand for food & goods.
• Many farmers who lost their land to
  enclosure became factory workers.
Why England?
• Large population and extensive natural
  resources!
• Industrialization-the process of developing
  machine production of goods-requires
  such resources
• Water power and coal, iron
  ore, rivers, harbors
Why England?
• Economic Strength and Political Stability
• Capital to invest in new inventions
• Highly developed banking system-loans
• Military & Political success=positive
  attitude
• Laws passed to protect business and help
  them expand
• Factors of Production=Land, Labor, and
  Capital!
New Technology Drives
        The Industrial Revolution
• Energy Revolution
  – James Watt vastly
    improves the steam
    engine (invented by
    Thomas Newcomen) which
    was key to the industrial
    revolution.
New Technology Drives
        The Industrial Revolution
• Textile industry first to
  be transformed
• Flying shuttle, Spinning
  Jenny, Water frame,
  spinning mule-ALL
  increased production
• Factories-production
  moves from homes to
  large buildings
• Cotton-Cotton gin
  increased cotton
  production
Textile Mills
Why England? (continued)
• Transportation
  – Turnpikes privately built roads that charged fees
    for use- “macadams”
  – Steam powered locomotive invented by George
    Stephenson, and the first major railroad was built in
    1830.
  – The steamboat invented by Robert Fulton (USA)
    shipped goods on water at record speeds.
  – By the late 1800s, coal powered freighters with
    iron hulls were hauling 10 to 20 times the cargo of
    wooden ships.
The Rest of the World Catches Up
• Many places such as the new nation of
  Germany (who united in 1871) and the US had
  greater amounts of natural resources than did
  England.
     -Nickolaus Otto- first car
     -Karl Benz – first patent for car (3 wheels)
     -Gottleib Daimler- first four wheeled auto
     -Sam Morse – telegraph
     -Alexander Graham Bell – the phone
• They stole ideas from England and made them
  better
The New Technology
             (late 1800s- early 1900s)

• Alfred Nobel- dynamite
  (1866)
• Electricity- dynamo machine
  that generates electricity
• Henry Ford- assembly line to
  make cars (Model T)
• Wright Brothers –first
  airplane
Yeah, I blow stuff up.
New Economic Systems Flourish
• The spread of industrialism to Europe and the US
  accelerated the spread of colonialism and
  imperialism.
• New investors (capitalists and investors) invested
  money (and received stock) and time to build on
  the creative ideas (technology) of others
  (entrepreneurs) to make goods (supply) out of
  cheap goods (raw materials) obtained from
  overseas possessions (colonies in an empire) for
  those wage earners (labor) who had money to
  spend (demand) on goods they used (thus, they
  were consumers).
Negative Effects of the
 Industrial Revolution
• continued demand for slaves in the U.S.
  – Eli Whitney’s cotton gin increased the need for people to
    pick cotton
The Haves =bourgeoisie
• The entrepreneurs
  (Individuals who start
  a new business and
  risk their own $) who
  opened factories and
  shipping companies
  became very rich
  during the early
  industrial revolution.
The Have-Nots=Proletariat
• The people who
  worked in the
  factories for the
  entrepreneurs (the
  working class), were
  soul-crushingly poor.
Urbanization
• Urbanization: The movement of people to
  the cities
• The Industrial revolution brought rapid
  urbanization.
Causes of Urbanization
• Population explosion

• High demand for workers
Don’t Forget!
• The enclosure
  movement
  pushed people
  off the farms and
  into the cities
City Life
• Cities grew around factories
• These cities grew rapidly, without planning
• Working people lived in tenements in
  hellish slums
• The lack of planning meant that there was
  no sewage, running water, or sanitation
  system
No sanitation meant the streets were filled
               with trash
The crowded, filthy slums were a breeding
  ground for diseases such as cholera
Working Life in Factories
•   Factory work was difficult and dangerous
•   Typical shifts lasted 12 to 16 hours
•   If you complained, you were fired.
•   If you got sick, you were fired.
•   If you got hurt and could no longer work,
    you were fired.
Women at Work
• Factory owners hired
  women because they
  could pay them less
• Women with families
  worked 12 hours a
  day and were still
  expected to cook,
  clean, etc. when they
  finally got home.
Children at Work
• Families needed the income working
  children could provide.
• Children could be hired at very low wages
• Children worked in the same dangerous
  factories, for the same long hours
Industrial pollution (London 1840s)




Child labor in the textile mills
                                       Poverty in the tenements
Workers respond to the awful
         conditions of their lives
• 1) Workers
  protested
  their
  conditions
• These
  protests were
  put down
  violently by
  the British
  government
Worker Response…continued
• 2) Luddites: skilled
  workers rejected the
  new machines that
  cost them their jobs
  by smashing them
Worker response…continued
• 3) Methodism: a new
  religious movement
  founded by John
  Wesley. Working
  people tried to focus
  on a better life to
  come rather than their
  lives on earth
New Ways of Thinking
• The industrial revolution changed the way
  people thought about everything from
  economics to the way governments should
  work.
“Iron law of wages”
• English economist David Ricardo
  developed idea
• Believed that workers should only be paid
  enough to survive
• If they make more, they will only have
  more children and therefore become poor
  again or die off from starvation
• Leads to the idea that poverty is caused
  by character flaws in an individual
Rise of Socialism
• Critics of the Industrial Revolution began
  advocating for a more even distribution of
  the wealth and the benefits of
  industrialization
• Many were labeled utopians because
  ideas were impractical and impossible to
  implement
Rise of Socialism
• Robert Owen set up an
  utopian system in his
  factories, creating an
  ideal working community

   – workers worked
  less, children were taken
  care of while parents       Robert Owen
  worked, productivity and
  profit increased
Socialism
• Goals
     • Factors of production owned by the
       public-operate for the welfare of all.
       Protect workers from greedy employers
• Government & Business:
     • Government should actively plan the
       economy. Equality and end of poverty.
• Major Philosophers:
     • Jeremy Bentham & John Stuart Mill
• Big Downside:
     • More taxes and less freedom than
       capitalism
Communism and Capitalism
• Karl Marx and Frederick
  Engels witness the
  horrors of industrialization
• Together they write the
  Communist Manifesto,
  the following chart
  outlines the major
  differences between
  communism and
  capitalism



                                 Karl Marx
Communism
• Major Philosophers:
  – Karl Marx and Friedrich Engles (1848) write
    the Communist Manifesto and Das
    Capital
• Vocabulary:
  – Bourgeoisie – upper middle class factory
    owners (abusers)
  – Proletariat – lower working class, factory
    workers (abused)
• Government & Business:
  – Government controls all businesses and
    provides for everyone.
• Note:
  – He believed that in the end the proletariat
    would rise up and take the means of
    production and set up a “classless” society.
Communism and Capitalism
         Capitalism   Communism

Founders Adam Smith   Karl
                      Marx/Frederick
                      Engels
Book     Wealth of    The Communist
         Nations      Manifesto
Communism and Capitalism
View on    People become         People should
people    wealthy because       cooperate to
          they offer            obtain success,
          something – a         eliminating
          product or service,   competition
          that others want       Everyone should
           Everyone has the     have an equal
          opportunity to        share of the
          succeed               available
                                wealth/property
Communism and Capitalism
           Capitalism           Communism
View of     Government           Everything
government should not interfere owned by
           with economy –       government
           laissez faire         Government
                                closely regulates
                                economy (sets
                                prices, etc.)
Communism and Capitalism
             Capitalism            Communism
Individual    People are free to    Government
Freedom      choose their own      determines job
             careers               placement
              Freedom of            Religion
             religion              considered a
              Freedom is more      burden
             important than         Sacrifice freedom
             security              for security
Communism and Capitalism
             Capitalism             Communism
Social        Through hard           Government
Conditions   work people can lift   ownership of the
             themselves out of      economy will end
             poverty                unemployment,
                                    poverty, hunger,
                                    and slave-like
                                    working conditions
Communism and Capitalism
Future of the Capitalism is the    Capitalism is self-
World         only efficient      destructive
              economic system      Workers will
                                  eventually rise up
                                  in a violent
                                  revolution and take
                                  power
                                   The future of the
                                  world is
                                  communism
Legislation and Reform
• Early attempts to regulate factories lacked any
  real enforcement
• Unions-collective bargaining (negotiation
  between employers and employees)-strikes if
  demands not met.
• Unions were outlawed by the government in the
  early stages of industrialization because they
  would interfere with the natural order of the
  factories. After 1825, unions were “unhappily”
  tolerated.
Legislation and Reform
• Initial legislation only limited child labor
• Kids could only work twelve-hour days and
  it only affected the textile mills (excluded
  the mines, shipyards, match factories,
  etc.)
Legislation and Reform
• Factory Acts of 1833, 1842, and 1847
  – limited child labor
  – prohibited women and children in the mines
  – set the maximum number of hours for women
    and children at ten
Benefits of Industrialism
• Growing middle class
  – Investment
  – Higher education and standard of living
• Health benefits
  – Longer life expectancy
  – Edward Jenner- discovers smallpox vaccination
  – Louis Pasteur- discovers bacteria, and how to eliminate it in
    food
• Population increase
• Britain and US outlaw slave trade, and eventually
  slavery
• Women’s movement (suffrage) begins to gain
  momentum
Advances in Medicine




Above: smallpox victim
Top Right: Edward Jenner- the man who
found a vaccine for smallpox (1796)
Bottom Right: Louis Pasteur- microbiologist
who found a vaccine for rabies, and
developed the pasteurization process (1865)

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The industrial-revolution

  • 2. Dawn of the Industrial Age (1750-1850) • In 1750, most people made a living farming the land, and most goods were produced by hand in a domestic (home) setting. • Travel was limited, and few people knew the world outside their village. • By the 1850s, many small towns had become large industrial cities. • Food and clothing were made by machines in a factory and were bought in stores in exchange for wages earned at a job. • This is referred to as the rise of industry and the demise of “cottage industries”
  • 3. The Agricultural Roots of the Industrial Revolution • 1st Agricultural Revolution occurred 11,000 years ago when man first changed from hunter gathering to domesticating animals and -Planting seeds and staying in one place farming. and open range herding. _________________________ _________________________________ • About 300 years ago, a 2nd Agricultural Revolution occurred that greatly improved the quality and quantity of agricultural products. -Seed culture, enclosure, fertilizer
  • 4. The Agricultural Roots of the Industrial Revolution (continued) • The British (England) (1700s) – Enclosures-fencing in land- more productive methods used to improve yields- displaced small farmers – Crop rotation-replaced three field system – Jethro Tull- the seed drill (better than scattering and wasting seed) – Improved livestock breeding.
  • 5. Population Explosion!!! • As food supplies increased and living conditions improved population grew. • Increased demand for food & goods. • Many farmers who lost their land to enclosure became factory workers.
  • 6. Why England? • Large population and extensive natural resources! • Industrialization-the process of developing machine production of goods-requires such resources • Water power and coal, iron ore, rivers, harbors
  • 7. Why England? • Economic Strength and Political Stability • Capital to invest in new inventions • Highly developed banking system-loans • Military & Political success=positive attitude • Laws passed to protect business and help them expand • Factors of Production=Land, Labor, and Capital!
  • 8. New Technology Drives The Industrial Revolution • Energy Revolution – James Watt vastly improves the steam engine (invented by Thomas Newcomen) which was key to the industrial revolution.
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  • 11. New Technology Drives The Industrial Revolution • Textile industry first to be transformed • Flying shuttle, Spinning Jenny, Water frame, spinning mule-ALL increased production • Factories-production moves from homes to large buildings • Cotton-Cotton gin increased cotton production
  • 13. Why England? (continued) • Transportation – Turnpikes privately built roads that charged fees for use- “macadams” – Steam powered locomotive invented by George Stephenson, and the first major railroad was built in 1830. – The steamboat invented by Robert Fulton (USA) shipped goods on water at record speeds. – By the late 1800s, coal powered freighters with iron hulls were hauling 10 to 20 times the cargo of wooden ships.
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  • 16. The Rest of the World Catches Up • Many places such as the new nation of Germany (who united in 1871) and the US had greater amounts of natural resources than did England. -Nickolaus Otto- first car -Karl Benz – first patent for car (3 wheels) -Gottleib Daimler- first four wheeled auto -Sam Morse – telegraph -Alexander Graham Bell – the phone • They stole ideas from England and made them better
  • 17. The New Technology (late 1800s- early 1900s) • Alfred Nobel- dynamite (1866) • Electricity- dynamo machine that generates electricity • Henry Ford- assembly line to make cars (Model T) • Wright Brothers –first airplane
  • 18. Yeah, I blow stuff up.
  • 19. New Economic Systems Flourish • The spread of industrialism to Europe and the US accelerated the spread of colonialism and imperialism. • New investors (capitalists and investors) invested money (and received stock) and time to build on the creative ideas (technology) of others (entrepreneurs) to make goods (supply) out of cheap goods (raw materials) obtained from overseas possessions (colonies in an empire) for those wage earners (labor) who had money to spend (demand) on goods they used (thus, they were consumers).
  • 20. Negative Effects of the Industrial Revolution
  • 21. • continued demand for slaves in the U.S. – Eli Whitney’s cotton gin increased the need for people to pick cotton
  • 22. The Haves =bourgeoisie • The entrepreneurs (Individuals who start a new business and risk their own $) who opened factories and shipping companies became very rich during the early industrial revolution.
  • 23. The Have-Nots=Proletariat • The people who worked in the factories for the entrepreneurs (the working class), were soul-crushingly poor.
  • 24. Urbanization • Urbanization: The movement of people to the cities • The Industrial revolution brought rapid urbanization.
  • 25. Causes of Urbanization • Population explosion • High demand for workers
  • 26. Don’t Forget! • The enclosure movement pushed people off the farms and into the cities
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  • 29. City Life • Cities grew around factories • These cities grew rapidly, without planning • Working people lived in tenements in hellish slums • The lack of planning meant that there was no sewage, running water, or sanitation system
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  • 32. No sanitation meant the streets were filled with trash
  • 33. The crowded, filthy slums were a breeding ground for diseases such as cholera
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  • 35. Working Life in Factories • Factory work was difficult and dangerous • Typical shifts lasted 12 to 16 hours • If you complained, you were fired. • If you got sick, you were fired. • If you got hurt and could no longer work, you were fired.
  • 36. Women at Work • Factory owners hired women because they could pay them less • Women with families worked 12 hours a day and were still expected to cook, clean, etc. when they finally got home.
  • 37. Children at Work • Families needed the income working children could provide. • Children could be hired at very low wages • Children worked in the same dangerous factories, for the same long hours
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  • 39. Industrial pollution (London 1840s) Child labor in the textile mills Poverty in the tenements
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  • 42. Workers respond to the awful conditions of their lives • 1) Workers protested their conditions • These protests were put down violently by the British government
  • 43. Worker Response…continued • 2) Luddites: skilled workers rejected the new machines that cost them their jobs by smashing them
  • 44. Worker response…continued • 3) Methodism: a new religious movement founded by John Wesley. Working people tried to focus on a better life to come rather than their lives on earth
  • 45. New Ways of Thinking • The industrial revolution changed the way people thought about everything from economics to the way governments should work.
  • 46. “Iron law of wages” • English economist David Ricardo developed idea • Believed that workers should only be paid enough to survive • If they make more, they will only have more children and therefore become poor again or die off from starvation • Leads to the idea that poverty is caused by character flaws in an individual
  • 47. Rise of Socialism • Critics of the Industrial Revolution began advocating for a more even distribution of the wealth and the benefits of industrialization • Many were labeled utopians because ideas were impractical and impossible to implement
  • 48. Rise of Socialism • Robert Owen set up an utopian system in his factories, creating an ideal working community – workers worked less, children were taken care of while parents Robert Owen worked, productivity and profit increased
  • 49. Socialism • Goals • Factors of production owned by the public-operate for the welfare of all. Protect workers from greedy employers • Government & Business: • Government should actively plan the economy. Equality and end of poverty. • Major Philosophers: • Jeremy Bentham & John Stuart Mill • Big Downside: • More taxes and less freedom than capitalism
  • 50. Communism and Capitalism • Karl Marx and Frederick Engels witness the horrors of industrialization • Together they write the Communist Manifesto, the following chart outlines the major differences between communism and capitalism Karl Marx
  • 51. Communism • Major Philosophers: – Karl Marx and Friedrich Engles (1848) write the Communist Manifesto and Das Capital • Vocabulary: – Bourgeoisie – upper middle class factory owners (abusers) – Proletariat – lower working class, factory workers (abused) • Government & Business: – Government controls all businesses and provides for everyone. • Note: – He believed that in the end the proletariat would rise up and take the means of production and set up a “classless” society.
  • 52. Communism and Capitalism Capitalism Communism Founders Adam Smith Karl Marx/Frederick Engels Book Wealth of The Communist Nations Manifesto
  • 53. Communism and Capitalism View on People become People should people wealthy because cooperate to they offer obtain success, something – a eliminating product or service, competition that others want Everyone should Everyone has the have an equal opportunity to share of the succeed available wealth/property
  • 54. Communism and Capitalism Capitalism Communism View of Government Everything government should not interfere owned by with economy – government laissez faire Government closely regulates economy (sets prices, etc.)
  • 55. Communism and Capitalism Capitalism Communism Individual People are free to Government Freedom choose their own determines job careers placement Freedom of Religion religion considered a Freedom is more burden important than Sacrifice freedom security for security
  • 56. Communism and Capitalism Capitalism Communism Social Through hard Government Conditions work people can lift ownership of the themselves out of economy will end poverty unemployment, poverty, hunger, and slave-like working conditions
  • 57. Communism and Capitalism Future of the Capitalism is the Capitalism is self- World only efficient destructive economic system Workers will eventually rise up in a violent revolution and take power The future of the world is communism
  • 58. Legislation and Reform • Early attempts to regulate factories lacked any real enforcement • Unions-collective bargaining (negotiation between employers and employees)-strikes if demands not met. • Unions were outlawed by the government in the early stages of industrialization because they would interfere with the natural order of the factories. After 1825, unions were “unhappily” tolerated.
  • 59. Legislation and Reform • Initial legislation only limited child labor • Kids could only work twelve-hour days and it only affected the textile mills (excluded the mines, shipyards, match factories, etc.)
  • 60. Legislation and Reform • Factory Acts of 1833, 1842, and 1847 – limited child labor – prohibited women and children in the mines – set the maximum number of hours for women and children at ten
  • 61. Benefits of Industrialism • Growing middle class – Investment – Higher education and standard of living • Health benefits – Longer life expectancy – Edward Jenner- discovers smallpox vaccination – Louis Pasteur- discovers bacteria, and how to eliminate it in food • Population increase • Britain and US outlaw slave trade, and eventually slavery • Women’s movement (suffrage) begins to gain momentum
  • 62. Advances in Medicine Above: smallpox victim Top Right: Edward Jenner- the man who found a vaccine for smallpox (1796) Bottom Right: Louis Pasteur- microbiologist who found a vaccine for rabies, and developed the pasteurization process (1865)