28
1700-1900

Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

  • Upload
    myron

  • View
    48

  • Download
    11

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution. 1700-1900. Objective. The student will understand the Industrial Revolution and its effects on both Europe and North America in the late 19 th Century. Industrial Revolution 1700-1900. Interact with History: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

1700-1900

Page 2: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Objective

The student will understand the Industrial Revolution and its effects on both Europe and North America in the late 19th Century.

Page 3: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Interact with History: You are a 15 year old living in England where the

Industrial Revolution has spurred the growth of thousands of factories. Cheap labor is in great demand. Like millions of other teenagers, you do not go to school. Instead you work in a factory 6 days a week, 14 hours a day. The dangerous machines injure many of your fellow workers. Inside the factory the air is foul, and it’s so dark it is hard to see. WHAT WOULD YOU DO TO CHANGE YOUR

SITUATION? BESIDES OBVIOUS HARM HAPPENING TO THE

WORKERS, WHAT IS TAKING PLACE TO THE ENVIRONMENT?

Page 4: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Industrial Revolution Enclosure Crop rotation Industrialization Factors of production Factory Entrepreneur Urbanization Middle class Corporation

Laissez faire Adam Smith Capitalism Utilitarianism Socialism Karl Marx Communism Union Collective

bargaining Strike

Page 5: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Leading into the Industrial Rev. farmers began cultivating larger fields that had been fenced in. These were known as enclosures. Farmers began to experiment with new

technology and the larger land owners forced smaller farmers out of business and into the cities looking for jobs.

Crop Rotation proved to be one of the best developments of the time, improving on the medieval three-field system. Year 1 – Wheat (exhausted nutrients from soil) Year 2 – Turnips (Root crop to restore nutrients) Year 3 & 4 – Barley then Clover

Page 6: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution
Page 7: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Rev. refers to the greatly increased output of machine made goods that began in England during the 18th century. It soon spread throughout Continental Europe

and North America.Growth of Nations

1. Hunters and Gatherers2. Agriculture

3. Industrialization4. Service Industries

Page 8: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Why England?? Large Population of workers Extensive natural resources

Water – Coal – Iron Ore – Rivers – HarborsAlso many people were eager to invest in new

inventions and Britain's banking system provided the availabity of the loans to people who would otherwise not be able to afford it.

Britain had all of the factors of production that were needed for the Industrial Rev. to take place.

LAND – LABOR - CAPITAL

Page 9: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

English entrepreneurs established their factories at the beginning of the nineteenth century, not in the traditional population centers such as London, but out of town, close to water power and coal fields and with easy access to markets.

Page 10: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Many Inventions helped to revolutionize industry in England. James Hargreaves: Spinning Wheel Samuel Crompton: Spinning Mule Edmund Cartwright: Power Loom Eli Whitney: Cotton Gin (America)

http://www.eliwhitney.org/cotton/patent.htm James Watt & Matthew Boulton: More efficient

Steam Engine Robert Fulton: Steamboat (America)

Page 11: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Cyrus McCormick: Reaper (boosted American wheat production)

Samuel Morse: Telegraph I.M. Singer: Sewing machine Alexander Graham Bell: Telephone

How have some of these inventions evolved today???

Page 12: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

The factory system changed the way people lived and worked, introducing a variety of problems. This process is being repeated in many less

developed countries today.Know your HISTORY or you are DOOMED to

repeat it!!!

Page 13: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Nike has admitted that its factories are places where physical and sexual abuse, extraordinarily low wages, restrictions of bathroom use and other human rights abuses happen on a regular basis.

Page 14: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Many job seekers crowded the cities. Europe’s urban areas at least doubled in

population. URBANIZATION Living Conditions

No sanitation No building codes Sickness was widespread Factories extremely dangerous

Average life span in England: 17 years old for working class in cities 38 years old for people who lived in rural areas

Page 15: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Working Conditions 14 hour work days 6 days a week Factories dirty and dark Frequent accidents Factory workers lived in poverty as wages

were low Middle Class emerges

Skilled workers, professionals, business people, factory owners

Page 16: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Created jobs (no matter how bad they might have been)

Increased wealth of the nation Fostered technological progress Raised standard of living Provided hope of the improvement of

people’s lives Healthier diets – better housing – cheaper

massed produced clothing – expanded educational opportunities

Page 17: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Industrialization that began in Great Britain spreads to other parts of the world. During the war of 1812, Britain blockaded the

United States in an attempt to keep it from engaging in international trade. This blockade actually forced the young country to use it’s own resources to develop new industries. Thousands of workers, mostly young women,

flocked from their rural homes to work as mill girls in factory towns. (12 hours a day, 6 days a week)

__________________________________________________Industrialization also reaches continental Europe

Belgium – Germany – Italy – France - Russia

Page 18: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Industrialization in America Great deal of industrial growth in America in the

Northeast by the early 1800’s Much of the rest of the U.S. remained dependent

on agriculture until the end of the Civil War in 1865.

Rapid railroad expansion helped the Industrial Rev. grow, as products could be transported for sale. From 1840 to 1890 the U.S. railroad system grew

from 2,818 miles of track to 208,152 miles, connecting the east coast with the west coast.

Page 19: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Industrialization shifted the world balance of power.

Many stronger nations began exploiting overseas colonies for their resources, and then selling the finished products back to the colonist themselves. This ushered in the

Age of Imperialism. (policy of extending one country’s rule over many other lands.)

Page 20: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Industrial Rev. led to economic, social, and political reforms. “Laissez faire”

economics became the popular economic policy for business owners as they did not want government interference in the economy.

Adam Smith and his book Wealth of Nations, argued that government need not interfere in the economy

Page 22: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Rise of Socialism: System of social organization in which

property and the distribution of income are subject to social control rather than individual determination or market forces. (Contrasting philosophy to laissez-faire) Ideas lead to the creation of Communism.

Karl Marx: Introduced his 23 page pamphlet, The Communist Manifesto, that called for working men of all countries to unite. Marx believed that the capitalist system would

eventually destroy itself as the workers would rise up against factory owners in order to equalize the wealth.

Private property would cease to exist as all goods and services as well as means of production would be owned by the “people”.

Page 23: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

CAPITALIST IDEAS / ADAM SMITH

MARXIST IDEAS / KARL MARX

1. Progress results when individualsfollow their own self-interest.

2. Businesses follow their own self interest when they compete with oneanother for the consumer’s money.

3. Each producer tries to provide goods and services that are better and lessexpensive than those of competitors.

4. Consumers compete with one another to purchase the best goods at the lowest prices.

5. Market economy aims to produce the best products and the lowest prices.

6. Government should not interfere

1. All great movements in history are the result of an economic class struggle.

2. The “haves” take advantage of the “have-nots.”

3. The Industrial Revolution intensified the class struggle.

4. Workers are exploited by employers.

5. The labor of workers creates profit for employers.

6. The capitalist system will eventually destroy itself. The state will wither away as a classless society develops.

Page 24: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

United States becomes the world power promoting Capitalism

The Soviet Union becomes the world power promoting Communism

Page 25: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

UNION MOVEMENT

Due to the dangerous and dirty working conditions, workers began to form associations know as unions.

Unions engaged in collective bargaining or negotiations between workers and their employers.

If factory owners refused workers demands, workers could strike or refuse to work.

Legislation was also passed regulating child labor and work hours.

Page 26: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Hourly regulations in Great Britain: (1833) Ages 9-12 no more than 8 hours a day. Ages 13-17 no more than 12 hours a day.

Page 27: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

Horace Mann: Favored free public education for all children.

“If we don’t prepare children to become good citizens…if we don’t enrich their minds with knowledge, then our republic must go down to destruction.”

Mann understood that if children toiled in the factories throughout their childhood, for 8-12 hrs a day, they would not be prepared to do anything but that for the rest of their lives….

Page 28: Chapter 25 The Industrial Revolution

What effects did entrepreneurs have upon the Industrial Revolution?

How did Industrialization contribute to city growth?

Using a bubble map show the effects of industrialization on the world.

Using a double bubble map compare and contrast Capitalism with Marxism.