Objectives Identify the social and the economic reforms that benefited British workers and others. Describe how British women worked to win the vote.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Social and Economic Reforms in Britain
Advertisements

Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 1. Reforms, Revolutions, and War Section 1 Preview Starting Points Map: European Possessions Main Idea / Reading.
Chapter 11 Section 2 A Century of Reform in Britain
A. Industrial Revolution brought wealth & power to Great Britain Result : created economic & social inequality B. Ideas of “Liberalism” influence politics.
Chapter 24 The Age of Reform
CHAPTER 10- AGE OF DEMOCRACY AND PROGRESS
Social and Economic Reform in Britain
Second Era of Revolutions British Reform and Uprisings in France, Central America, and the United States.
19th Century Reforms edited by Tp from WB Phillips.
A Century of Reform Bell work #2 Evelyn a brilliant student will probably get a higher score then I will betty remarked.
WORLD HISTORY II Chapter 11: Growth of Western Democracies
Liberal Reform in Industrial Britain
Chapter 23: Growth of Western Democracies ( )
BRITAIN AND IRELAND. Britain’s Victorian Age represented a period of prosperity, imperial greatness and the evolution of a true parliamentary democracy.
Democratic Reform in Britain
15.1 Liberal Reforms in Great Britain & Its Empire
24.1 Liberal Reforms in Great Britian & Its Empire
Chapter 11 section 1 and 2 By Alexander Bonilla. Setting the scene  In the 1800’s Disraeli and other political leaders slowly worked to bridge Britain's.
CH 23 The Age of Industry. The Industrial Revolution A slow process of change that began in England in the 1750’s where the means of production shifted.
Britain Becomes More Democratic Britain was a constitutional monarchy with a parliament Voting Rights in the early 19 th Century: - Less.
World History with Mr. Hearty & Mr. Bellisario
© HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance What was the most important consequence of the Irish Famine in ?
Chapter 23 Section 1.  Queen Victoria  Victoria Era  Benjamin Disraeli  Suffrage  Emmeline Parkhurst.
Victorian England. Queen Victoria: the Namesake Queen from 1837 to 1901 –Key royal personality for most of 19 th Century –Symbolizes the prosperity, expansion,
Brief Response How did works of literature and art like Charles Dickens’ novels make people aware of social issues? In their art they pointed out poverty,
Out with the Old, but What is the New?
Age of Reforms Liberal Reforms in Great Britain and its Empire.
Industrial Revolution: Reforms. Labor Unions  By the 1800’s, working people became more active in politics  Workers joined voluntary labor associations.
A Series of Reforms Spread Through Out Britain By: Yvette, Makenna, Matt, Brock.
British Response to the Industrial Revolution Pages
VictorianEngland Queen Victoria r Britain: s * The most prosperous period in British history. *BUT, Britain’s prosperity didn’t do.
HWH UNIT 7 CHAPTER Constitutional Monarchy House of Lords Appointed Veto power over the House of Commons House of Commons Elected Less than.
Reforming the Industrial World
History of the Modern World 19 th Century Society Out with the Old, but What is the New? Mrs. McArthur Walsingham Academy Room 111 Mrs. McArthur Walsingham.
Social and Economic Reform in Britain
Britain Becomes More Democratic 1800s Bring Reform.
Liberal Reforms in Britain & Its Empire. Reforms of the 1800s  Liberalism protected individual rights and civil liberties;  Many reforms were created.
Potato Famine Known to the Irish as “The Great Hunger”
Timeline political reforms of france the Second Republic February 1848 Revolution of Louis Philippe overthrown A republic is declared with.
Liberal Reforms in G.B. & Its Empire.  Industrial Revolution brought wealth & power to G.B.  Spread political philosophy, liberalism, supported gov.
Victorian England the Early Years. Sir Robert Peel  Gained his first seat in Parliament in 1809 from a “rotten borough”  Began politics under a system.
Britain Becomes More Democratic. Reforming Parliament: Pressure for Change Britain was a constitutional monarchy with a Parliament + 2 political.
Liberal Government In Great Britain
Philosophers of Industrialization
The Industrial Revolution
World History Chapter 14 Section 1.
History of Economic Systems
Life in Upper Canada.
The Victorian Era Do Now: What is suffrage?
Social and Economic Reform in Britain
The Age of Reform.
Democracy and Reform in Great Britain and France
The Victorian Age 1 From 1837 to 1901, the greatest symbol in British life was Queen Victoria. Although she exercised little real political power, she.
Reforming the Industrial World
Industrial Revolution Day 3
Reforms in the British Empire
Democratic reform and activism
Brief Response How did works of literature and art like Charles Dickens’ novels make people aware of social issues? In their art they pointed out social.
Social and Economic Reforms in Britain
Industrial Revolution: Reforms
Self-Rule for British Colonies Sec 2
A Century of Reform Chapter 11 Section 2.
Social and Economic Reform in Britain Chapter 8.2
Reforms in the British Empire
Industrial Revolution: Reforms
Reforming the Industrial World
World History: Unit 3, Chapter 9, Section 1
Social and Economic Reforms in Britain
Social and Economic Reforms in Britain
Warmup 3/27 How did your town (from the activity) change during the industrial revolution? Do you think the change was good? How do you think the lives.
Presentation transcript:

Objectives Identify the social and the economic reforms that benefited British workers and others. Describe how British women worked to win the vote. Understand the causes of conflict between the British and the Irish nationalists.

Terms and People free trade – trade between countries without quotas, tariffs, or other restrictions repeal – to cancel a law abolition movement – the campaign against slavery and the slave trade capital offense – a crime punishable by death penal colony – a settlement to which convicts were sent

Terms and People (continued) absentee landlords – one who owns a large estate but does not live there home rule – local self-government

What social and economic reforms were passed by the British Parliament during the 1800s and early 1900s? Suffragists were just one of many British groups fighting for reform in the 1800s. Between 1815 and 1914, Parliament passed a series of social and economic reforms. At the same time, the question of British control over Ireland was becoming a dominant and divisive political issue.

Britain taxed imports to protect local producers, including farmers. Advocates of free trade wanted to remove tariffs, including the Corn Laws. Farmers and wealthy landowners opposed repeal of the Corn Laws on grains. “Corn” meant all grains, including crops such as wheat or barley.

Tariffs kept prices high by adding to the cost consumers paid. Free traders, who believed in Adam Smith’s laissez- faire ideas, argued that repealing the tariffs would make food more affordable for workers. In 1846 Parliament finally repealed the Corn Laws.

In 1807 Britain banned the slave trade on its ships. British ships transported African slaves to America in the 1700s. Abolitionists fought hard to end the practice. In 1807 Britain banned the slave trade on its ships. In 1833 slavery was outlawed in all British colonies.

Reformers saw injustices in the criminal justice system, notably the number of capital offenses. Reformers limited capital crimes to murder, arson, treason, and piracy. Penal colonies were set up. Convicts might be sent to Australia. Over 200 crimes were punishable by death—even shoplifting. Prison conditions were improved, public hangings ended, and imprisonment for debt was outlawed.

In 1842 mine owners were forbidden from hiring women or children under ten. In 1847 the work day was limited to ten hours for women and children. Laws were passed later to further limit hours and set wages for all workers. Reformers began to pass laws to improve the harsh work conditions of the industrial age.

Reformers fought for better working conditions. Strikes remained illegal until later in the 1800s, but over time unions won higher wages and better conditions. In 1825, trade unions were legalized. Unions grew gradually over the 1800s, then membership soared between 1890 and 1914.

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, both political parties achieved social reform. Disraeli sponsored laws to improve public health and housing for workers in cities. Gladstone pushed for free elementary school education and merit tests for public service jobs.

The Fabian Society, a socialist group formed in 1883, was an important reform organization. Though small in size, the Fabian Society was influential as it pressed for gradual change in a nonviolent fashion through legislation. In 1900 socialists and workers united to create the Labour Party, which by the 1920s had become a major British political party.

The middle class saw reforms as proof that democracy worked. Social reform prevented Marxism from gaining more than limited support. In the early 1900s, social welfare laws were passed in Britain. Social welfare laws protected workers with accident, health, and unemployment insurance as well as old-age pensions.

Women suffragists demanded the right to vote. Not all women supported suffrage; Queen Victoria called it a “mad, wicked folly.” In the early 1900s Emmeline Pankhurst led violent protests, while others resorted to hunger strikes. In 1918 the vote was granted to women over 30. Younger women got the vote a decade later.

The “Irish question” became a major issue for Britain. By the 1800s most of these settlers were wealthy absentee landlords who did not live on the land. Poor Irish farmers resented these landlords, to whom they had to pay high rents. In the 1600s, British and Scottish settlers colonized Ireland, taking possession of the best farm lands.

In the 1800s, Irish nationalists led by Daniel O’Connell demanded “Ireland for the Irish.” In 1829 they won the right to hold office and to vote. But many injustices remained. Absentee landlords could evict a tenant at will.

The situation became desperate when a potato blight struck in 1845. Three-quarters of Irish farm land was used to grow crops for export. The remainder was used to grow potatoes, which were the staple of the Irish diet.

During the “Great Hunger,” almost a million people died of starvation and disease. British relief agencies did little to help. Unable to pay their rent, destitute families were evicted. The blight destroyed the potato crop. The other crops were still exported.

Those who could emigrated, mainly to the United States or Canada. Resentment against Britain rose among those who couldn’t leave. In the 1850s militants organized the Fenian Brotherhood to fight for home rule.

In the 1870s, moderate nationalists rallied behind Charles Stewart Parnell. Gladstone pushed through laws that ended tithing to the Anglican Church and protected the rights of tenant farmers. The Irish question continued to divide Parliament. In 1914 a home rule bill was finally passed, but implementation was delayed by World War I.

Section Review QuickTake Quiz Know It, Show It Quiz