Industrial Revolution All about the industrial Revolution.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Early Industry and Inventions
Advertisements

Guided Reading and Review
Early Industry and Inventions Take notes as the lecture is given.
Chapter 11 Section 1.
Early Industry and Inventions
Early Industry and Inventions
North and South take different Paths
Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism
Gabriel Martinez Period. 8 Industrial Revolution.
JUMPSTART Have out your Urban Game town to finish up quickly. What do you notice about your town so far? Would you want to live there? Why or why not?
WHEN did the Industrial Revolution come to the U.S. ?
Antebellum America: North vs. South. The North: Farming Mostly small farms Labor provided by family members Subsistence agriculture: food crops and livestock.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Early Industrial Revolution.
Chapter 9 The North. Graphic Overview: Copy down in your notes Causes *greater demand for finished goods. *new inventions *raw materials Transportation.
U.S. History Project By: Brett Hively & Caleb Maxam Famous People Who Made a Change in History: Eli Whitney, Samuel Slater, & Francis Cabot Lowell.
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION 2/2/2015 What does this cartoon say about working conditions during the industrial revolution? Wrap up: Turn and Tell your neighbor.
Early Industry and Inventions
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Early Industrial Revolution.
Industrial Revolution in the United States Ch 7 Section 1 Page 212.
Part 1 National Growth ► After the War of 1812 the nation was finally out from under the threat of war for the first time in its existence. The nations.
Objectives Explain the changes that the Industrial Revolution brought to American life. Discuss the importance of Samuel Slater’s cotton mill. Describe.
The Industrial Revolution
Chapter 11 Lesson 1 Industrial Revolution.  In the 1700’s most people were farmers.  Cloth, tools, and furniture were made by hand or in small shops.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION By Luke Sinagra. FACT 1  The Industrial Revolution is one of the greatest and worst times in history. One of the most unfortunate.
Industrial Revolution
Inventions that changed America and the rise of factories.
Industrial Revolution. The IR is when people stopped making stuff at home and started making stuff in factories.
America’s Economy: Full Steam Ahead The Industrial & Transportation Revolutions.
Chapter 11, Lesson 1 ACOS #10 : Describe political, social, and economic events between 1803 and 1860 that led to the expansion of the territory of the.
Industrial revolution As the number of factories grew people from the countryside began to move into the towns looking for better paid work. The wages.
11.1Early Industry and Inventions
SAMUEL SLATER – Englishman who brings the secrets of textile mills to America from England in
Explain dynamics of economic nationalism during the Era of Good Feelings, including transportation systems, Henry Clay’s American System, slavery and the.
Chapter 7 Section 1 – pg 256 The Industrial Revolution.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 10, Section 1. New Ways to Produce Goods Industrial Revolution: a revolution in the war goods were produced Before most.
Bellringer Make a list of rules that apply to teenagers who work. Make a list of rules that apply to teenagers who work. Age, conditions, dress code, etc…
Industrial Revolution Video Notes. Life Before the Industrial Revolution 9 out of 10 people lived in rural areas (small farms) People did not leave their.
The Industrial Revolution The shift to factories and machines Samuel Slater arrives in Rhode Island with plans to build machines from memory Slater seeks.
The North and South take Different Paths The Industrial Revolution.
Unit 4 “Growing Pains” s Changes in societies bring about both Unity and Division.
Belief in the right of “Manifest Destiny”—The idea that expansion was for the good of the country and was the right of the country USI.8b.
Objective: Students will understand Sectionalism and Nationalism in the United States.
Unit 3 – Expansion and Governmental Reform U4 MYP Title: Which Way Should We GO? Unit Question: Why is Power Important Concept Statement: The Culture with.
Early Industries and Inventions Chapter 11, sec. 1.
Chapter 7, Section 3 Pages  Industrial Revolution – the birth of modern industry and the social changes that accompanied it  Occurred from.
Chapter 11: National and Regional Growth Section 1: Early Industry and Inventions.
Current Events CNN Student News Lecture/Notes Homework Bell Ringer.
Economy & Society Economy & Society in Antebellum America
Cotton Gin Who invented the cotton gin and in what year? Eli Whitney, 1793 How did the machine work and what was its purpose? It quickly and efficiently.
The Industrial Revolution
Quiet & Seated.
Early Industry and Inventions
Part 1 National Growth After the War of 1812 the nation was finally out from under the threat of war for the first time in its existence. The nations trading.
Early Industry and Invention
Early Industry and Inventions
The Industrial Revolution
Early Industry and Inventions
Part 1 National Growth After the War of 1812 the nation was finally out from under the threat of war for the first time in its existence. The nations trading.
The First Industrial Revolution
The industrial revolution
Early Industry and Inventions
The Industrial Revolution
Growth and Expansion 1790 to 1825
Industrial Revolution
Early Industry and Inventions
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION.
Early Industry and Inventions
Early Industry and Inventions
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Presentation transcript:

Industrial Revolution All about the industrial Revolution

Facts It has been going for the past 18 th century. The industrial revolution started in The industrial revolution ended in It was caused by people trying to find ways to increase production of food and goods. The steam engine was invented in this revolution. The Industrial Revolution lasted for 164 years. Miners used child labour as one of the main ways to get coal in small places. They pay less to children and woman then men. The Industrial Revolution has never properly ended.

About the industrial revalution The Industrial Revolution started in England around 1733 with the first cotton mill. A more modern world had begun. As new inventions were being created, factories followed soon thereafter. England wanted to keep its industrialization a secret, so they prohibited anyone who had worked in a factory to leave the country. Meanwhile, Americans offered a significant reward to anyone who could build a cotton-spinning machine in the United States. Samuel Slater, who had been an apprentice in an English cotton factory, disguised himself and came to America. Once here, he reconstructed a cotton-spinning machine from memory. He then proceeded to build a factory of his own. The Industrial Revolution had arrived in the United States.

More about the industrial revolution The Industrial Revolution brought severe consequences to society. Factory owners, needing cheap, unskilled labor, profited greatly by using children and women to run the machines. By the age of 6, many children were already working 14 hours a day in factories! These kids had no free time to do anything else and earned low wages. Some got sick and died because of the toxic fumes, while others were severely injured and sometimes killed working at the dangerous machines in factories. Obviously, the Industrial Revolution had both good and bad sides.

Eli Whitney & The Cotton Gin Eli Whitney attended Yale College in 1789 at age 23, and in 1793, he invented the cotton gin. This machine played a large role in the Industrial Revolution. Unfortunately, when it was invented, nobody, not even Whitney himself, realized that the cotton gin would revitalize slavery. Whitney's invention helped the cotton industry just when the South was suffering economic problems. The cotton gin (short for cotton engine) was a machine for getting seeds out of cotton. Where before the seeds had to be picked by hand, slaves used the machines to significantly increase production.

Eli Whitney & The Cotton Gin Later, Whitney became quite famous for building muskets with interchangeable parts. These were the easiest and fastest guns to make. They became very popular due to their lower cost. There were good and bad things about these guns. Because they were easier to make, large quantities could be produced in a short period of time. This factor became important during the American Civil War. The quality of the guns, though, were not as good as those which were hand made. Choosing between quality and quantity, factory owners chose quantity. Whitney's interchangeable muskets became almost as popular as his cotton gin.

Robert Fulton & The Steam Engine Robert Fulton was a famous inventor and engineer. During the 1780s, he became the first American to build a steam-powered engine. This engine was used to power steamboats all over the United States. He built a paddle steamboat, the Clermont, that traveled from New York to Albany on the Hudson River. The steam engine was a great invention because it was important to the transportation industry. With steamboats traveling all of the United States's major rivers, they became the fastest way of transportation for Americans.