1 Bell Ringer!!! Locate your paired group and have a seat. All you need is the packet and something to write with –Everything else can be put under the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Take a few minutes and write down your thoughts about the picture.
Advertisements

Do Now: Describe the characteristics that make up people’s lives Before the Industrial Revolution Homework: Read chapter 7 section 1 and take notes. AND.
Social Reform: Labour Legislation in 19th Century England
Introduction to the Industrial Revolution
Industries powered by steam now used mass production Industries powered by steam now used mass production Mass Production-The rapid manufacture.
Early Industry and Inventions By: Team A: Samantha, Aditya, Hahyeong.
Chapter 12: Section 1 Industries Take Root (Pages )
SPONGE 1.Finish this sentence: “To set up and operate a spinning mill required large amounts of…” (p. 331) 2.Define the term, “Capitalist.” (p. 331) Chapter.
The Industrial Revolution From England to America.
Reforms in the Mid- 1800s. Women’s Reforms  To gain a political voice, women advocated:  Abolition  Women’s Rights (voting, property, etc.)  Temperance.
Industrialization. Agenda 1. Bell Ringer: How does Industrialism lead to more powerful countries? 2. Lecture: Industrialism and Major Philosophers (15)
Industrial Revolution Life in English Factories. Objective: I can prove industrialization had social, political, and economic effects on Western Europe.
Partner Questions What is a union? Why did workers band together to form and join unions?
Bellringer Page 65: Write down the answers to the following questions on a paper titled “Bellringer 1/4/12”: 1. Why did the Industrial Revolution begin.
SAMUEL SLATER – Englishman who brings the secrets of textile mills to America from England in
SAMUEL SLATER – Englishman who brings the secrets of textile mills to America from England in
Pre-Industrial Society Farming & Cottage Industry –Inefficient land use –Not enough food to feed population –Products made in cottages Merchants supplied.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 10, Section 1. New Ways to Produce Goods Industrial Revolution: a revolution in the war goods were produced Before most.
The Industrial Revolution Textiles Lead a Revolution Chapter 11.1 pages Chapter pages
New Methods and Business Organizations Bell Ringer: How did factories change society?
Industrial Revolution Life in English Factories. 2 English Factory System First adopted in England in the 1750s, as a method for manufacturing Involved.
Industrial Revolution Life in English Factories World Warm Up, December 12, 2013 From what you’ve studied so far, what did NOT exist at the beginning of.
Unit 4 “Growing Pains” s Changes in societies bring about both Unity and Division.
T HE S OCIAL I MPACT OF T HE I NDUSTRIAL R EVOLUTION Notes –
 I. New Methods and Business Organizations A. Capitalism Capitalism- an economic system in which individuals or corporations, control the factors of.
10/28 Focus: Important Terms: Do Now: Union, Strike,
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution 1750s
Conditions of the Working Class in England
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
What do you know about the Industrial Revolution?
Economic Growth (2).
Industrial Revolution in America
Conditions of the Working Class in England
The Industrial Revolution: Factory System (+) & (-)
Warm Up What are the 3 “factors of production” or Goldilocks conditions that made England the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution? Explain each.
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Early Industry and Inventions
Aim: Did early industrialization have a positive or negative impact on the USA post-War of 1812? Essential Questions: Why were the first factories located.
Factory System and Free Enterprise
UNIT 10.1 INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION MR. dickerson.
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
UNIT 6.1 INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION MR LANGHORST.
Agenda 1. Warm Up- Essay Guessin and Mappin 2. Video Clip 4. Discussion: Industrialism and Major Philosophers 5. Primary Source packet HW: Primary Source.
Do Now.
Early Industry and Inventions
Industrial Revolution
Take a few minutes and write down your thoughts about the picture.
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Percentage of Population Working Agricultural Jobs
Industrial Revolution
Lesson 1: A Growing Economy
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION.
Early Industry and Inventions
Industrialization.
Early Industry and Inventions
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
(The Industrial Revolution)
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution in America (Pages )
Presentation transcript:

1 Bell Ringer!!! Locate your paired group and have a seat. All you need is the packet and something to write with –Everything else can be put under the desk Answer the questions on the 1 st slide

Industrial Revolution Life in English Factories

Objective: Industrialization had social, political, and economic effects on Western Europe and the world. A)Social= B)Political= C)Economic=

4 English Factory System First adopted in England in the 1750s, as a method for manufacturing Involved mass producing goods by machines usually run by water or steam Featured low and unskilled workers running machines, or moving materials Lowered costs of goods Power Looms in English Cotton Mill (circa 1830)

5 Factory Reform Legislation Between 1800 and 1850, Parliament passed a series of laws to regulate factory work. Many of these laws focused on protecting children working in factories, and set limits on the amount of hours that children could work in factories. The Factory Act of 1850, for example, limited the weekly hours that children could work to 60 and daily hours to Political Cartoon: “English Factory Slaves.” Robert Cruikshank

6 Factory Reform Legislation Throughout this period, several commissions investigated working conditions in factories. Politicians, academics, doctors, and other public figures wrote books, pamphlets, speeches, and newspaper articles in support of or against regulating the country’s growing factory system.

Were textile factories bad for the health of English workers? Central Historical Question

8 The Process…A/B Documents A/B: Select one person to be questions and one person to be answers. Complete reading back and forth with good analysis. Complete the questions on page 4. 5 Minutes for each document

9 The Process…C/D One partner will read aloud Document C –Answer questions from page 7 together. One partner will read aloud Document D –Answer questions from page 7 together. 5 Minutes for each document.