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Published byLynn Tyler Modified over 9 years ago
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INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 5 Review
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WHY BRITAIN? Labour supply Farmers replaced by new technology Large unemployment rate Middle class (businessmen) influence over government Puritans barred from positions of power (government, church, military) as a result of the Test Act British government encouraged new business Raw materials Colonies
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AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION Enclosure and re-sale of commons land Negatively affected poor farmers -> sell farms to wealthy farmers Subsistence farming -> farming for profit New animal breeds; new technologies Turnips -> Barley -> Grasses -> Wheat Land did not need to be left fallow 4 times larger crop yield Fewer farmers could feed larger populations Turnips and clover = winter fodder
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ECONOMIC REVOLUTION English parliament Tories – rich landowners Whigs – middle class business people Laissez-faire – economic policy implemented by the Whigs Business/industry free from government regulation Textiles (cloth/cloth products) Enclosure made it possible to maintain enormous herds of sheep Sheep -> wool -> thread -> cloth Grew more efficient with new inventions (Flying Shuttle, Spinning Jenny) Steam – an engine to power factories
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TRANSPORTATION The need for roads From horses to horse-drawn wagons Canals Railways
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MECHANIZATION THE FACTORY SYSTEM The Cottage Industry – a case of supply and demand Rendered obsolete by new inventions during I.R. The Factory Age Created new cities – workers lived in large housing developments Difficult working conditions (labour costs $) Child labour – chimney sweepers The Factory Acts (1802) – 12 hour max for children (1819) – cannot hire a child under 9
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SOCIETY AND CULTURE Upper class – “society” Middle class – doctor, engineer, lawyer, university degree Lower middle class – white collar (stores, offices, small shops), teachers Women – worked same jobs/under same conditions as men Poor – diseased, treated poorly
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