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The Industrial Revolution The greatly increased output of machine made goods that began in England in the 18 th century.

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Presentation on theme: "The Industrial Revolution The greatly increased output of machine made goods that began in England in the 18 th century."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Industrial Revolution The greatly increased output of machine made goods that began in England in the 18 th century

2 Changes in Agriculture  Wealthy landowners bought village farms and made changes to farming techniques Agricultural Revolution  Enclosures: large enclosed fields where landowners experimented with farming methods  Crop rotation: A system of growing a different crop in a field each year to preserve the land

3 Changes in Agriculture  OUTCOMES:  Experimentation with farming techniques  Small farmers forced to become tenant farmers or move to cities many became factory workers  Increase in food supplies improved living conditions increased population increased demand for food and goods

4 Industrialization  Industrialization: the process of developing machine production of goods  Why did the Industrial Revolution begin in England?  Water power and coal to fuel the machines  Iron ore to build the machines  Rivers for transportation  Harbors from which merchants could set sail  Strong economy and political stability England had the factors of production, or land, labor and capital, which were the resources needed to produce goods and services

5 Inventions in the Textile Industry  Spinning Jenny (1764) allowed a workers to spin 8 threads at one time  Inventions regarding water power to drive the spinning wheels in the 1770s and 1780s further increased the production of textiles Spinning Jenny

6 Factories  Large buildings that housed textile machines  Owned by wealthy entrepreneurs:  People who organize, manage and takes on the risks of a business  Originally located on rivers and streams for waterpower

7 Cotton Gin  England received its cotton from the American south, who had used slave labor to remove the seeds from cotton by hand  1793 – Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin to remove seeds  Production of cotton increased from 1.5 million pounds (1790) to 85 million pounds (1810)

8 Improvements in Transportation  Steam engine (1705)  Steamboat (1807) manmade canals for transportation  Improvements in roads in the 1800s  Railroad (1820), which would dominate industrial transportation in England  Cheap way to transport materials and finished products  Created jobs as railroad workers and miners (providing iron for the tracks)

9 Improvements in Transportation

10 Manchester, England, 1851

11 German Factory, 1840

12 Effects of Industrialization  Urbanization: After 1800 more people moved to cities rather than rural areas  Why?  The growth of the factory system brought people looking for jobs to the cities  This led to a population explosion in industrial cities

13 Living Conditions in Cities  No sanitary codes  no drains; heaps of garbage in the streets  Lacked adequate housing, education, police protection  People lived in crowded conditions where disease spread quickly

14 Industrialization in the U.S.  Samuel Slater: British mill worker who emigrated to the United States in 1789, bringing British ideas of industrialization with him  Francis Cabot Lowell: Revolutionized American industry in Lowell, Massachusetts

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16 Impact of Industrialization  Growth of corporations: business owned by stockholders who share in the profits but are not personally responsible for debts  Global Inequality: wider gap between industrialized and non-industrialized nations imperialism  Imperialism: the policy of extending one country’s rule over many other lands  Growing gap between rich and poor

17 Philosophers of Industrialization  Adam Smith  Laissez-faire economics: “Let people do as they please” without government interference  Believed government regulation of business interfered with the production of wealth  Capitalism: an economic system based on private ownership, in which money is invested in business with the goal of making a profit

18 Philosophers of Industrialization  Thomas Malthus  MAIN IDEA: population increased more quickly than food supply, so people would always be poor and miserable  David Ricardo  MAIN IDEA: the permanent underclass would always be poor because if there were many workers, their labor would always be cheap; as population increased, wages would decrease Against government efforts to help the workers because they believed it would hurt the production of wealth in society

19 Philosophers of Industrialization  Jeremy Bentham  Philosophy of utilitarianism: believed government interference in business was only useful if they promoted the greatest good for the greatest number of people

20 Philosophers of Industrialization  Socialism:  Factors of production are owned by the public and operated for the welfare of all  Believed that the government should plan the economy rather than rely on free- market capitalism  Government control of factories, mines, railroads, etc. to help the workers who were at the hands of greedy employers  Grew out of a concern for social justice

21 Philosophers of Industrialization  Karl Marx  German journalist who introduced radical socialism, or Marxism, to the world  Wrote The Communist Manifesto with Friedrich Engels  KEY IDEAS: Human society has always been divided between the haves and have-nots HAVES: Owners of production or bourgeoisie HAVE-NOTS: Workers or proletariat VS.

22 The Future According to Marx 1) Small number of manufacturers would control all the wealth 2) Revolt by the proletariat – they would seize factories and workers would share the profits, bringing about economic equality for all people 3) “dictatorship of the proletariat” would eventually lead to a classless society, or communism: a form of complete socialism in which the means of production is owned by the people, all goods/services are shared equally and private property no longer exists

23 Other Reforms  Unions: groups of voluntary workers who pressed for reforms in the 1800s, such as higher pay and shorter hours  Participated in collective bargaining, or negotiations between workers and they employers for better working conditions  If demands were not met, workers could strike, or refuse to work  Although many unions were initially outlawed, they eventually won the right to strike and picket peacefully, which led to reforms aimed at improving the lives of workers


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