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INDUSTRIALIZATION Chapter 25 Section 2
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Key Terms Urbanization Middle Class
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Work in the Home Workers produced finished goods and dealt with the merchants Merchants delivered materials to the weavers cottage Next the weavers family processed the wool When finished the merchant picked it up
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Work in the Home Home workers controlled their schedule Work faster when they needed money Work slow to make the highest quality cloth Could make their own adjustments
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Problems of Cottage Industries Working at home had disadvantages – Fires – Floods – Ruin a family in an instant Cloth making required a lot of skills Only adults had the physical strength for the job
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Problems with Cottage Industries Typical loom was 6 feet wide and needed strength to operate Parents fell ill or dies children could not do it
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Working in a Factory Divided work into several easy to learn tasks Each worker assigned one task Children could learn jobs Boys and girls as young as 6 worked Could pay children a lower wage
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Working in a Factory Factory work was dangerous No safety protection from the machines Worked 12 hour days Noise, inadequate ventilation, inadequate food added to hardship Lasted the 1700’s into the 1800’s
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Life in Factory Towns Whole towns grew up around factories Some companies provided housing Families in crowded shoddy, close packed dwelling Water power changed to steam factories near mines
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Life in Factory Towns Thick soot from burning coal blanketed the town Smoke sent sulfur and other poisonous gases into the air. Smelting and refining factories sent smoky pollution into the air England emitted so much pollution it was called the black country
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Life in Factory Towns American visitor called it black by day and red by night – Smelting fires Some neighborhoods in Manchester only had two toilets for every 250 people Disease spread rapidly Six in ten children died before age of 5
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Workers in a New Economy Three levels A wealthy businessman to invest and own the factory Midlevel employees to run the factory Low level employees to run the machines
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Workers in a New Economy Employers who invested expected to make a profit Shared little of their profits with employees Factory workers had little incentive to improve performance Workers were plentiful
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Workers in a New Economy Displaced by the enclosure movement United States, immigrant were happy to find any kind of work Preferred hiring women and children Men wanted more money Do not take orders easily
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Workers in a New Economy Saw unskilled jobs as inappropriate for men Factory work was women’s work
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Cottage Workers Unrest Weavers and other cottage workers trying to make a living Their items were more expensive 1811 masked workers attacked a mill Luddite movement- named after Gerald Ned Ludd
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Cottage Workers Unrest Machines were hurtful to the economy Put people out of work Luddites burned factories Smashed machines 1812 movement spread to other cities Several Luddites were hanged
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Changing Labor Conditions British government did not want to get involved in factory problems Regulating business not their job Citizens thought the government should get involved
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Changing Labor conditions Labor unions- organizations that represent the workers interests Strikes-work stoppages to raise wages or improve conditions Parliament banned unions and strikes
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Changing Labor Conditions Pressure from public brought unions back 1832 Sadler Report- describe factory abuses Britain passed laws Limit working hours for women and children Required children to be at least 9 years old 1871 legalized strikes
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A New Class of Worker Growth of the middle class Between factory owners and poor factory workers Several groups essential to a factory Accountants and managers Engineers, mechanics Selling spread through the whole economy Middle class increased
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The Manchester Mills Best and worst of Industrial Revolution Unhealthy for poor who lived and worked their Wealth flowed from the factories Money to owners, middle class Working class conditions started to rise
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The Mills of Manchester Business owners made high profits Erected gracious homes on the outskirts of town
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The Mills of Manchester Worked under terrible conditions Worked 6 days a week from 6am to 7 or 8pm Half hour for lunch 1 hour for dinner Factory Act of 1819 child labor law
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