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The Industrial Revolution Spreads. 1. New powers emerge – A. Other nations raced to catch up to Britain. – B. By mid 1800s, several nations caught up.

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Presentation on theme: "The Industrial Revolution Spreads. 1. New powers emerge – A. Other nations raced to catch up to Britain. – B. By mid 1800s, several nations caught up."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Industrial Revolution Spreads

2 1. New powers emerge – A. Other nations raced to catch up to Britain. – B. By mid 1800s, several nations caught up because: 1. Other nations had more coal, iron and other resources (USA, Germany, France) 2. Other nations borrowed British experts, technology (U.S.-first textile factory, steamboat) 3. Germany and U.S. became industrial leaders. 4. By 1900, U.S. manufactured 30% of all goods.

3 – C. Uneven development 1. Some nations developed slowly-lack of resources or capital 2. Russia slow to industrialize due to social and political conditions 3. Japan rapidly industrialized after 1868. 4. Canada, Australia, New Zealand industrialized.

4 – D. Effects of Industrialization 1. Working class worked long hours, dangerous conditions. 2. Goods prices lower. 3. Demand for goods created jobs. 4. Competition changed global trade. 5. Western powers came to dominate the world.

5 E. Technology sparked growth – 1. By 1880s, companies hired professionals to create products and machines. A. 1856-Henry Bessemer developed process for making steel. B. 1866-Alfred Nobel invented dynamite, used for construction and warfare. C. 1800-Allesandro invented first battery. D. Michael Faraday created first dynamo-(machine that generates electricity). E. 1870s-Thomas Edison developed the light bulb.

6 Thomas Edison

7

8 F. New Methods of production – 1. Interchangeable parts introduced in 1800s. – 2. 1900s-Assembly line introduced.

9 G. Transportation and Communication Advances – 1. Nikolaus Otto-internal combustion engine – 2. Gottlieb Daimler-four wheel car – 3. Early 1900s-Henry Ford made assembly line to mass produce cars – 4. 1903-Wright brothers flew first airplane – 5. Samuel Morse-first telegraph 1844. (1860s- underwater cable relaying messages Europe to U.S.) – 6. 1876-Alexander Graham Bell-telephone – 7. 1890s-Guglielmo Marconi-radio

10 II. Business Takes a New Direction – A. Rise of Big Business 1. Owners sold stock to raise money for businesses 2. Investors became a tiny part owner of the company 3. Some sold 100s of 1000s of shares. 4. These companies became first corporations (businesses owned by many investors). 5. Allowed companies to expand

11 B. Move Toward Monopolies – 1. Monopolies and trusts were created by big business. – 2. Controlled entire industries or areas of the economy A. Krupp-German steelmaking B. Rockefeller –U.S. Standard Oil Company Rockefeller dominated oil industry

12 Andrew Carnegie –U.S. Steel worth $298 billion in todays dollars

13 John D. Rockefeller-Standard Oil Company worth $663 billion in todays dollars

14 JP Morgan-banking financier

15 Cornelius Vanderbilt-shipping railroads

16 – 3. Ruthless business leaders destroyed competition. – Free to raise prices – 4. Some formed a cartel-an association to fix prices-control markets

17 C. Move Toward Regulation – 1. Creation of immense wealth sparked debate A. Viewed as captains of industry or robber barons – 2. Reformers called for regulation on monopolies – 3. By 1900s, some governments did start regulations against monopolies despite business leaders efforts to hinder regulation

18 – 2. Reformers called for regulation on monopolies – 3. By 1900s, some governments did start regulations against monopolies despite business leaders efforts to hinder regulation


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