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Warm Up: How did natural resources and new means of transportation affect the growth of industry?
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The Industrial Revolution was a period from the 18th to the 19th century where major changes in agriculture, manufacturing, mining, transportation, and technology had a profound effect on the socioeconomic and cultural conditions of the times
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Industrialization: a shift from an agricultural (farming) economy to one based on industry (manufacturing) Effect on Economy ▪ City population increased (Urbanization) ▪ New entrepreneurs emerged (more money = more technology/inventions)
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The factory system changed the world of work; Mass Production = the production of large amounts of standardized products, especially on assembly lines Mass production began in U.S. Elements: –Interchangeable parts –Assembly line Production and repair faster and more efficient Mass Production Dramatic increase in production Businesses charged less Affordable goods More repetitious jobs Soon became norm Effects Factories and Mass Production
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New Technologies Steam-became key power source Iron-less expensive, better quality Railroads-Changed the way raw materials, goods, and people moved Textiles Cotton Gin- quickly separated cotton fibers from seeds Spinning Jenny-Spun many threads at the same time
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Rise of Unions-organized strikes to demand increased wages and improved working conditions Goods were able to be produced much more cheaply There were greater job opportunities There was an increase in wealth and in general quality of life An independent urban manufacturing business force arose New inventions and innovations occurred; information spread, making the world “smaller” Spurred the rise of large cities
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Stable Government No wars Had capital (money) to invest in businesses Had overseas markets (colonial empire) Natural Resources Coal (energy for machines) Iron ore (for tools) Large network of rivers to move products Labor Supply Growing population Ready workforce New Technology Invention and improvement of steam engine
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Believed unions before them failed because they limited their membership Organized both skilled and unskilled workers, blacks, and women By early 1880’s, became a national force Goals: 8 hour work day End of child labor Equal pay for equal work Graduated income tax
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Written in 1906 to point out the troubles of the working class and the corruption of the American meatpacking industry in the early 20 th Century Depicts poverty, absence of social programs, unpleasant living and working conditions, and hopelessness prevalent among the working class, which is contrasted with the deeply-rooted corruption of those in power Legislation Resulting from The Jungle Meat Inspection Act of 1906 (sanitary standards) Pure Food and Drug Act (food and drug tests, labels on food products) ▪ Lead to the creation of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) by Theodore Roosevelt
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The “HAVES” Bourgeois Life Thrived on the Luxuries of the Industrial Revolution The “HAVE-NOTS” The Poor, The Over-Worked, and the Destitute Benefited most
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Increased world productivity Growth of railroads (faster and more efficient transportation of goods and people) New entrepreneurs emerged (more money = more technology/inventions) New inventions improved quality of life for many Labor eventually organized (unions) to improve working conditions Laws were enacted to enforce health and safety codes in cities and factories New opportunities for women Rise of the middle class – size, power, and wealth expanded Social structure becomes more flexible A global economy began to emerge (trade)
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FACTORY Child labor Sweatshops Miserable (dirty, cramped) and dangerous (fingers, limbs, & lives lost) working conditions Long working hours – six days a week, with little pay Diseases such as pneumonia & tuberculosis spread through factories Strikes Cities Tenement housing was poorly constructed, crowded, and cold
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Increase in population of cities Women and children enter the workplace as cheap labor Rise of labor unions Introduction of reforms Laws to protect children in the workplace Minimum wage and maximum hour laws Federal safety and health standards Growth of the middle class Increased production and higher demand for raw materials = growth of worldwide trade Expansion of education Women’s increased demands for suffrage OBJECTIVE: SWBAT identify the social and economic impact of the Industrial Revolution through evaluating sources and completing a graphic organizer. STANDARDS:H.3.b; H.2.d; E.1.a
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Economic system in which the means of production are privately owned and operated for a private profit Free-market economy: decisions regarding supply, demand, price, distribution, and investments are made by private actors Profit goes to owners who invest in the business Wages are paid to workers employed by companies and businesses
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Socialism - An economic system in which the government owns or controls many of the means of the production and directly provides for many of the people’s needs People as a society would operate and own the means of production, not individuals Their goal was a society that benefited everyone, not just a rich, well-connected few Tried to build perfect communities [utopias]
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Communism- a political philosophy that aims for a classless and stateless society structured upon common ownership of the means of production and an end to private property “Haves” -Bourgeoisie (benefited the most) “Have Nots”-proletariat (working class)
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Explain the relationship between a nation’s industrial productivity and its degree of world strength Explain industrialization and how it effected the economy during the Industrial Revolution How do the different perspectives of the distribution of labor impact the views of the Industrial Revolution? In your opinion, which invention during the Industrial Revolution was most important? Why?
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What are some lasting effects of the Industrial Revolution?
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