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Patterns of Industrialization

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Title: Patterns of Industrialization


1
Patterns of Industrialization
  • 1750-1914

2
Foundations of Industrialization
  • Coal critical to early indust. of Britain
  • Shift from wood to coal in 18th C deforestation
  • Abundant, accessible coal reserves
  • Overseas colonies raw materials
  • Plantations in Americas sugar cotton
  • Colonies British manufactured goods market
  • After 1830, grain, timber, beef shipped to
    Britain from US

3
Foundations of Industrialization, cond
  • Demand for cheap cotton spurred mechanization
  • John Kay, 1733 (flying shuttle)
  • Samuel Crompton, 1779 (spinning mule)
  • Edmund Cartwright, 1785 (power loom)
  • James Watt?steam engine, 1765
  • Burned coal, which turned a piston, which turned
    a wheel
  • Widespread use by 1800increased productivity,
    cheaper prices

4
Yet more industrial foundations
  • Iron steel important industries
  • Coke (purified coal) replaced charcoal
  • Bessemer converter (1856) made cheaper, stronger
    steel
  • Improved transportation
  • 1st steam-powered locomotive, 1815
  • Steamships replace sailing ships, mid-19th C
  • Railroads steamships lowered transportation
    costs

5
The Factory System
  • Replaced the putting-out system
  • Required division of labor everyone did single
    task
  • High degree of coordination, work discipline,
    close supervision
  • Work conditions harsh
  • Workers lost status not skilled, just
    wage-earners
  • Harsh work discipline, fast pace, frequent
    accidents
  • Industrial protest
  • Luddites struck against mills destroyed
    machines, 1811-1816

6
More factory system
  • The early spread of industrialization
  • Industrialization in western Europe
  • British industrial monopoly, 1750-1800, forbade
    immigration of skilled workers
  • Napoleon abolished internal trade barriers in W.
    Europe/dismantled trade guilds
  • Belgium France moved toward industrialization,
    mid-19th C
  • After unification, Bismark sponsored heavy
    industry, arms, shipping

7
More factory system
  • The early spread of industrialization
  • In North America, slow to start few laborers
    little capital
  • British craftsmen started cotton textile industry
    in New England, 1820s
  • Heavy iron steel industries, 1870s
  • Rail network developed in 1860s

8
More factory systems
  • Industrial capitalism
  • Mass production promoted cheaper goods
  • Eli Whitney interchangeable parts for firearms
  • Henry Ford (1913) assembly line to car
    production
  • Industrialization expensive large-capital
    investment
  • Encouraged large-scale corporations w/ hundreds
    of investors
  • New laws protected investors from liability
  • Monopolies, trusts, cartels
  • Competitive associations

9
Industrial Society
  • The fruits of industry
  • Population growth
  • Raised material standards for living
  • Populations of Europe America sharply rose,
    1700-1900
  • Better diets sanitation reduced death rates
  • Demographic transition
  • Declining birthrate in response to declining
    mortality
  • Voluntary birth control through contraception

10
Industrial Society
  • Urbanization and migration
  • Drew migrants from country to urban centers
  • By 1900, 50 of population of industrialized
    countries lived in towns
  • By 1900, more than 150 cities with over 100,000
    people in Europe N. America
  • Urban problems shoddy houses, etc.
  • By late 19th C., govt passed building codes,
    sewers
  • Transcontinental migration
  • 1800-1920, 50 million Europeans migrated to N S
    America
  • Fled famine in Ireland, anti-Semitism in Russia,
    etc.

11
Industrial Society
  • Industry society
  • New social classes
  • Captains of industry new aristocracy of wealth
  • Middle class managers, etc.
  • Working class
  • Changes to industrial family
  • Long hours outside home
  • Increasingly separate lives

12
Industrial society
  • Industry society
  • Men gained increased stature responsibility
  • Middle upper-class sole providers
  • Valued self-improvement, discipline, work ethic
  • Values on working-class men
  • Workers resisted work discipline
  • Working-class culture

13
Industrial society
  • Industry society
  • Opportunities for women narrowed
  • Cant bring children to mines or factories
  • Middle-class women need to stay home care for
    children
  • Increased opportunities in domestic service
  • Many children forced to work to support family
  • 1840s Parliament begins regulating child labor
  • 1881, mandatory primary education in England

14
Industrial society
  • The Socialist Challenge
  • Utopian socialists Charles Fourier, Robert Owen,
    their followers
  • Established model communities based on principle
    of equality
  • Stressed cooperative control of industry,
    education of children

15
Industrial society
  • Socialist challenge
  • Marx (1818-1883) and Engels (1820-1895)
  • Scorned the utopian socialists as unrealistic
    unproductive
  • Critique industrial capitalism
  • Unrestrained competition led to ruthless
    exploitation of working class
  • State, court, police all tools of the capitalist
    ruling class
  • The Communist Manifesto, 1848
  • Excesses of capitalism would lead communist
    revolution
  • dictatorship of the proletariat
  • Socialism would follow fair, just, egalitarian
    society
  • Ideas dominated European and international
    socialism

16
Industrial Society
  • Socialist challenge
  • Social reform came gradually
  • Regulated hours restricted work for women
    children
  • Under Bismark, Germany provided medical insurance
    social security
  • Trade unions formed to represent workers
  • Stiff opposition from employers governments
  • Forced employers to be more responsive to needs

17
Global effects of industrialization
  • Continuing spread beyond Europe N. America
  • Industrialization of Russia by tsarist govt
  • Between 1860-1900, built 35,000 miles of RR
  • Finance minister, Sergei Witte, promoted industry
  • Oversaw construction of tran-Siberian RR
  • Reformed commercial law to protect industries
    steamship companies
  • Promoted nautical engineering schools
  • Encouraged foreign investors
  • By 1900, Russia produced ½ the worlds oil, also
    iron armaments

18
Global effects of industrialization
  • Continuing spread beyond Europe N. America
  • Industrialization in Japan also promoted by govt
  • Hired thousands of foreign experts to establish
    modern industries
  • Created new industries opened technical
    institutes universities
  • Government-owned businesses then sold to private
    entrepreneurs (zaibatsu)
  • Japan most industrialized in Asia by 1900

19
Global effects of industrialization
  • International division of labor
  • Increased demand for raw materials
  • Non-industrial societies became suppliers of raw
    goods
  • Cotton from India rubber from Brazil, Malay,
    Congo River basin
  • Economic development better in lands colonized by
    Europe
  • High-wages encouraged labor-saving tech

20
Global effects of industrialization
  • International division of labor
  • Economic dependency more common in other
    countries
  • Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, S. Asia, SE
    Asia
  • Foreign investors owned controlled plantations
    production
  • Free-trade policy favored foreign products over
    domestic
  • World divided into producers consumers
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