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INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

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industrial revolution perhaps the most important of the three 18th century revolutions why? because it transformed everything it touched changed work patterns – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION


1
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
  • PERHAPS THE MOST IMPORTANT OF THE THREE 18TH
    CENTURY REVOLUTIONS
  • WHY?
  • BECAUSE IT TRANSFORMED EVERYTHING IT TOUCHED
  • Changed work patterns
  • Transformed European social structure
  • Altered international balance of power
  • Caused population explosion
  • Provoked rapid growth of cities
  • Sparked advancements in science, medicine, and
    agriculture
  • HELPED CREATE THE MODERN WORLD

2
WHY ENGLAND?
  • ENGLAND POSSESSED EXPANDING MARKET FOR
    MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS
  • Colonies
  • Agricultural Revolution
  • Resulted in large harvests, bountiful food
    supplies, relatively inexpensive food
  • Created discretionary income (money left over
    after paying for necessities)
  • Spent discretionary income on small purchases of
    manufactured items ( shoes, cloth, small metal
    products)
  • Small purchases added up to expanding market for
    manufactured goods

3
OTHER FACTORS
  • Cheap transportation
  • Effective central bank and well-developed credit
    facilities
  • Stable and predictable government

4
COTTON TEXTILES
  • FIRST SECTOR TO INDUSTRIALIZE
  • DOMESTIC SYSTEM
  • Also called cottage industry or putting-out
    industry
  • Everything done by hand
  • People worked in their spare time from
    agricultural work
  • People worked in family units at home
  • Merchants dropped off raw materials and picked up
    finished product each week
  • Inefficient because of lack of supervision of
    workers
  • COULD NOT MEET ESCALATING DEMAND FOR COTTON
    PRODUCTS AFTER 1700

5
FIRST MACHINES
  • DEVELOPED IN RESPONSE TO NEED TO BOOST COTTON
    TEXTILE PRODUCTION TO MEET RISING DEMAND
  • SPINNING JENNY
  • Big and clunky
  • Water powered
  • Could spin 300-400 spools of cotton thread
    simultaneously
  • POWER LOOM
  • Big and clunky
  • Water powered
  • Could do the work it took 100 hand loom workers a
    day to do in one hours

6
THE COTTON MILLS
  • Machines were to big, too expensive, and required
    regular operationcould not be adapted to
    domestic system
  • Had to be located in large, central location that
    met power and size requirements and where workers
    could be supervised
  • Birth of factories
  • Mechanized production made cotton products
    cheaper, thereby stimulating demand, thereby
    encouraging development of more and better
    machines and bigger factories birth of the
    Industrial Revolution

7
SPREAD OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
  • DRAWBACKS OF WATER POWER
  • Restricted location of factories
  • Restricted size of machines
  • Left production at the mercy of elements
  • SOLUTION THE STEAM ENGINE
  • James Watt
  • More reliable, flexible power source
  • Stimulated iron and coal industries and promoted
    them to industrialize

8
THE LOCOMOTIVE
  • INVENTION OF THE LOCOMOTIVE
  • George Stephenson (1830)
  • Resulted in construction of rail network
  • Reduced shipping costs
  • More stimulus for iron, coal, and steam engine
    industries
  • Created unified national market for manufactured
    products

9
WORKSHOP OF THE WORLD
  • By 1850, England dominated world production of
    coal, iron, and cotton textiles
  • Had phenomenal annual growth rate
  • Had fasted growing population in Europe
  • Increasingly concentrated in cities
  • Industrial Revolution made Great Britain the
    first modern nation
  • Urban, industrial, wealthy, and militarily
    powerful

Crystal Palace Exhibition
10
INTERNATIONAL GROWTH
  • Industrialization spread throughout western world
    once others realized its benefits
  • Belgium (1830s)
  • France (1840s)
  • Germany and United States (1860s)
  • Sweden, Japan, and Russia (1870s)
  • Brazil, South Africa, China, South Korea, India,
    and others (20th century)

11
DOWNSIDE OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
  • INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION, IN THE LONG TERM,
    BENEFITTED THE COMMON MAN
  • Higher standard of living
  • Longer life expectancy
  • Better chance for social mobility
  • In general, a better quality of life
  • BUT IN THE SHORT TERM IT CREATED A VAST ARRAY OF
    NEW SOCIAL PROBLEMS
  • Tremendous upheaval in lives of early industrial
    workers
  • Ripped people out of their traditional ways of
    living and working
  • Threw into a new world for which they were
    unprepared and hence exploited
  • AS A RESULT OF NEGATIVE EXPERIENCES WITH EARLY
    INDUSTRIALIZATION, MANY WORKERS TURNED TO
    SOCIALISM FOR AN ALTERNATIVE

12
LABOR PROBLEMS
  • DOMESTIC SYSTEM
  • Laid-back system, families worked together, no
    supervision, no set schedules, and no set work
    pace
  • People worked when and as fast as they wanted to
  • FACTORY SYSTEM
  • Had to show up on time everyday and work steadily
    at pace set by machine
  • Could only take breaks at predetermined time
  • Had to adjust your life to the strict discipline
    of industrial production

13
CHILD LABOR
  • Adults refused to work in factories because they
    appeared hideous, inhuman places
  • CHILD LABOR
  • Orphans were terribly exploited
  • Situation was so bad that Parliament finally
    intervened and regulated child labor

14
URBAN SQUALOR
15
SOCIALISM
  • General socialist argument
  • Capitalism made a few people very rich but kept
    most people poor and miserable
  • Capitalism was unjust system
  • Early socialist schemes
  • Utopian communities (La Reunion)
  • Nationalization of industry
  • Violent revolutions
  • Replace unbridled competition with cooperation
  • Abolition of private property
  • Flaws
  • Misunderstood human nature
  • Wanted to turn back clock to days before
    industrial revolution

Charles Fourier
Robert Owen
16
SCIENTIFIC SOCIALISM (MARXISM)
Frederick Engels
Karl Marx
  • Published Communist Manifesto in 1848
  • Corrected flaws in early socialism and proved it
    was workable and inevitable

17
FUNDAMENTALS OF MARXISM I
  • Human history characterized by one class
    exploiting another
  • Classa social group bound together by common
    economic activity and interests
  • Ancient World
  • Slaveowners exploit slaves
  • Feudal Age
  • Nobles exploit commoners
  • Capitalist (modern) Age
  • Bourgeoisie exploits proletariat

18
FUNDAMENTALS OF MARXISM II
  • Industrialization would eventually create
    conditions for the overthrow of bourgeoisie by
    proletariat
  • By making bourgeoisie richer and smaller in
    number
  • By making proletariat poorer and larger in number
  • Creates class consciousness among
    proletariatthe realization that they are being
    exploited by the bourgeoisie and the desire to do
    something about it
  • Result?
  • Revolution by proletariat
  • Creation of communist society heaven on earth
    where there are no classes and no exploitation

19
INACCURATE PREDICTIONS
  • Marxist regimes that have been established are
    hardly heavens on earth
  • Former Soviet Union, China, Cuba, North Korea
  • Most of the industrial world is still capitalist
  • No proletarian revolutions in sight
  • But Marxism does provide some insight into the
    extreme concern some had with the social
    ramifications of capitalism and
    industrializations during the early Industrial
    Revolution
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