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The Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution. Mr. Ermer World History AP Miami Beach Senior High. Industrial Breakthroughs. Technological and organizational changes to manufacturing process Machine power (fueled by coal and petroleum) replaces man power

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The Industrial Revolution

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  1. The Industrial Revolution Mr. Ermer World History AP Miami Beach Senior High

  2. Industrial Breakthroughs • Technological and organizational changes to manufacturing process • Machine power (fueled by coal and petroleum) replaces man power • Factory replaces workshops/homes as main site of production • Europe, the United States, and Japan are main areas of industrialization • New divisions of labor, interchangeable parts, belt-driven assembly lines • Newer larger machines produce good more efficiently • Need for ever more expensive machines promotes rise of large businesses • Giant corporations join together in trusts and cartels • Common conditions promote industrialization in Britain, Yangzi Delta, and Japan • High levels of agricultural production = population growth • High population density promotes occupational specialization • Navigable rivers and canal networks promote trade/communication • Cities house sophisticated banks and financial institutions • Ecological challenges begin to halt progress in all three regions • Great Britain survives by using coal and their large empire

  3. British Advantages • Wood = primary fuel in pre-industrial Britain; deforestation • Britain sits atop some of Europe’s largest coal deposits • British have homeland full of coal, and skills to extract it • Coal much better fuel source than wood, powers steam engines/iron works • Britain’s colonies & access to American markets = raw materials • Sugar and cotton, both unable to grow in Europe, fuel industrialization • Cotton in high demand among British, replaces wool • Calico Acts of 1720 & 1721, attempt to restrict sale of imported cotton • Demand remains high • Cotton production mechanized to increase productivity • 1765: James Watt invents general-purpose steam engine • Capable of creating several horsepower units • Iron production increases with use of coal “coke” in blast furnaces • Henry Bessemer streamlines production of steel (1856) • Steel and steam engine combine to create locomotive trains • Steamships and locomotives increase rate of transportation, lowers costs

  4. Industrialization • Factories replace the putting-out system • Workers perform specialized tasks under the same roof • Managers rise as new class of people • Impose workplace discipline, supervise quality of work • Worker productivity and factory output increase • Factory owning capitalists earn fantastic wealth • Factory workers are less skilled than their artisan ancestors • Often resented repetitious nature of work, disconnected to products • Engines allow factories to run 24/7 • Formerly rural workers’ lives no longer dictated by seasons, cycles of the sun, or the organic power of animals; but by the factory whistle, set hours • Workers work long 12-14 hour shifts; day shift or night shift • Working conditions unsanitary, dangerous—workers protest • Industrial process spreads to Europe, North America

  5. Spread of Industrialization • Napoleon reduces trade barriers in Europe, promoting conditions needed for industrialization • Belgium and France first to industrialize • German industrialization picks up pace after unification • United States has more than enough natural resources • Immigration provides industrial labor force U.S. needs to industrialize • European companies eager to invest in America’s potential • Steamships and railroads connect far-flung American markets • Telegraphs facilitate communication • Mass production increases business profits, size • The corporation rises as primary unit of capitalization • Monopolies, Trusts, and Cartels • Vertical integration of resources/businesses, collusion, greed

  6. Social Effects • Industrialization improves standards of living • People believe in the power of industrialized progress—Crystal Palace • Populations increase exponentially • Better medical technology prolongs life • Demographic transition, birth control leads to low population growth • Migration from countryside to cities—urbanization • Cities grow too fast, conditions in poor neighborhoods = horrible • Water and air pollution, crowded living quarters, poor construction/sanitation • Death rates outpaced birth rates in many cities • Rich build fancy homes in newly built suburbs, connected by streetcars • Late-1800s, governments begin to improve conditions in cities • Building codes, sanitation/sewage improvements, create more parks • Transportation technology encourages immigration from Europe (eventually Asia) to Americas (especially to the United States)

  7. Industrial Society • New social classes emerge as cities grow • Industrialists and capitalists overshadow traditionally privileged classes • Growth of the middle class creates new values in society • Large working class begins to influence politics • Family roles begin to change slowly • Distinction drawn between working and family life • Women and children expected to work early on • Child labor eventually frowned upon, compulsory education created • Women forced out of workplaces, into the home to “preserve traditional values” • Growth of middle class leads to growth in recreational activity • Harsh conditions for working class poor creates new ideologies • Utopian Socialism • Karl Marx & FredrichEngles (the Communist Manifesto & Das Kapital) • Capitalists vs. Proletariat • Abolition of private property, communal ownership through proletariat revolution • Socialists agree with Marx to a degree, believe in change through democracy • Trade Unions begin to fight for workers rights, force change

  8. Industrial World Order • Industrial nations have advantages over others • Non-industrial countries export raw materials • Industrial countries control mechanisms of trade, exploit non-industrial • Other countries attempt industrialization with limited success • Britain, W. Europe, United States, and Japan (Russia limited) industrialized • Industrialized countries depend on others for raw goods, food • Africa, Asia, the Americas seen as markets for industrialized countries • Places colonized/settled by Europeans also begin to develop industrially • Australia, Argentina, New Zealand, Canada, South Africa • Economic interdependence of developed and underdeveloped • Sub-Saharan Africa, south and southeast Asia, most of Latin America depend on rich industrialized countries for economic growth • Increase in rate and regularity of global travel and communication

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