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The Industrial Revolution 1700-1900

The Industrial Revolution 1700-1900. Setting the Scene. In the 1700s, small farms covered most of England. Wealthy landowners were buying all the small farms. T hey could make many improvements in farming techniques with their money, but many people were left without jobs.

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The Industrial Revolution 1700-1900

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  1. The Industrial Revolution1700-1900

  2. Setting the Scene In the 1700s, small farms covered most of England. Wealthy landowners were buying all the small farms. They could make many improvements in farming techniques with their money, but many people were left without jobs. This is known as the “agricultural revolution”

  3. Setting the Scene • Technology was changing how goods were made • Small-scale production by hand at home large-scale production by machine in a factory Industrialization – switch to machine production of goods

  4. Activity • Read the article “Before the Industrial Revolution” • Answer the 10 “Challenges” questions • Be prepared to be called on randomly!

  5. Why Did it Begin in England? • Large population • Natural resources • Expanding economy • Political stability

  6. Activity • Read the article “Great Britain: First to Industrialize” • Using this information, answer the two questions on the back on a separate sheet of paper • These will be collected so make sure to put your name on your answer sheet!

  7. Factors of Production: Land • Water power & coal = fuel for machines • Iron ore = construct machines, tools, and buildings • Rivers = inland transportation • Harbors = shipping

  8. Factors of Production: Labor • Unemployed farmers needed new jobs • People were willing to move to cities to work in factories

  9. Factors of Production: Capital • Capital= wealth • Business people wanted to invest money • Banks gave out loans to businesses

  10. Textiles Change First • Cottage industry: people created goods by hand in their own homes • Making cloth had been a cottage industry • With new technology, cloth is made faster and cheaper in factories

  11. Activity: The Textile Industry • Read the article and answer the accompanying questions • Be prepared to randomly be called on!

  12. Activity: The Life of a Textile Worker • Read the two personal accounts of life as a textile worker • Answer the four questions on the bottom

  13. Improvements in Transportation • James Watt’s Steam Engine • Cheap, convenient power • Water Transportation • Steamboats • Canal systems • Road Transportation • Large rocks on bottom and small on top – helped drain water

  14. Railroads Revolutionize Life • Cheaper way to transport goods • Created jobs for railroad workers and miners • Made travel easier – people could travel for work Steam Engine

  15. Comparing Viewpoints Activity • In this activity, you will read two different viewpoints on the impact that industrialization had on society • On a separate sheet of paper, answer the three questions on the bottom

  16. 1850: Population Living in Cities Urban Growth • Urbanization: the building of cities and the movement of people to cities

  17. Activity: Why England? • In this activity, we will be analyzing a number of sources to answer the question “Why did the Industrial Revolution begin in England” • For each of the sources, there is an accompanying question. Read through each and answer the question.

  18. Living Conditions in Cities • Not enough housing, schools, or police • Streets had no drains, garbage piled up • Whole families lived in dark, dirty one room “apartments” • Disease was widespread

  19. Working Conditions • 14 hour work days, 6 days a week • Dirty, poorly lit factories led to injuries • Children as young as 6 work in factories • Many coal miners killed by coal dust

  20. Activity “Hazardous Duty – Factory Work During the Industrial Revolution” • Use the reading to answer the multiple choice questions

  21. Class Tensions Grow • Middle Class = factory owners, skilled workers, professionals, business people, wealthy farmers • New social class • Had most of the money • Looked down on by the upper class • Working class = factory workers, laborers • Poorest group

  22. Reforming Society • Workers started getting involved in politics • Created labor unions • Unions represented all the workers in a particular trade • Engaged in collective bargaining with employers • If employers didn’t agree, workers would strike (refuse to work)

  23. Creating Unions • Skilled workers created the first unions – harder to replace in workforce • Was a very tough process • England – unions/going on strike illegal • Eventually governments look into the awful conditions • Most obvious were child labor problems

  24. Effects of the Revolution • Creates jobs, enriches nation, encourages technological progress • Increases production of goods, raises standard of living, gives people hope of improving their lives • Education expands, clothing becomes cheaper, diet and housing improve

  25. Protecting the Revolution • Great Britain did not want to share the secrets of industrialization • To protect these secrets, they FORBADE engineers, toolmakers, and mechanics from leaving the country

  26. JIGSAW

  27. Writing an Editorial • Congratulations! You’ve been promoted to Editor for the London Times • Using the information that you gathered during the jigsaw, you will be writing a editorial arguing whether or not the Industrial Revolution improved life in England and how to fix some of the existing problems

  28. Industrial Revolution Project • Let’s play tic-tac-toe! • For this project you get to choose what aspects you would like to focus on! • You must pick THREE topics – these can go across, up and down, or diagonally

  29. Evolving Economic Theories

  30. Mercantilism: The Old Theory

  31. Mercantilism: The Old Theory • Main idea: MONEY = POWER • Import (buy from another country) as little as possible • Export (sell to another country) as much as possible • Needed colonies to make this system work • Had been the most popular economy

  32. ACTIVITY • Read the information sheet about your theory • Individually list what you think are the most important parts of the theory • With the other students who have your theory answer these questions (you’re turning these in!): • How would you summarize your theory? • What are advantages to your theory? • What might be some disadvantages to your theory? • After about 15-20 minutes, we will jigsaw!

  33. Your Opinion On a sheet on paper, using your notes from today, answer the question below: Which theory do you think sounds best or worst? Which kind would you want to use if you could choose? WHY? Make sure to put your name on your paper! IT IS BEING COLLECTED!

  34. Let’s Review…

  35. Capitalism (Theory A) • Individuals have the right to own private property and businesses • Government should protect these rights • Gov’t should stay out of the economy (laissez-faire) • Owner can choose what to make, how much to make, and what price to sell at

  36. Capitalism (Theory A) • Economy based on competition • Prices often lower • Example: when only AT&T carried the iPhone, they could charge whatever they wanted • When Verizon began carrying the iPhone, AT&T had to drop their prices • Items probably of better quality • Why buy something that isn’t made well if you can get a better item somewhere else?

  37. Capitalism (Theory A) • Based on supply and demand • Make products based on what and how much buyers want • Gov’t might have to step in if a company creates a monopoly • Too much control over one industry = less competition

  38. Sound Familiar? Think back to the Enlightenment and Adam Smith!

  39. Socialism (Theory B) • Cooperation instead of competition • Government controls all means of production • Picks what to make and how much to make • Supply and demand doesn’t exist

  40. Socialism (Theory B) • A government using socialism might promise the people: • Economic equality • No more poverty • Decent houses • Good working conditions

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