life in the industrial age (1800–1914) world history chapter 12: industrialization and nationalism
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Life in the Industrial Age(1800–1914)
World HistoryWorld History
Chapter 12: Industrialization and Nationalism
Age of Industry:
Chapter 12.1
Introduction to industry• The Industrial Revolution
began in Great Britain during the late 1700s.
• Changes in the way land was used and new farming methods increased productivity.
• Skilled inventors developed new technology, and entrepreneurs with money invested in new or expanded ventures.
The Middle Class• Farmers displaced by rural changes went to the cities to find work in factories.
• The availability of such natural resources as coal, iron, and water power led to the use of power-driven machines in factories.
• Industrialization spread to the rest of Europe and to North America, creating a new social order.
• A growing middle class of prosperous factory owners and managers began to exert political power, while an even larger working class pressed for reforms to improve working conditions and their daily lives.
Village Life• Village life was harsh, people
mostly stayed in their villages.• Private and public lands were not
fenced off or separated from the rest of the land.
• Roads were not effectively built, they were just dirt paths that turned to mud when it rained.
• Everyone on a farm worked hard, it was part of life back at that time.
• Everyone in the family-- from children to the husband and wife-- contributed something on the farm.
Industrialization and Nationalism, 1800–1870
• The Industrial Revolution and a wave of liberal nationalist revolutions transformed Europe during the 19th century. A weakened old order gave way, and a number of unified European states emerged.
• Canada gained its independence, and the northern and southern United States reunited after a bloody civil war.
The Industrial Revolution
• The Industrial Revolution began in the late 18th century and turned Great Britain into the first and the richest industrialized nation. A series of technological advances caused Great Britain to become a leader in the production of cotton, coal, and iron. After the introduction of the first steam-powered locomotives, railroad tracks were laid across Great Britain, reducing the cost of shipping goods. The Industrial Revolution spread to Europe and North America. In the United States, the railroad made it possible to sell manufactured goods from the Northeast across the country. The Industrial Revolution had a tremendous social impact in Europe. Cities grew quickly, and an industrial middle class emerged. The industrial working class, meanwhile, dealt with wretched working conditions. These conditions gave rise to socialism, a movement aimed at improving working conditions through government control of the means of production.
The Beginnings of Change
Chapter 12, Section 2
Enclosure Movement
• Open field system- system where British farmers had planted crops and kept livestock on unfenced private and public lands for hundreds of years
• Landowners felt that larger farms with enclosed fields would increase farming efficiency and productivity
• Enclosure Movement-practice of fencing or enclosing common lands into individual holdings
• Parliament supported this and passed laws that allowed landowners to take over and fence off private and common lands
• Many small farmers dependent on village lands were forced to move to towns and cities to find work
• Landowners practiced new, more efficient farming methods
– To raise crop yields, they mixed different kinds of soil and used new crop rotation systems– Crop Rotation-the practice of alternating crops of different kinds to preserve soil fertility– Charles Townshend- urged the growing of turnips to
enrich exhausted soil– Another reformer, Robert Bakewell, bred stronger
horses for farm work and fatter sheep and cattle for meat– Jethro Tull- invented the seed drill that enabled farmers to plant seeds in orderly rows
Great Britain Leads the Way
• This agriculture revolution helped Great Britain to lead the Industrial Revolution
• Successful farming business allowed landowners to invest money in growing industries
• Many displaced farmers became industrial workers
Money and Industry• Capital-money to invest in
labor, machines, and raw materials that is essential for the growth of industry
• By investing in growing industries, the aristocracy and middle class had a good chance of making a profit
• Parliament encouraged investment by passing laws that helped the growing businessesThe four factors of economics are:
land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship
Great Britain Leads the Way cont.Natural Resources
• Britain’s wealth included its rich supply of natural resources
• Water provided power for developing industries and transported raw materials and finished goods
• Britain also had huge supplies of coal, the principle raw material of the Industrial Revolution– Produced iron and steel for
machinery and helped to fuel industry
Large Labor Supply• In one century, England’s
population nearly doubled– Improvements in farming lead
to increased availability of food
– better, more nutritious food led to people living longer and healthier lives
• Changes in farming lead to increased supply of industrial workers
• Entrepreneurs-businesspeople who set up industries by bringing together capital, labor, and new industrial inventions
English: Work by Ford Madox Brown, 1852-63 Oil on canvas. Original in the Manchester City Art Galleries
Growing Textile Industry
Advances in Machinery• John Kay- improved the loom with
the flying shuttle• James Hargeaves- invented a more
efficient spinning machine called the spinning jenny
• Richard Arkwright-developed the water frame-a huge spinning machine that ran continually on waterpower
• Samuel Crompton- produce the spinning mule by combining features of the spinning jenny and the water frame
Producing More Cloth• Edmund Cartwright-
developed the power loom to solve the shortage of weavers
• The new inventions created a growing need for raw cotton
• (American) Eli Whitney- developed the cotton gin that cleaned cotton 50 times faster than one person could
Flying shuttle
Spinning Jenny Water Frame
Spinning Mule Power Loom Cotton Gin
The Factory System• Factory System- organized method of production that brought workers and
machines together under control of managers• Waterways powered machines and provided transportation for raw
materials and finished cloth• As the factory system spread, manufacturers required morepower than horses and water could provide• James Watt- designed an efficient steam engine*
– Steam engines allowed factories that had to close down when water froze or flowed too low to run continuously
• The steam engine enabled factories to be built far from waterways
Industrial Developments• The use of factory machinery
increased demand for iron and steel
• Henry Bessemer and William Kelly-developed methods to inexpensively produce steel from iron
• At the same time, people worked to advanced transportation systems throughout Europe and the US
• Improvements began when private companies began building and paving roads
• John McAdam and Thomas Telford- further advanced road making:– better drainage systems and– the use of layers of crushed rock
• Water transportation also improved: in 1761, British workers dug one of the first modern canals– Soon, a canal building craze began in
both Europe and the US
• A combination of steam power and steel would soon revolutionize both land and water transportation– In 1801, Richard Trevithick first
brought steam-powered travel to land with a steam-powered carriage that ran on wheels and three years later, a steam locomotive that ran on rails
– In 1807, Robert Fulton designed the first practical steamboat
• Railroads and steamboats laid the foundations for a global economy and opened new forms of investment
Review• Enclosure Movement-practice
of fencing or enclosing common lands into individual holdings
• Crop Rotation-the practice of alternating crops of different kinds to preserve soil fertility
• Charles Townshend-urged the growth of turnips to enrich exhausted soil
• Jethro Tull-seed drill• John Kay- flying shuttle• James Hargeaves- spinning
jenny• Richard Arkwright-water frame• Samuel Crompton-spinning
mule
• Edmund Cartwright- power loom
• Eli Whitney- cotton gin• Factory System- production of
goods in factory through the use of machines and a large number of workers
• James Watt- steam engine• Henry Bessemer & William
Kelly-developed methods to cheaply produce steel from iron
• John McAdam & Thomas Telford- better drainage systems and the use of layers of crushed rock
• Robert Fulton-steamboat
Centers of Industry1
The Growth of Industry
»Chapter 12, Section 3
Samuel Slater
• Tall, ruddy young British worker on a ship bound for New York.
• A farmer was his listed occupation but he was actually a smuggler, stealing a valuable British commodity-industrial knowledge-to make money in America.
• Knew how to build an industrial spinning wheel and introduced it to the US.
Great Britain• Most Productive
Country in the World– Kept technology secret– Parliament passed laws
restricting the flow of machines and skilled workers to other countries
– Until 1825, the law that Slater ignored prohibited craftspeople from moving to other countries
– Mercenaries and technicians left Great Britain, carrying industrial knowledge with them
• Britain gave up trying to guard its industrial monopoly• British industrialists saw that they could make money by spreading
the Industrial Revolution to other countries• Large-scale manufacturing based on the factory system was not as
successful in other lands. The major exceptions were France, Germany, and the US– Set up factories in Europe, supplying capital (money), equipment,
and technical staff. – *earned Great Britain the title “The Workshop of the
World”
• Railroads– Construction was funded in India, Latin America, and North
America by financiers• Financiers were people concerned with the management of
large amounts of money on behalf of governments or other large organizations.
France Germany United States
government encouraged industrialization
Used British capital to build their first major
railway
British capital and machinery and American
mechanical skills promoted new industry.
developed a large pool of outstanding scientists
Strong iron, coal, and textile industries
emerged.
Shoe and textile factories flourished in New
England.
industrialization was slow-paced
industrialization was successful
industrialization was successful especially in
the Northeast
Napoleonic Wars strained the economy
and depleted the workforce
Government funding helped the industry to
grow
Coal mines and ironworks expanded in
PA
Growth of mining and railway construction became big in Paris
Brought machinery from Britain and set up
factories
By 1870, the US ranked with Great Britain and Germany as one of the
world’s 3 most industrialized countries.
Economy depended on farming and small
businesses, not new industries.
Industrialization: Success or Failure?
Technology and Industry
Alessandro Volta developed the first battery.Michael Faraday created the first electric motor and the first dynamo, a machine that generates electricity.
Thomas Edison made the first electric light bulb.
Chemists created hundreds of new products.New chemical fertilizers led to increased food production.Alfred Nobel invented dynamite.
Henry Bessemer developed a process to produce stronger steel.
Steel quickly became the major material used in tools, bridges, and railroads.
ELECTRICITYCHEMICALSSTEEL
The marriage of science, technology, and industry spurred economic growth. To improve efficiency, manufacturers designed products with interchangeable parts. They also introduced the assembly line.
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• Capitalism was a major factor in spurring industrial growth. It was an economic system in which individuals and private firms, not the government, own the means of production, including land, machinery, and the workplace. In a capitalist system, individuals decide how they can make a profit and determine business practices accordingly
• Industrialists practiced industrial capitalism which involved continually expanding factories or investing in new businesses. After investing in a factory, capitalists used profits to hire more workers and buy more raw materials and new machines.
• Mass Production: the production of huge quantities of identical goods
• Manufacturers invested in machines to replace more costly human labor. Machines were fast working and precise and enabled industrialists to mass-produce
Capitalism
Eli Whitney
Eli Whitney designed and invented the cotton gin by April 1793. The cotton gin was a machine that automated the separation of cottonseed from the short-staple cotton fiber. He contributed to the concept of interchangeable parts and increased factory production. These interchangeable parts were machine-made parts that were exactly alike and easily assembled or exchanged.
Frederick Taylor
Encouraged manufacturers to divide tasks into detailed and specific segments of step-by-step procedureUsing his plan, industrialists devised a division of labor:
Each worker performed a specialized task on a product as it moved by on a conveyor beltThat worker would then return the product to the next belt where it continued down the line to the next worker. This was called the assembly line.
Henry FordHenry Ford used the assembly
line methods to produce his Model T automobiles. As he
produced greater quantities of his cars, the cost of producing each car fell, allowing him to drop the price. This enabled
millions of people to buy cars.
Organizing Business
A partnership was a business organization involving two or more entrepreneurs who can raise more capital and take on more business than if each had gone into business alone.Partners share management, responsibility, and liability.
Corporations are business organizations owned by stockholders who buy shares in a company. The stockholders vote on major decisions concerning the corporations. Shares decrease or increase in value depending on the profits earned by the company.Corporations became one of the best ways to manage new businesses.
As production increased, industrial leaders developed ways to manage the growing business world and to ensure a continual flow of capital for business expansion.
The People Formed Partnerships...
...and then They Formed Corporations
Business Cycles• Individual businesses concentrated on producing a particular kind of
product. This increase in specialization made growing industries dependent on each other: when one industry did well, so did the others. The economic fate of a country came to rest on business cycles.
• Business cycles were alternating periods of business expansion and decline and follow a certain sequence.
• Lowest point of a business cycle-a depression, which is characterized by bank failures and/or widespread unemployment.
• Most people suffered during “bust” periods and prospered during peaks.
Amateur Inventors• Amateur Inventors relied
heavily on trial and error.• Produced the most industrial
advances at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.
• By the late 1800s, manufacturers began to apply more scientific findings to their businesses.
Communications
Samuel Morse James Clerk Maxwell
assembled a working model of the telegraph
promoted the development of the radio
Used a system of dots and dashes
Promoted the idea that electromagnetic waves
travel through space at the speed of light
American inventor British physicist
Telegraph lines linked most European and North
American cities
Guglielmo MarconiAlexander Graham
Bell
devised the wireless telegraph which later became the radio invented the telephone
Scottish-born American teacher of the deaf
Tiny electrical wires carrying sound allowed people to speak
to each other over long distances
Scientists devised ways to harness electrical power and electricity replaced coal as the major source of industrial fuel.
Michael Faraday Thomas Edison
discovered that moving a magnet through a coil in a
copper wire would produce an electrical current
Invented the phonograph which reproduced sound
Electric motor was based on this principle
Made electric lighting cheap and accessible by inventing
incandescent light bulbs.
British chemist American inventor
Electricity
Michael Faraday Thomas Edison
Energy & Engines•The Industrial Revolution surged forward with advances in engines. These inventions ushered in the age of the motor car:
Gottlieb Daimler
Redesigned the internal combustion engineGerman engineer
Now runs on gasolineProduced enough power to propel vehicles and boats
Rudolf Diesel
German engineer
Could run industrial plants, ocean liners, and locomotives Developed an oil-burning internal-combustion engine
Ferdinand von ZeppelinStreamlined the dirigible with a gasoline engine
A dirigible was a 40-year-old balloon-like invention that could carry passengers
Advances in Transportation and Communication
TRANSPORTATION•Steamships replaced sailing ships.•Rail lines connected inland cities and seaports, mining regions and industrial centers.•Nikolaus Otto invented a gasoline-powered internal combustion engine.•Karl Benz patented the first automobile.•Rudolf Diesel invented the diesel engine •Henry Ford began mass producing cars.•Orville and Wilbur Wright designed and flew the first airplane.
COMMUNICATION•Samuel Morse developed the telegraph.•Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone.•Guglielmo Marconi invented the radio.
During the second Industrial Revolution, transportation and communication were transformed by technology.
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Taking FlightWilbur and Orville Wright achieved success in 1903 at Kitty Hawk with the first flight of a motorized airplane. It covered a distance of 120 feet. Only five years later they flew their wooden airplane 100 miles. New airplanes and other vehicles
needed a steady supply of fuel for power and rubber for tires and other parts. Petroleum and rubber industries skyrocketed and innovations in transportation, communications, and electricity changed the American lifestyle forever.
Chapter 12 Section 4: A New Society
The Rise of Big BusinessNew technologies required the investment of large amounts of money. To obtain capital, entrepreneurs sold stock, or shares in their companies, to investors.Large-scale companies formed corporations, businesses that are owned by many investors who buy shares of stock.
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Powerful business leaders created monopolies and trusts, huge corporate structures that controlled entire industries or areas of the economy. Sometimes a group of businesses joined forces and formed a cartel, an association to fix prices, set production quotas, or control markets.
The Rise of the Middle Class
• More jobs came along with successful owners
• Education became a key idea along with people becoming involved in politics
Middle-Class Lifestyles
• The stereotype of men go out to work and the women stayed home to clean and raise the children developed during this period
• Boys sent to school to learn business or trade and typically took father’s position or worked in family business
• Girls stayed at home learning to cook, sew and all the workings of a household
The World of Cities
• What was the impact of medical advances in the late 1800s?
• How had cities changed by 1900?
• How did working-class struggles lead to improved conditions for workers?
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City Life
• Settlement patterns shifted: the rich lived in pleasant neighborhoods on the outskirts of the city, while the poor crowded into slums near the city center.
• Paved streets, gas lamps, organized police forces, and expanded fire protection made cities safer and more liveable.
• Architects began building soaring skyscrapers made of steel. • Sewage systems improved public
health.
As industrialization progressed, cities came to dominate the West. At the same time, city life underwent dramatic changes.
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Lives of the Working Class
• Class size increased• Luxuries became available • No longer made or grew what the family
needed
At the Mercy of Machinery• As competition increased between factories,
work conditions decreased• Workers spent between 10-14 hours in the
factories a day• Women made less than half the amount men
made and children made even less
Working-Class StrugglesWorkers protested to improve the harsh conditions of industrial life. At first, business owners tried to silence protesters, strikes and unions were illegal, and demonstrations were crushed. By mid-century, workers slowly began to make progress:• Workers formed mutual-aid societies, self-help groups to aid sick or
injured workers. • Workers won the right to organize unions.•Governments passed laws to regulate working conditions. Social unionism—vote in guys who will pass pro-union laws.• Governments established old-age pensions and disability insurance. • The standard of living improved.
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Workers’ Lives
• Working children didn’t go to school, they worked long hours and suffered from diseases and injuries from the intense work.
• Working offered new independence for women• Owners of mills often controlled most of the
worker’s lives
Workers Unite
• Developed labor unions that demanded fair wages and tolerable working conditions
• Labor unions are made up of workers of a trade
Union Tactics• Organized protests, slowdowns,
boycotts, sitdowns, strikes• Unions banned in England, and known
members of unions lost their jobs and were not hired for jobs in U.S.--blacklisted
• Collective bargaining developed
Advances in Medicine
JOSEPH LISTER discovered how antiseptic prevented infection.
FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE insisted on better hygiene in wartime field hospitals, introduced sanitary measures in British hospitals, and founded the world’s first nursing school.
ROBERT KOCH identified the bacteria that caused tuberculosis.
LOUIS PASTEUR proved the link between microbes and disease, developed vaccines against rabies and anthrax, and discovered the process of pasteurization, the killing of disease-carrying microbes in milk.
Improved medicine and hygiene played a major role in increasing life expectancy in the industrialized world.
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Population ExplosionBetween 1800 and 1900, the population of Europe more than doubled. This rapid growth was not due to larger families. Instead, population soared because the death rate fell. The drop in the death rate can be attributed to the following:
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YearMale Female1850 40.3 years 42.8 years1870 42.3 years 44.7 years1890 45.8 years 48.5 years1910 52.7 years 56.0 years
•People ate better.•Medical knowledge increased.•Public sanitation improved.•Hygiene improved.
The Industrial Revolution: Cause and Effect2
Causes•Increased agricultural productivity•Growing population•New sources of energy, such as steam and coal•Growing demand for textiles and other mass-produced goods•Improved technology•Available natural resources, labor, and money•Strong, stable governments promoted economic growth
Immediate Effects•Rise of factories•Changes in transportation and communication•Urbanization•New methods of production •Rise of urban working class•Growth of reform movements
Long-Term Effects•Growth of labor unions•Inexpensive new products•Spread of industrialization •Rise of big business•Expansion of public education•Expansion of middle class•Competition for world trade among
industrialized nations •Progress in medical care
What Values Shaped the New Social Order?
• A strict code of etiquette governed social behavior.
• Children were supposed to be “seen but not heard.”
• Middle-class parents had a large say in choosing the future spouse for their children. At the same time, the notion of “falling in love” was more accepted than ever before.
• Men worked while women stayed at home. Books, magazines, and popular songs supported a cult of domesticity that idealized women and the home.
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• Across Europe and the United States, politically active women campaigned for fairness in marriage, divorce, and property laws.
• Women’s groups supported the Temperance movement, a campaign to limit or ban the use of alcoholic beverages.
• Before 1850, some women had become leaders in the union movement.
• Some women campaigned to abolish slavery.• Many women broke the barriers that kept them out of
universities and professions. • In the mid- to late 1800s, groups dedicated to
women’s suffrage emerged.
3Rights for Women
Growth in Public Education
• By the late 1800s, reformers persuaded many governments to set up public schools and require basic education for all children.
• Governments began to expand secondary schools, or high schools.
• Colleges and universities expanded during this period. Universities added courses in the sciences to their curriculums.
• Some women sought greater educational opportunities. By the 1840s, a few small
colleges for women opened.
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