chapter 9-3 industrialization spreads –i) industrial development in the united states –ii)...

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Chapter 9-3 • Industrialization Spreads – I) Industrial Development in the United States – II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe – III) Worldwide Impact of Industrialization

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Page 1: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

Chapter 9-3

• Industrialization Spreads– I) Industrial Development in the United States– II) Industrialization Reaches Continental

Europe– III) Worldwide Impact of Industrialization

Page 2: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

I) Industrial Development in the United States

• The Industrial Revolution that began in Britain soon spread to other countries that had similar conditions that made for rapid industrialization.

• Eager to keep the secrets of industrialization to itself, Britain had forbid engineers, mechanics, and toolmakers to leave the country.

• In 1789 however a young mill worker named Samuel Slater snuck out of Britain and designed a spinning machine from memory which was put in the 1st United states factory in Rhode Island.

Page 3: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

I) Industrial Development in the United States

• In 1813 Francis Cabot Lowell and four other investors revolutionized the American textile industry by mechanizing every stage in the manufacturing of cloth.

• Thousands of young single female workers flocked from their rural homes to work as mill girls in factory towns, toiling 12 hours a day for 6 days a week.

• Despite a great deal of industrialization in the Northeast in the early 1800’s, the United states remained primarily a agricultural nation until the Civil War ended in 1865, when the country experienced a technological boom.

• As in Britain the US had a wealth of natural resources (oil, coal, iron), a burst of inventions (light bulb, telegraph) and a swelling urban population that consumed the manufactured goods.

• Railroads played a major role in America’s industrialization, and building large businesses like railroads required a great deal of money.

Page 4: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

I) Industrial Development in the United States

• To raise the money entrepreneurs sold shares of stocks, and people who bought stock became part owners of the business.

• These businesses were called corporations, where stockholders share in the profits but are not personally responsible for its debt.

• Big business tried to control entire industries and made big profits by cutting the cost of production, such as Standard Oil (John Rockefeller) and Carnegie Steel Company (Andrew Carnegie).

• While workers earn small wages for long hours at hard labor, stockholders earned high profits and corporate leaders made fortunes. Profits

Page 5: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe

• While other European nations yearned to adopt the “British miracle”, they were absorbed by the French Revolution and Napoleon until the 18th century.

• Belgium led the way in adopting Britain’s new technology, as a Lancashire carpenter named William Cockerill smuggled secret plans for building spinning machinery out of England which helped his son John eventually build an enormous industrial enterprise in eastern Belgium.

• Although Germany was a politically divided empire, beginning around 1835 they began to copy the British model by importing equipment and engineers and sending children to England to learn industrial management.

Page 6: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe

• Most importantly Germany built railroads to link its growing manufacturing cities, and its growing industrial strength allowed it to develop into a military power by the 19th century.

• In France, industrial growth did not occur until after 1850 when the central government constructed railroads that created a thriving market foir new French products.

• Elsewhere in Europe industrialization proceeded by region rather than country, and in some nations the social structure or geography prevented them from industrializing.

Page 7: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

III) Worldwide Impact of Industrialization

• The Industrial Revolution shifted the balance of power by promoting competition between industrialized nations and increasing poverty in less developed nations.

• To keep factories running and workers fed, industrialized nations required a steady supply pf raw materials from less developed land and in turn sold their manufactured products back to them.

• Soon industrialized Western nations, led by Britain, seized and exploited overseas colonies for their resources and markets.\

Page 8: Chapter 9-3 Industrialization Spreads –I) Industrial Development in the United States –II) Industrialization Reaches Continental Europe –III) Worldwide

III) Worldwide Impact of Industrialization

• This policy of extended one country’s rule over many other lands, Imperialism, gave even more power to the wealthy nations.

• Industrialization gave Europe and the West tremendous power, especially since the economies of Asia and Africa were still based on agriculture.

• The industrialization that took place in the 18th and 19th centuries revolutionized every aspect of society, and despite the hardships the development of a middle class created great opportunities in education and improvements in daily life and health for the majority of the population.