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Industrial Revolution

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Page 1: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Industrial Revolution

Page 2: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not
Page 3: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Working ConditionsThe machines were exposed and dangerous

Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous

Often lived with 6 people in one room

Not paid well

Exhausted

12 hour shifts

Page 4: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Reforms to Factory Work Robert Owen and Titus Salt started some of the reforms

Other factory workers did not like the reforms (less money)

Reforms: Factory Act 1819 Limited the hours worked by children to a

maximum of 12 per day. Factory Act 1833 Children under 9 banned from working in the

textiles industry and 10-13 year olds limited to a 48 hour week. Factory Act 1844 Maximum of 12 hours work per day for Women. Factory Act 1847 Maximum of 10 hours work per day for Women

and children. Factory Act 1850 Increased hours worked by Women and children

to 10 and a half hours a day, but not allowed to work before 6am or after 6pm.

1874 No worker allowed to work more than 56.5 hours per week.

Page 5: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Farm Economy Individual families produce everything they

need on their farm

Luxury items are sent from England

Wealth is measured in property

Page 6: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Market EconomyBased on jobs and money

Families bought more things than they made

Wealth is measured in money.

Page 7: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Main Figures of the Industrial Revolution

Samuel Slater

Francis Cabot Lowell

Eli Whitney

Page 8: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

TextilesFancy word for cloth or fabric

Late 1700s: England made the best AND cheapest cloth

England used cotton-spinning machines to make their textiles

English factories kept their machines secret so no American factories could compete with them.

Page 9: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Samuel SlaterAmerica’s first corporate spy

Worked in a cotton factory in England

Memorized how cotton-spinning machines were made.

Came to America (1790) and shared the secret with American businessmen

Page 10: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Samuel Slater

Page 11: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Francis Cabot LowellSaw a power loom in England

After seeing the power loom once Lowell understood how it worked and made his own loom in the USA.

Page 12: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Lowell SystemFrancis Cabot Lowell hired young women to

work his factories.

He paid them less than men

He offered attractive incentives: Boarding house near the factory Religious instruction Educational opportunities

Page 13: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Eli Whitney Introduced the idea of interchangeable parts

Before this time a musket was made by a gunsmith.

Each gun would be a little different so if it broke a gunsmith would have to be make a replacement part.

Now you could fix a gun using parts of another gun etc.

Applied this idea to machines used in the industrial revolution

Page 14: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Eli Whitney Invented the Cotton Gin

Took seeds out of cotton 50 times faster than by hand

Made cotton more readily available for making textiles

Greatly increased the demand for slaves

Page 15: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

Timeline of Industrial Revolution Inventions

1733 Flying shuttle invented by John Kay - an improvement to looms that enabled weavers to weave faster.

1742 Cotton mills were first opened in England.

1764 Spinning jenny invented by James Hargreaves - the first machine to improve upon the spinning wheel.

Page 16: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

1764 Water frame invented by Richard Arkwright - the first powered textile machine.

1769Arkwright patented the water frame.

1770Hargreaves patented the Spinning Jenny.

1773The first all-cotton textiles were produced in factories.

Page 17: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

1785Cartwright patented the power loom. It was improved upon by William Horrocks, known for his invention of the variable speed batton in 1813.

1787Cotton goods production had increased 10 fold since 1770.

1789 Samuel Slater brought textile machinery design to the US.

1790Arkwright built the first steam powered textile factory in Nottingham, England.

Page 18: Working Conditions The machines were exposed and dangerous Children worked in hard to reach places-dangerous Often lived with 6 people in one room Not

1792Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin - a machine that automated the separation of cottonseed from the short-staple cotton fiber.

1804 Joseph Marie Jacquard invented the Jacquard Loom that weaved complex designs. Jacquard invented a way of automatically controlling the warp and weft threads on a silk loom by recording patterns of holes in a string of cards.

1813 William Horrocks invented the variable speed batton (for an improved power loom)

1856William Perkin invented the first synthetic dye.