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Chapter 22 Part 4 The Industrial Revolution

Chapter 22 Part 4

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Chapter 22 Part 4. The Industrial Revolution. Changes in working conditions. Factory work meant more discipline and less personal freedom Work became impersonal - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 22 Part 4

Chapter 22Part 4

The Industrial Revolution

Page 2: Chapter 22 Part 4

Changes in working conditions

Factory work meant more discipline and less personal freedom

Work became impersonal The factory environment was so

different than what cottagers were used to that they were reluctant to work in factories even for better wages

Page 3: Chapter 22 Part 4

Working Conditions Early factories resembled English

poorhouses where destitute people went to live on welfare

Some poorhouses really were industrial prisons

Page 4: Chapter 22 Part 4

Child Labor Increased More agricultural workers became

weavers and were paid fairly well so were unwilling to move to factories

Factory owners turned to child labor

Abandoned children became a main source of labor from local parishes and orphanages

Page 5: Chapter 22 Part 4

Child Labor Factory owners treated children like

slaves

Hours were long; conditions were appalling

Factories, mines, chimney sweeps, market girls, shoemakers, etc.

BUT this was much the same as child labor in cottage industries

Page 6: Chapter 22 Part 4

Child Labor Did child labor in factories only

APPEAR to be worse? As the Industrial Revolution

continued, child labor declined

BUT at first, families worked in factories in units

Parents were unwilling to be separated from their children in factories and mines

Working together made the work more tolerable

Page 7: Chapter 22 Part 4

In Cotton Mills Children worked for mothers or

fathers Collected waste and pieced together

broken thread

In mines children sorted coal and picked up stray bits that fell from the corvees (carts) pushed by their mothers while fathers mined the seams

Parents DID protest inhumane treatment

Page 8: Chapter 22 Part 4

See Listening to the Past752-753

Page 9: Chapter 22 Part 4

Parliament tried to limit Child Labor

The Saddler Commission: investigated working conditions and helped to initiate legislation to improve conditions in factories

Page 10: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Factory Act 1833 Limited the workday for children 9-13 to

8 hours a day

Limited ages 14-18 to 12 hours a day

Prohibited hiring children under age 9

Were to attend elementary schools that factory owners were required to establish

Page 11: Chapter 22 Part 4

Employment of Children declined rapidly

BUT the Factory Act of 1833 helped to destroy the family as a working unit

Page 12: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Mines Act of 1842

Prohibited boys and girls under age 10 from working underground

Page 13: Chapter 22 Part 4

Impact of the Industrial Revolution on Society

Urbanization: was the most important sociological effect

Was the largest population transfer in human history

Birth of factory towns: cities grew into large industrial centers…like Manchester

Page 14: Chapter 22 Part 4

Before the Industrial Revolution

Most people lived in the South of England

BUT coal and iron were located in the Midlands and in the North

In 1785 only 3 cities had more than 50,000 people in England and Scotland

By 1820, 31 cities with 50,000 or more

Page 15: Chapter 22 Part 4

The role of the city had changed

From governmental and cultural centers

To industrial centers

Living conditions SEEMED worse (due to overcrowding) in the cities but did not differ much from those living on farms

Page 16: Chapter 22 Part 4

Reformers tried to improve

life in cities The big issues of the 19th century:

working class injustices gender exploitation standard-of-living issues

Page 17: Chapter 22 Part 4

The family structure and gender roles within the

family changed Families were no longer a unit of

production and consumption

Families were less closely bound together

Productive work was taken out of the home

Page 18: Chapter 22 Part 4

New roles As wages rose for skilled adult males

women and children were separated from the workplace

Gender-determined roles at home and a new “domestic” life slowly emerged

Married women stayed at home Husband was the wage earner

Page 19: Chapter 22 Part 4

Women Were expected to create a nurturing

environment for family members who returned from work

Married women DID work outside the home IF family required it: illness, death of a spouse

Single women and widows had much work available BUT few skills required and very low wages

No way to protect themselves from exploitation

Page 20: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Irish Increased numbers to Great Britain Became urban workers

Many Irish were forced out of Ireland…poor economic conditions, population growth and the Potato Famine

Page 21: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Irish Ireland had not industrialized

The Industrial Revolution may have limited human catastrophe elsewhere…factory work provided better wages…people could buy food from elsewhere

Better transport could have brought food in

Page 22: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Irish Overpopulation and rural poverty in

Ireland Most were Irish Catholic peasants

and lived in abject poverty

Rented land from a tiny minority of Anglicans

Most landowners were absentee Had not improved agriculture (new

crops, methods of the Agricultural Revolution NOT introduced)

Page 23: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Potato Famine 1845 & 46…Crop failure Again in 1848 & 1851

Also…fever epidemics!

Higher food prices, tremendous suffering, social unrest

Page 24: Chapter 22 Part 4

Irish Potato Famine 1.5 million died or went unborn 1840-1855: 2 million left Ireland

Most went to U.S. or Britain

By 1911…population in Ireland 4.4 million

1845 population in Ireland was 8 million

British government response was abysmal

Page 25: Chapter 22 Part 4

It might have happened Anywhere that there was rapid

population growth without industrialization

Central Russia, western Germany, Southern Italy were vulnerable

All relied on the potato, were overpopulated and poor

Page 26: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Dismal Science(Economics)

Thomas Malthus Essay on the Principle of Population (1798): argued that the population would always grow faster than the food supply

The only way to ward off “positive checks” on population growth: war, famine, disease…to marry later in life.

Page 27: Chapter 22 Part 4

The Dismal Science David Ricardo (1722-1823) The

Iron Law of Wages: due to population growth, wages would always sink to subsistence level

Wages would be just high enough to keep workers from starving

Page 28: Chapter 22 Part 4

John Maynard Keynes During the Great Depression of the

1930’s

“We are all dead in the long run….”

Page 29: Chapter 22 Part 4

Friedrich List German journalist and thinker:

Promoted economic nationalism (became increasingly popular in 1840’s)

Government should protect industry with tariffs

Government should subsidize RR’s, etc.

Wrote: National System of Political Economy (1841)

What would Adam Smith say?

Page 30: Chapter 22 Part 4

Capitalists viewed the Industrial Revolution as a Positive Force in the

long runIn the end it did fulfill human wants and needs

Industry provided the power to replace human labor

Wealth for all increased Huge amounts of food, clothing, energy

became available to all Luxuries became commonplace Life expectance increased More leisure time available Prevented human catastrophe (like in

Ireland)

Page 31: Chapter 22 Part 4

Socialists and Communists

Believed the Industrial Revolution to be the continued exploitation of the have-nots (proletariat) by the haves (Bourgeoisie)

Workers had to wait until the second ½ of the 19th century to share in the wealth

Until then: low wages, poor conditions, abuse