objectives the students will examine the industrial revolution. complete warm ups complete taks...

51
Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19 Sections 1&2 Complete Section 1&2 Study Guides

Upload: amanda-maddern

Post on 15-Dec-2015

222 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Objectives

• The students will examine the Industrial Revolution.

• Complete Warm ups• Complete TAKS

Activity• Complete Ch 19

Map/Graph Activity• Discuss Ch 19

Sections 1&2• Complete Section 1&2

Study Guides

Page 2: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Industrial Revolution• Definition

– the shift from making goods by hand to making them by machine

Page 3: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

List of Inventions from 1700-1900• battery

• bi-focal glasses

• carbonated water

• thermometer

• Cotton Gin

• electricity

• reflecting telescope

• hot-air balloon

• interchangeable parts

• mayonnaise

• parachute

• Metric System

• Time Zones

• sandwich

• steamboat

• voltage batterycanning

• anesthesia

• modern pencil

• Microphone

• stethoscope

• electric motor

lawn mowerMechanical ReaperMorse Codepasteurized milkrubber bandsafety pintelephonetelegraphblue jeansBunsen Burnerpeanut Buttercash registerCoca-Colacameraelevator brakeescalatorhotdogsfountain penelectric ironzippersafety matchesmotorcycles

elevatorpaper clippotato chipsradiorayonrecordsx-raystoilet paperTractortypewritervacuum cleanerbicyclesubmarinediesel enginefirst incandescent light bulbdishwashersewing machinelight bulb

Page 4: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

Page 5: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

• The Industrial Revolution was a period from the 18th to the 19th century where major changes in agriculture, manufacturing, mining, transportation, and technology had a profound effect on the socioeconomic and cultural conditions of the times.

• It began in the United Kingdom, then subsequently spread throughout Europe, North America, and eventually the world.

1780’s – 1800’s

Page 6: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19
Page 7: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Adam Smith

• Physiocrat: – One who searches for natural laws that govern

the economy; part of the Enlightenment

Page 8: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Laissez-faire:• Government should leave the economy alone

– No regulations– No protection for workers– No control of prices– No control of wages

• The guide for the economy is self-interest (one might call it greed).

• Self-interest will ultimately make it better for everyone.

• The economy will be guided by an Invisible Hand (market forces).

Page 9: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Role of Government

• Protect the citizens from foreign invasion.

• Protect the citizens from internal enemies.

• Help build infrastructure (roads, canals, bridges).

Page 10: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Law of Supply and Demand

• Supply: the amount of items at a given price available for sell.

• Demand: the number of items at a given price that consumers wish to purchase.

• Law of Supply & Demand: If the demand for an item grows beyond its supply, more producers will enter that market to increase the supply until the market achieves equilibrium. If the demand for a specific item lessens, producers will leave the market and put their resources into more profitable items.

Page 11: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Law of Competition

• Competition is good.

• Competition keeps prices low.

• If you cannot produce an item that is competitive in the market, you will go out of business.

• If you go out of business your resources will be put to use in a more productive way and you will find another place in market.

Page 12: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

What is the down side of Free Enterprise Capitalism?

• The individual is on his own; every man for himself. If you do not have marketable skills or control of needed resources, you may easily get left behind and never be able to live beyond subsistence in this economic system.

Page 13: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19
Page 14: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

IN GREAT BRITAIN

1. Improve agricultural practices

Increased food supply low prices

2. Population grew; more people to work

3. Britain had money

4. Natural Resources

5. Britain had many markets throughout Europe

5 REASONS WHY INDUS. REV. BEGAN IN GREAT BRITAIN:

Page 15: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Production Before The Industrial Revolution: Food

• All goods were made by hand or grown on the farm.

• Farmers grew just enough food to survive.• Surpluses might be exchanged for goods

made in towns on “Market Days”.

Page 16: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Agricultural Revolution:England

• Increased use of agricultural machinery and techniques enables the farmer to increase productivity: reaper & iron plow (later tractors)– Mechanization requires less people to work the farms.– The more land, the more products to sell. The

Enclosure Act removes the poor people from the land.

Page 17: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Before: Essential Goods

• Most necessities, such as clothing, furniture, and tools, were made on the farm or in small shops in the towns and villages.

• Cottage Industry – (cotton) 2 step slow process of spinning & weaving by individuals.

Page 18: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Cottage Industry

• The Good:– Pro-family (keeps worker near/in home) – Worker meets quota and works at own pace

• The Bad: – Owner of raw material could not track its use

(inefficient control of production) – No on-site management of production– Could not mass produce– Not in control of equipment

Page 19: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Before: Essential Goods

• Manufacturing in towns• Some items were made in towns in guild shops

– Guilds were associations of craftsmen in a certain profession.

– Craftsmen used simple tools to make cloth, hardware, leather goods, etc.

– Cottage Industry: Items were, essentially, hand- made by women working out of their homes.

Page 20: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Population Before Industrial Revolution

• Less than 10% live in cities• Most lived in small towns or villages in the

countryside.• The majority were farmers leasing small

plots of land from landowners (subsistence farming).

• Life and community revolved around the agricultural seasons.

Page 21: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

(1) People moved from the country to the city – living conditions in cities were pitiful

(2) two new classes evolved – industrial middle class and industrial working class

(3) Men were now expected to earn most of the money

Page 22: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Family Life: Before Industrialization

• Living conditions were hard for most people– Life revolved around the success of the crops.– Most people were malnourished and susceptible

to diseases. – Frequent diseases and epidemics kept the

population relatively stable.– Life expectancy was about 30-35 years.– Marriage and child bearing occurred during the

teenage period.

Page 23: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Working: Before

• Boys worked in the fields and helped make tools and other necessary implements.

• Girls worked at home doing necessary chores, such as making clothes, baskets, cooking, cleaning, etc.

• There was little or no pay other than a place to live and food to eat.

• Everyone helped out at an early age.• No coinage or currency for the public for the easy

exchange of goods and services.

Page 24: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Overview of Industrial Revolution

• The Industrial Revolution creates great wealth but also great social and economic inequality, prompting a backlash of political, social, and economic reforms.

Page 25: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Why did the Revolution begin in England?

• Because England had the 4 factors for production necessary for industrialization

Page 26: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

What are the four factors of production?

• Land (raw material, natural resources)

• Labor (skilled and unskilled labor force, management)

• Capital (money for investments)

• Entrepreneurs (People with a vision and the ability to make it happen)

Page 27: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Land

• Natural resources such as:– water power and then coal to fuel new machines– iron ore to construct machines, tools, and

buildings– raw materials such as cotton, hemp, wood, etc.– rivers for inland transportation

– harbors from which merchant ships set sail

Page 28: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Labor

• An increase in population created a surplus of workers

• Enclosed farms pushed farmers off the land and into the cities

• Unskilled laborers were needed to run the machines

• Middle management positions (factory managers, accountants, equipment managers)

Page 29: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Capital

• A strong economic and political stability in England encouraged private investment

• Banks gave loans to invest in new machinery and to expand operations

• Business people invested in the manufacturing of new inventions

Page 30: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Entrepreneurs

• People with a vision who see a need the public will respond to

• People with skills and knowledge to gather the needed raw material, recruit and organize workers, and arrange for capital and investments

Page 31: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

What was the first industry to be transformed by the revolution?

• Textile industry

– Britain’s textile industry clothed the world in wool, in linen, and cotton.

– James Watt – improved steam engine 1782…steam power used to spin & weave cotton using coal.

– By 1840 Britain’s cotton products sold all over the world.

Page 32: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Major inventions in the textile industry

• Inventions that transformed the manufacture of cloth– flying shuttle

– spinning jenny

– water powered spinning wheels

Page 33: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Willowing Machine

• Willowing was the breaking up of raw cotton and removing impurities.

• Willowing machines first began to be used at the end of the 18th century.

• The machine contained a large drum filled with iron spikes, which loosened and separated the fibers, and a powerful fan which blew away the dust and other impurities through a large pipe.

Page 34: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Spinning Jenny

• The Spinning Jenny was an 18th century cotton spinning machine designed by James Hargreaves in 1764 that improved thread production.

• By turning a single wheel, the operator could now spin eight threads at once.

Page 35: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Power Loom

• This invention made it possible for weaving to become a large-scale factory based industry.

• Before the invention of the power loom it was handloom weavers who made cloth. These were men who worked in the basements of their homes using wooden hand-powered looms to weave cloth.

Page 36: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Flyer Spinning Frame

• Introduced by Richard Arkwright in 1769, the flyer spinning frame is powered by the drive wheel at the bottom, drawing out the fiber into thread, then twisting it as it is wound onto the bobbins.

Page 37: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Water Powered Mill

• Water turned the paddles of a wheel, which in turn moved grinding stones or other mechanical devices.

Page 38: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

COAL INDUSTRY EXPANDS

•The steam engine drove Britain’s Industrial Revolution using coal.•Supply of coal seemed unlimited.•Coal transformed the IRON industry•Coal had been made in England since the Middle Ages.•Henry Cort developed puddling, process of producing better quality of iron.•The British iron industry boomed!•By 1852, Britain was producing almost 3 million tons of iron annually.

Page 39: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Developments in England had an impact on the rest of the world

• Example:– England’s cotton came from plantations in the

American South, where cotton production skyrocketed in response to demand from the textile mills in England.

– To meet the demand Southern cotton producers sought to expand into the new territory of the USA, taking slavery with them.

– The expansion of slavery was one event that led to the American Civil War in 1861-1865.

Page 40: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

American Cotton Production• Thanks to Eli Whitney’s

invention of the cotton gin, cotton production in the U.S. skyrocketed from 1.5 million pounds in 1790 to 85 million pounds in 1810.

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

1790 1810

cotton

Page 41: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Age of Steam

• 1760s James Watt made significant improvement to create an effective and efficient steam engine.

• Now instead of being near a river, steam power changed the location of factories to where the resources or workers were changing the landscape of England.

Page 42: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Transportation expands

• Invention of the steam engine, which connected consumers, producers, and suppliers

• Construction of canals• Railroads, which promoted the

iron and steel industries, where the Bessemer Process was introduced

• Construction of better roads

Page 43: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Industrialization changes ways of life

• Leads to urbanization (living in cities) and urban ills

• Industrialization generates wealth for some but hardship for others

• As divisions between rich and poor grow, class tensions escalate

Page 44: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Effects of Industrialization

• Size of Cities– Tremendous growth in population

– Some cities specialize in certain industries

– Factories develop near sources of energy

– Growth of factories bring job seekers to cities

Page 45: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Living Conditions• No sanitary codes or building controls• Lack of adequate housing, education and police

protection• Lack of running water and indoor plumbing• Workers lived in dark, dirty shelters, whole families

crowding into one bedroom• Unpaved streets had no drains and collected heaps of

garbage.• Epidemics or diseases caused by poor water and

sanitary conditions regularly swept through slums• Lead to a movement called Socialism-government

owns and controls means of production.

Page 46: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

More about…

• Polluted water was a major problem in British cities in the 1800s. In London, most drinking water came straight from the Thames River, which was filthy with sewage and industrial waste. In 1849, a cholera epidemic killed 400 Londoners a day.

Page 47: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Working conditions

• Dirty and unsanitary factories• Workers running dangerous machines for long

hours in unsafe conditions• Harsh and severe factory discipline• Average worker, including children, spent 14

hours a day at the job, 6 days a week• FACTORY ACT of 1833 – children ages 9-13

work only 9 hours a day & ages 13-18 12 hours a day.

Page 48: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Child Labor

• Because they could be paid less, children (and women) were often hired instead of men.

• Children worked 6 a.m. to 7 or 8 p.m.• To keep them awake, mill supervisors beat

them.• Tiny hands around machinery often made

this very dangerous for the children.

Page 49: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Positive Effects of the Industrial Revolution

• Created jobs for workers

• Contributed to the wealth of nations

• Fostered technological progress and inventions in transportation, agriculture, and communication

• Greatly increased the production of goods worldwide

Page 50: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

The Industrial Revolution led to economic, social, and political

reforms• Economic Reforms

– unions, collective bargaining, strikes

• Social Reforms– eventual end of child labor– new wage earning classes from the factory

workers

• Political Reforms– laws were passed to protect the workers

Page 51: Objectives The students will examine the Industrial Revolution. Complete Warm ups Complete TAKS Activity Complete Ch 19 Map/Graph Activity Discuss Ch 19

Causes of the Industrial Revolution Explanation Agricultural Revolution

New Technology

1. Flying Shuttle: 2. Spinning Jenny: 3. Water Powered Loom: 4. Cotton Gin: 5. Steam Engine: 6. Railroad:

Effects of the Industrial Revolution

Political

Economic

Geographic

Social