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CHANGES IN THE ECONOMY
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/mercantilism.asp
ADAM SMITH’S “WEALTH OF NATIONS”:
THE INVISIBLE HAND (1776)
ADAM SMITH’S “WEALTH OF NATIONS”:
THE INVISIBLE HAND (1776)
“"Every individual necessarily labours to render
the annual revenue of the society as great as he
can. He generally neither intends to promote the
public interest, nor knows how much he is
promoting it ...
ADAM SMITH’S “WEALTH OF NATIONS”:
THE INVISIBLE HAND (1776)
“"Every individual necessarily labours to render
the annual revenue of the society as great as he
can. He generally neither intends to promote the
public interest, nor knows how much he is
promoting it ... He intends only his own gain, and
he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an
invisible hand to promote an end which was no
part of his intention.
ADAM SMITH’S “WEALTH OF NATIONS”:
THE INVISIBLE HAND (1776)
“"Every individual necessarily labours to render
the annual revenue of the society as great as he
can. He generally neither intends to promote the
public interest, nor knows how much he is
promoting it ... He intends only his own gain, and
he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an
invisible hand to promote an end which was no
part of his intention. Nor is it always the worse
for society that it was no part of his intention. By
pursuing his own interest he frequently promotes
that of the society more effectually than when he
really intends to promote it. I have never known
much good done by those who affected to trade
for the public good."
INVISIBLE HAND EXPLAINED
“The theory of the Invisible
Hand states that if each
consumer is allowed to choose
freely what to buy and each
producer is allowed to choose
freely what to sell and how to
produce it, the market will
settle on a product
distribution and prices that
are beneficial to the all
individual members of a
community, and hence to the
community as a whole.”
http://www.worldlingo.com/ma/enwiki/en/Invisible_hand#Economists.27_interpr
etation_of_the_.22invisible_hand.22_quote
SUPPLY AND DEMAND
LAISSEZ FAIRE ECONOMICS
“Let be” in French
 No government interference
in economy, let the economy
be
 Same idea as the “invisible
hand” but termed by Jean
Baptiste Colbert, French
Finance Minister

STILL CONFUSED??
CHANGES TO PRODUCTION
INDUSTRIES
Textile industry
PRE-INDUSTRIAL
REVOLUTION WEAVING
By Christoph Weigel
1698
 The worker is about
to move the shuttle
back through the
threads
 The man on the left
is pulling wool
through a weaving
comb.

PRE-INDUSTRIAL LOOM
TEXTILE INDUSTRY

John Kay’s Flying Shuttle 1733
FLYING SHUTTLE





Doubled the output of a
weaver
Increased the demand for
thread
Able to create wider cloth
Kay had struggles collecting
from the patent and
eventually lost it
Backlash from weavers
losing jobs because of the
flying shuttle



1753 neighbours broke into
Kay’s home try to kill him
Kay escaped
Kay leaves for France
PRE INDUSTRIAL YARN SPINNING
PRE INDUSTRIAL YARN SPINNING
JAMES HARGREAVES SPINNING JENNY
1764
SPINNING JENNY
http://videos.howstuffworks.com/discovery/31667-industrial-revelationsspinning-jenny-video.htm
SPINNING JENNY


Hargreaves was an uneducated carpenter and weaver
Two origin myths about the invention:
Named after his wife
Daughter knocked over a spinning wheel and Hargreaves
got the idea
1.
2.


Invention was not patented in 1764 so others
reproduced his machine



Wikipedia says he had no daughters or wife named Jenny…
Similar backlash to the flying shuttle but since there was
no patent, people adopted the designs instead
Hargreaves patents the design in 1770 but others
had already began to improve on his design
Hargreaves dies 8 years later in 1778
RICHARD ARKWRIGHT’S WATER FRAME
1768






John Kay had been working
on a spinning machine but
ran out of money
Arkwright continues Kay’s
work
Made stronger thread by
stretching the cotton/wool
very thinly first, then
spinning it
Automated machine run by
a water wheel
Up to 128 threads at one
time!
Beginnings of the movement
from cottage industry to
factory because of unskilled
labour (children)
SAMUEL CROMPTON’S SPINNING MULE
1779




Crompton combined
elements of the Spinning
Jenny and Water Frame
to create the Spinning
Mule
Could be steam powered
Made strong and varied
types of yarn
The machine was too
similar to Arkwright’s so
a patent would be difficult

Instead, spread the
knowledge for a
subscription fee (ended up
being only 60 pounds)
SAMUEL CROMPTON’S SPINNING MULE
1779
Toured the country to
try to get more
subscriptions and found
that about 80% of the
textiles produced was
from his invention
 Lobbied the government
and got 5000 pounds
(asking for 10000)
 Had a number of failed
business ventures and
died 1827

CHANGES TO PRODUCTION
INDUSTRIES
Steam
JAMES WATT’S STEAM ENGINE 1769
First patented in 1769 by
Watt, original created by
Thomas Newcomen
 First steam machines used
for pumping water out of
mines

JAMES WATT’S STEAM ENGINE 1769

Watt improves
Newcomen’s design by
allowing the condensing to
occur in a separate
chamber


This allows the steam
cylinder to stay hot
Watt’s version would be
adapted to be used in
factories
CHANGES TO PRODUCTION
INDUSTRIES
Iron and Coal
COAL
Year
Coal Output (tons)
1700
2,600,000
1790
7,600,000
1795
over 10,000,000
http://www.saburchill.com/history/chapters/IR/016.html
COAL
Coal was mined, then converted to coke
 Coke is purified coal

Created by heating the coal without oxygen
 Requires 12,000 degrees Celsius


Burns with little or no smoke
COAL USES
Can create higher
smelting
temperatures
 Gases collected from
coking coal could be
used as lamp fuel
 Fuel to drive steam
engines

IRON/STEEL USES
The iron bridge has been
Railways
popular tourist attraction
 To build factories and bridges
since 1779 (Ironbridge, Eng)
 To build machines
 It was essential for steam engines, ships, trains
 It was essential for replaceable machine parts
 It was used for weapons of war such as cannons
and rifles
 The Rotherham Plough used an iron plough
 It was used in the home for railings, kitchen
ranges and bed frames

IRON
Cast iron (Pig Iron) = brittle (1709 using coke)
 Wrought iron = malleable (1784 using a puddling
furnace)
 Therefore steel became more popular in 1850s
(0.2-2.1% Carbon)

CHANGES TO TRANSPORTATION
TURNPIKE ROADS
Companies built the roads and charged tolls
 Roads made of stone and gravel to shed water
 Communication becomes faster
 Transporting goods becomes faster

New Kent 1825
CANALS





Used for heavier goods or larger shipments (coal)
Good for transporting delicate goods
Faster than road transport
James Brindley engineered 400 miles of canal
Subject to freezing or drying up
CANALS
STEAM ENGINE TRAINS

First Steam Engine train in
1814 (Blucher) by George
and Robert Stephenson
Hand made
 4 mph

STEAM ENGINE TRAINS
First public railway 1825 (Stockton &
Darlington)
 Liverpool-Manchester 1830

STEAM ENGINE TRAINS
1829
Stephensons
built the
“Rocket”
 24mph


fastest
anyone’s been
on land
Multichambered
boiler
 Concentrated
the steam

ADVANTAGES VS
DISADVANTAGES?
TASK:
Read pp 134-141
 In a paragraph, explain how all of the following
allowed for the movement towards a factory
system:







Economic values
Advances in textile industry
Steam power
Coal/Coke
Iron
Advances in Transportation
(describe the developments and connect it to how it
allows for factories)