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1800-1870 Coalbrookdale by Night by Philippe Jacques de Loutherbourg crop rotation seed drill enclosure The Industrial Revolution began in Great Britain and there are a few factors we need to consider. One is the enclosure movement, when small parcels of land were consolidated into larger parcels. This forced small farmers into the cities, so Britain had a ready labor force. Then there were innovations and inventions such as crop rotation and Jethro Tull’s seed drill. Britain was producing more food to feed workers. spinning jenny James Watt steam engine flying shuttle A number of inventions involving the processing of wool, then cotton occurred (some of these inventions are shown here). These combined with James Watt's steam engine (a reliable and efficient power machine) to give birth to a revolution in technology which affects all of us today. The Power Loom Great factories began to arise in places like Liverpool and Manchester. This created jobs for many people but conditions and pay were not good. An English mill drawn in the 1840's and the same mill photographed in the 1970's. Early factory workers migrated from rural areas to big cities seeking jobs. Poor working conditions, labor strife, pollution and disease associated with industrialism occurred also. Child workers were often used because they demanded even less wages. Workers could be fired for any small infraction of rules, and the workdays were long, hard, and noisy. Biermeister & Wain Steel Forge by P.S. Kroyer One important factor in Britain's Industrial Revolution was the abundance of coal and iron in the country. These two resources provided the power and strong materials for the mills. With advanced processes like puddling, Britain was able to lead the world in iron production. Iron combined with the coal for energy also gave Britain a new form of transportation… The Rocket was an early locomotive capable of traveling at 30 mph. Britain was blessed with abundant natural resources because the energy source for the steam engine, coal, could be found nearby. In time other uses were found for the steam engine, and soon the first locomotive trains came into being. Soon Britain had a massive rail system which could transport Materials and people around the country. An early steamboat The United States joined the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century. Robert Fulton built the first steamboat, the Clermont, in 1807. The United States had a great waterway in the Mississippi River and had a good canal system too. By 1869 they had created the world’s first transcontinental railroad, which made trade to Asia much quicker than before. By the end of the 19th century some trains, such as the "999" steam engine shown here, could reach a sustained speed of over 100 mph! Trains and ships powered by steam began to dominate travel and to make entire world accessible and easy to reach for the first time in world history. Industrialized nations began to seek out new markets for their manufactured products. This is why they began to turn to Imperialism. - What conclusion can be made about industrialized areas in Europe? Britain was the leading industrial nation in the early and midnineteenth century, but countries such as the United States eventually surpassed Britain in industrial production. 1. Comparing How did Britain’s population growth, from 1830 to 1870 and 1870 to 1900,compare to the United States’ growth? How did Britain’s expansion in railroad tracks compare to that of the United States during the same period? 2. Problem Solving Which country had the highest percentage of railroad track miles in comparison to total square miles in 1870? In 1900? London in the 19th century was bustling, but poverty lurked in many places. Great Britain was the beneficiary of the Industrial Revolution. Many industrial capitalists became wealthy and a new middle class emerged with people in the legal and medical professions, and also in government. But the system depended on an abundance of cheap labor and this created problems. The condition of the typical workplace was unsafe, and poverty abounded. People did not think about pollution so they air was chokingly bad and the water foul. Reformers began to push a new economic idea called socialism. Socialism is an economic system in which society, usually in the form of the government, owns and controls important parts of the economy, such as factories and utilities. In socialist theory, this public ownership of the means of production would allow wealth to be distributed more equally to everyone. Socialism was a response to the excesses of capitalists who did not feel any responsibility toward workers. Early socialists such as Robert Owen (shown above) created new socialist communities like New Lanark in Scotland or New Harmony, Indiana. New Harmony failed. “The first principle to be followed by the monarchs, united as they are by the coincidence of their desires and opinions, should be that of maintaining the stability of political institutions against the disorganized excitement which has taken possession of men’s minds. . . . The first and greatest concern for the immense majority of every nation is the stability of the laws, and their uninterrupted action— never their change. Therefore, let the governments govern, let them maintain the groundwork of their institutions, both ancient and modern; for it is at all times dangerous to touch them.” Klemens Von Metternich, 1815 The monarchs of Europe met in Vienna after Napoleon’s defeat to see if they could restore the old royal order from before the French Revolution; these were the conservatives. Conservatives set up the principle of intervention. This allowed the Great Powers of Europe to use military force to maintain it. Other ideas emerged in this period like liberalism, which followed the ideas found in the American Bill of Rights. In the long run the royals lost out to a new force in Europe, Nationalism. Royals in France were overthrown, and Belgium seceded from the Dutch Republic. Revolts occurred all over Europe. The restored French monarchy was overthrown in 1848 and for the first time anyone (actually only men) could vote. This is called universal male suffrage. Who did the French elect? Napoleon’s nephew LouisNapoleon. He set about to reduce rights for the people. That summer revolutions broke out all over Europe. These were put down but for the conservatives the future looked bleak. Countries had to make liberal reforms which gave more rights to the people. Loosely confederated countries like Italy & Germany began to work towards creating a national state. “Capital is dead labor, which, vampire-like, lives only by sucking living labor, and lives the more, the more labor it sucks.” From the upheavals of 1848 came an influential philosopher named Karl Marx. Karl Marx (1818-1883) lived in the 19th century but played a big role in shaping events in the 20th century. In 1848 Marx published The Communist Manifesto, which outlined his ideas for a more equitable world where capitalistic industrialists would be replaced by the workers, or proletariat. His ideas had a profound effect on the Russian Revolution of 1917. Today a few countries, like Cuba and North Korea, follow Marx’s ideas. “Wherever we may be, there will be Rome.” Giuseppi Garibaldi “An appeal to fear never finds an echo in German hearts.” Otto Von Bismarck Italy’s unification was accomplished by a number of events. In 1849 King Victor Emmanuel II became the King of Piedmont in the North. He had a smart prime minister named Camillo di Cavour. Cavour allied with either the French or the Prussians to make territorial gains. Later ultra-nationalist Giuseppi Garibaldi moved from the south of the Italian peninsula with his famous “Red Shirt” army. They joined with Piedmont and a new Kingdom of Italy was proclaimed led by King Victor Emmanuel II. As shown here, Germany was a loose confederation of Kingdoms. But nationalism became an overriding factor for Germans. Their leader was Otto Von Bismarck, a skilled practitioner of realpolitik, using a combination of war and diplomacy to unify Germany. In 1870 Bismarck fought a war against France over the Alsace-Lorraine region and won easily. This would later be A place of contention for France in World War I. The new country proclaimed Kaiser Wilhelm I as its leader in 1871. “A long suburb of red brick houses— some with patches of garden ground, where coal-dust and factory smoke darkened the shrinking leaves, and coarse rank flowers; and where the struggling vegetation sickened and sank under the hot breath of kiln and furnace — a long, flat, straggling suburb passed, they came by slow degrees upon a cheerless region, where not a blade of grass was seen to grow; where not a bud put forth its promise in the spring; where nothing green could live but on the surface of the stagnant pools, which here and there lay idly sweltering by the black roadside.” From The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens By the end of the 19th century Romanticism emerged as a an important cultural force in Europe. The movement was a reaction against the cold reason of the Enlightenment. Writers like Charles Dickens saw the horrors of poverty in the Industrial Revolution and wrote about them. Romantics wished to return to the “good old days” when life was supposedly simpler. A “Medieval” castle built in the 19th century The following slides show some of the artists, musicians, writers and even scientists from the era. Be ready for class discussion! Mary Shelley (remember her mom?) was married to poet Percy Bysse Shelley. She wrote Frankenstein to warn against the Enlightenment sciences going too far. Was she wrong? By the mid 20th century humans could destroy the world! Many things can be said about Ludwig Von Beethoven. Perhaps the best descriptor is “passion.” What do you know about the man and his music? How many symphonies did he write? Which of his works is your favorite? It was many and many a year ago, In a kingdom by the sea, That a maiden there lived whom you may know By the name of Annabel Lee; And this maiden she lived with no other thought Than to love and be loved by me. I was a child and she was a child, In this kingdom by the sea; But we loved with a love that was more than loveI and my Annabel Lee; Poe’s work needs little explanation. The With a love that the winged seraphs passage is from the poem Annabel Lee. of heaven coveted her and me. Ivanhoe was one of the most popular books of the 19th century. Many historians from this time were influenced by it as well. What do you think this Romantic book is about? Another popular author from the era was Charles Dickens. Who doesn’t know about Scrooge and Tiny Tim? It’s more than a Christmas story because Dickens was pointing out social injustice in his story. Eugene Delacroix - Romantic Gustave Courbet - Realist Science - Pasteur What is Louis Pasteur known for? Science - Darwin One reason Charles Darwin spent his life studying science was to understand Why his children had so many birth defects. Darwin had married his cousin. Assignment: Create the appropriate chart in your group to Correspond with this chart. Add at least two more examples From the chapter under each heading. Good Luck! End of Slide Show