Top Banner
The Industrial Revolution brings change to Colonial Victoria Marion Littlejohn Education Officer, Sovereign Hill Museum HTAV Annual Conference, July, 2012.
44

Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Jan 18, 2015

Download

Education

This presentation was delivered to the HTAV annual conference 2012 and looks at key developments of the Industrial Revolution and how these ideas travelled to Australia during the Gold Rushes and transformed society there.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

The Industrial Revolution brings

change to Colonial VictoriaMarion Littlejohn

Education Officer, Sovereign Hill MuseumHTAV Annual Conference, July, 2012.

Page 2: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Year 9 The Making of the Modern World

Depth Study 1 Making a Better World?

Choose ONE

1 The Industrial Revolution (1750 – 1914)

2 Movements of Peoples (c. 1757 – 1914)

3 Progressive Ideas and Movements (1750 – 1914)

Page 3: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Making a Better World ? (1750 – 1914)

Content descriptionStudents investigate …the experiences of men, women and children during the Industrial Revolution, and their changing way of life The Industrial Revolution (1750 – 1914)The technological innovations that led to the Industrial Revolution, and other conditions that influenced the industrialisation of Britain (the agricultural revolution, access to raw materials, wealthy middle class, cheap labour, transport system, and expanding empire) and of Australia

Elaborations•the impact of steam, gas and electricity on people’s way of life•The experiences of men, women and children during the Industrial Revolution•The population movements and changing settlement patterns•changes to the cities and landscape in European countries and Australia as the Industrial Revolution continued to develop, using photos•The short and long-term impacts of the Industrial Revolution, including global changes in landscapes, transport and communication

The Australian Curriculum; Year 9 - History

Page 4: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

George Baxter, News from Australia 1854

[Penny post 1848]Pierre Edouard Frere, Washing Dayc. 1837

Page 5: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Beginnings of the Industrial Revolution

A revolution in agriculture in Britain in the 1700s created conditions that favored the Industrial Revolution.

• Farmers began growing new crops and using new technology such as the seed drill and the iron plow.

• Increased food production improved people's diet and health, which in turn contributed to rapid population growth.

• More efficient farming methods (enclosures) meant that fewer people were needed to farm.

• As a result, unemployed farmers created a large new labor force.

Page 6: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Why Britain took the lead.

• It had plentiful iron and coal resources and a good transportation system (canals). • It was a leading commercial power so merchants had the capital to invest in new enterprises.

• It had colonies that supplied raw materials and bought finished goods.

• The British government encouraged improvements in transportation and used its navy to protect British trade.

• Political stability – secure property rights encourages investment

• British ideal that people could move ahead in society by hard work and talent. The Protestant Work Ethic.

Page 7: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

The Industrial Revolution began in the textile industry. Between 1733 and 1793, inventors produced new machines, such as the flying shuttle, the Spinning Jenny, and a water-powered loom, for spinning and weaving of wool and cotton.

New machines led to the growth of the factory system, which brought workers and machines together in one place. By the late 1700s, steam began to replace water as a source of power after James Watt greatly improved Thomas Newcomen’s 1712 steam engine. Steam engines gave a boost to two other industries that were essential to the Industrial Revolution; coal and iron.

Page 8: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Replica of Richard Trevithick's 1804 locomotive at the National Waterfront Museum, Swansea.

Page 9: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

1808 Trevithick charged one shilling at his Steam Circus to view his “Catch me who can” steam locomotive.

c.f. What is happening in NSW in 1808?

Page 10: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

1829 George Stephenson’s Rocket successfully pulled an

open carriage carrying 30 passengers at 45 kph.

Rocket (with some post 1829 innovations) as preserved in the Science Museum, London.

Page 11: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Benefits of rail travel

• ability to transport fresh meat, milk, eggs & vegetables → better diet → improved health

• Information/news spreads faster - newspapers and letters delivered next day in UK

• Shrinking world

• Cheaper transport costs → cheaper goods → raising sales → more jobs

• Population more mobile, day return ticket to seaside now possible

William Powell Frith - Life at the Seaside (Ramsgate Sands) 1854.

Page 12: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806-1859)

Page 13: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Brunel’s Great Western railway linking London to Bristol included this two-mile-long Tunnel at Box; then the longest railway tunnel in the world.

The first train ran in 1838.

Page 14: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

A famous Great Western engine, the "Vulcan," built in 1837

Page 15: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

SS Great Britain

Page 16: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Launch of the SS Great Britain by HRH Prince Albert in 1843

Page 17: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 18: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 19: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 20: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

The Crystal Palace, Hyde Park, London. 1851

Queen Victoria opens the Great Exhibition in the Crystal Palace. Hyde Park, London, 1851

1851 THE GREAT EXHIBITION

Page 21: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

North Transept – waiting for the Queen

Page 22: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

India

Page 23: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Agriculture

Page 24: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Machinery

Page 25: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Moving machinery

Page 26: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

S.T. Gill, Homeward Bound

The Port Phillip District of NSW 1835 - 1851

Page 27: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

The Forest Creek Diggings, Mount Alexander, Port Phillip 1852,The London Illustrated News, 3rd July 1852

Page 28: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Henry O’Neil, The Parting Cheer

Colonization spread Britain’s Industrial Revolution to Australia.

Page 29: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 30: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Between 1852 and 1875 the ss Great Britain made 32 round trips to Australia

bringing 15,000 passengers.

2% of present day Australians are descended from a Great Britain passenger.

Page 31: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 32: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

S.T. Gill, Deep Sinking Ballaarat, 1852

Page 33: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Star of the East Quartz Gold Mine, Ballarat c.1890s

Page 34: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Water wheel at Chewton

Stamper Batteries, crushing ore to release gold

Page 35: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Phoenix Foundry Ballarat, 1873

Page 36: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 37: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

B class locomotive, Ballarat

Page 38: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 39: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Ballarat 1872 by William Bardwell.

Page 40: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

H.V. McKay Sunshine Harvester factory showing harvester combs, comb teeth, wheels and other metal parts are being packed for shipment c1918Reproduced courtesy of Museum Victoria

Early stripper/harvester c. 1883

Page 41: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Ballarat station 1903.A load of Sunshine Harvesters leaving Hugh V. McKay’s Ballarat works for export to Argentina Both train and farm machinery made in Ballarat.

Page 42: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

1858 “the Great Stink”Joseph Bazalgette, Chief Engineer of the London Metropolitan Board of Works, proposes to build 82 miles of intercepting sewers, that will link with over 1,000 miles of underground street sewers.

Page 43: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012
Page 44: Industrial revolution HTAV 2012

Teaching resources

http://www.teacherlink.org/content/social/instructional/industrialrevolution/home.htmlUseful outline for teaching a unit on the Industrial Revolution in England – some of the links no longer work

http://www1.umassd.edu/ir/welcome.cfmInteresting site from University of Massachusetts Dartmouth which contains an excellent Image Gallery

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/IndustrialRevolution.htmAmazing site produced to support the UK History curriculum with easily searchable sections on History topics from Romans to World War 2

Google Images – type in Industrial Revolution and go ballistic!!