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The Rise of Industrialism
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Page 1: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

The Rise of Industrialism

Page 2: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Harvest, Pieter Brueghel

Page 3: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Traditional or Pre-Industrial Society

• Farming in the Middle Ages– Villages feed themselves (AKA: Subsistence Farming)– One of 3 fields left fallow (empty)– Animals grazed in common pastures

• Disadvantages– Land use inefficient – Farmers did not experiment with new farming methods

• Forces of Change– Population growth– French Blockade=no corn=more food needed

Page 4: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

How to do a Flow Chart

1. Take the information learned in the last slide and your notes

2. Create a visual to help you remember the information

3. Draw an arrow to the next box of flowchart

Example of Flow Chart:

Fallow

Crops +

Livestock

= Forces for Change

+

Page 5: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

The Agricultural Revolution

Page 6: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Agricultural Revolution• Enclosure Movement

– Wealthy landlords fenced in common pastures & experimented with new farming technology

– Villages lost all common lands, & political power, Villages became poorer

• Crop Rotation– Fields depleted of nutrients by one crop replenished by planting

different crops – Fields not left inefficiently fallow

• Other Discoveries – Seed Drill planted seeds more efficiently– New crops: Corn, turnips & potatoes

• Results – More Food Available – Population Increased

Page 7: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Flow Chart Time!

1. Take the information learned in the last slide and your notes

2. Create a visual to help you remember the information

3. Draw an arrow to the next box of flowchart

Seed Drill

Crop rotation

What Else? YOU FILL IN THE REST!

Page 8: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Cottage Industry

Page 9: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Cottage Industry and Early Capitalism

• Merchant’s Role in Cottage Industry– Supplied materials wool & cotton to cottages to be

carded and spun– Took supplies form spinning cottage to weaving

cottage to dyeing cottages and then sold finished cloth

– Merchants sell product for more than material & labor costs = PROFIT

– Profit + Larger Investment =higher profit• Capitalism

– An Economic system based on private ownership, Free enterprise, & profit

– Cottage industry is an example of early capitalism• Effects of cottage Industry

– Big Profits for New class of merchants– Alternative source of Income for peasants

Page 10: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Flow Chart Time!

1. Take the information learned in the last slide and your notes

2. Create a visual to help you remember the information

3. Draw an arrow to the next box of flowchart

What’s Missing?Try it on your Own

Page 11: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Textile Industry and Factory System

Page 12: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Textile Industry and Factory System• Textile Industry invented

– Cottage industry could not keep up with demand for cloth– Spinning Jenny, water frame, and spinning mule, improved

spinning– Power Loom sped up weaving– Cotton Gin separated seeds from cotton

• Rise of the Factory– New Machines, often to big for homes, were put into factories– Factories were located near power sources: coal, water &

steam• Effects of Textile factories in Britain

– Prices of Mass produced textiles were much lower than hand-produced items

– Britain’s textile industry increased enormously– Majority of villagers forced to leave to find work in Factories

Page 13: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Flow Chart!

1. Take the information learned in the last slide and your notes

2. Create a visual to help you remember the information

3. Draw an arrow to the next box of flowchart

NEW INVENTIONS

TRY THIS ONE ON YOUR OWNYou can do it!

Page 14: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Transportation• The need for better Transportation

– Increased production increased the need to transport goods, quickly & cheaply

– Pre-Industrial society used horses, mules, & dirt roads• Inventions

– Stone & eventually asphalt roads – Canals– Railroad Era ushered in with the Rocket in 1829

• Effects of the Railroad– Expanded rapidly throughout Britain– Cheaper transportation increased production and

profits– Railways fueled other industires: Coal, steam

engines, iron, steel, and many manufactured products

Page 15: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Flow Chart!

1. Take the information learned in the last slide and your notes

2. Create a visual to help you remember the information

3. Draw an arrow to the next box of flowchart

• This one your on your own! Ask if you need help.

Page 16: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

The Steam Engine

Page 17: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

The Steam Engine: Energy for the Industrial Revolution• The Need for Energy

– Early factories relied on horse, oxen and water mills– Steam Engine evolved in response to increasing need

for power• How the Steam Engine Works

– Steam forced from high to low pressure produces power

• Effect of steam Engine– Steam power, used wherever coal existed, increased

textile production– Improved mining which increased metals which in turn

fueled other industries

Page 18: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Flow Chart

1. Take the information learned in the last slide and your notes

2. Create a visual to help you remember the information

3. Draw an arrow to the next box of flowchart

• This one your on your own! Ask if you need help.

Page 19: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Iron and Coal: Energy for the Industrial Revolution

Page 20: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Iron & Coal: Energy for the Industrial Revolution• The need for Iron

– Farming tools, new factory machinery, & railways– Smelting makes iron more pure but requires carbon

• The need for Coal– Carbon necessary for smelting iron– Steam engines powered by coal

• Effect of Iron and Coal– Britain produced more iron than all other countries of

the world combined– Coal powered Britain’s enormous Navy

Page 21: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Flow Chart!

1. Take the information learned in the last slide and your notes

2. Create a visual to help you remember the information

3. Draw an arrow to the next box of flowchart

• This one your on your own! Ask if you need help.

Page 22: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Why Britain Led the Industrial Revolution?

Page 23: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

Why Britain Led the Industrial Revolution?

• Geography– Climate good for textile production– Plenty of natural resources such as Iron and Coal– Separation from the European Continent kept them out of wars

• Government– Internal trade encouraged– Population allowed to relocate– Helped builded canals & roads (Public Works)

• Social Factors– British society less rigid than the rest of Europe

• Colonial Empire– Supplied raw materials for manufactured goods – Provied markets for goods

• Advantages Of Industrializing 1st

– No other countries competing for manufactured goods – Monopoly on Technology

Page 24: The Rise of Industrialism. Harvest, Pieter Brueghel.

THE END