intro question - what constitutes fair working conditions?

22
Intro Question - What constitutes “fair working conditions”?

Upload: deborah-daniel

Post on 18-Jan-2018

222 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Industrialization Changes Ways of Life While the Industrial Revolution eventually led to a better quality of life for most people, the change to machine production also caused immense human suffering.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Intro Question - •What constitutes “fair working conditions”?

Page 2: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Chapter 9-2•Industrialization

▫Industrialization Changes Life▫Class Tensions Grow▫Positive Effects of the Industrial Revolution▫The Mills of Manchester

Page 3: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Industrialization Changes Ways of Life•While the Industrial Revolution eventually led

to a better quality of life for most people, the change to machine production also caused immense human suffering.

Page 4: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Industrialization Changes Ways of Life•For centuries most Europeans had lived in

rural areas, but as the pace of industrialization quickened in Britain in the 1800’s, cities soon swelled with workers.

Page 5: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Industrialization Changes Ways of Life•This period of city building and the movement

of people to the cities was known as urbanization, where most of Europe’s urban area’s at least doubled in population.

Page 6: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Industrialization Changes Ways of Life•No plans, sanitary or building codes controlled the

growth of cities and they lacked adequate housing, education, and police protection for the people.

•Unpaved streets had no drains and collected heaps of garbage, and workers lived in dark, dirty shelters with whole families often crowding into 1 bedroom.

•Sickness was widespread, cholera epidemics regularly swept through the slums of Britain and the average life span for working class people was 17 years.

Page 7: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?
Page 8: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?
Page 9: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Industrialization Changes Ways of Life•Factory owners wanted to keep their machines

running for as long as possible and as a result the average worker spent 14 hours a day at the job, 6 days a week.

•Factories were seldom well-lit or clean, and machines injured workers in countless ways.

Page 10: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Industrialization Changes Ways of Life

•The most dangerous conditions were in the coal mines, where frequent accidents, damp conditions, and the constant breathing of coal dust made the average lifespan for a miner 10 years shorter than other workers.

Page 11: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?
Page 12: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Class Tension Grows• Not everyone in the city lived

miserably, well to do merchants and factory owners built fancy homes in the suburbs.

• This wealthy people made up a growing middle class of skilled workers, professionals, business people and wealthy farmers.

• Social distinctions divided the wealthy, with landowners looking down on those who made their fortunes in the business world.

Page 13: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Class Tension Grows

• Gradually a new middle class emerged in Britain of doctors, lawyers, and managers as well as a lower middle class of skilled workers such as toolmakers, mechanical drafters, and printers.

• Poor workers however saw little improvement in their own life and grew frustrated as they watched machines replace themselves.

Page 14: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Class Tension Grows• In response they sometimes smashed the machines

they thought were replacing them, such as the Luddites who attacked whole factories of weaving machinery in northern England in 1811.

Page 15: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Positive Effects of the Industrial Revolution• Despite the problems, the Industrial Revolution had a

number of positive effects.

• It created jobs for workers, raised the standard of living, and provided HOPE of improvement in many people’s lives.

• Other benefits included healthier diets, cheaper housing, and expanded educational opportunities.

Page 16: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Positive Effects of the Industrial Revolution• It contributed to the wealth of the nation and greatly

increased the production of goods, such as mass-produced clothing.

• The middle and upper class prospered immediately, while it took longer for the workers.

• The long term effects of the Industrial Revolution are still evident, most people can afford consumer goods that would have been considered luxuries 50 or 100 years ago.

Page 17: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

The Mills of Manchester• Manchester’s unique advantages made it a good

example of a new industrial city, this northern England town had easy access to water power, available labor from the countryside and an outlet to the sea at Liverpool.

• While gold flowed toward the mill owners and new middle class, its rapid, unplanned growth made it a filthy sewer for the poor people who worked there.

• Manchester’s business people worked many hours risking their own money in pocketing high profits and building grand homes on the outskirts of town.

Page 18: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?
Page 19: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

The Mills of Manchester• To provide the mill owners with these high profits

however, workers labored under terrible conditions, and children as young as 6 joined their parents in the factories.

• Putting so much industry in one place polluted the environment, as the coal that powered the factory blackened the air and the textile dyes and other wastes poisoned the river.

Page 20: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?
Page 21: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?
Page 22: Intro Question - What constitutes fair working conditions?

Reflection:•Why do you think young children were

working in these factories/mines under such terrible conditions?

•Why was this permitted?

•What child labor exists today?