wheels, deals and automobiles: the industrial revolution

30
Wheels, Deals and Wheels, Deals and Automobiles: Automobiles: The Industrial The Industrial Revolution Revolution World History B – World History B – Seminar 4 Seminar 4 Warm Up – Define: Capitalism (On the back of the chart.)

Upload: tavon

Post on 04-Jan-2016

20 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Wheels, Deals and Automobiles: The Industrial Revolution. Warm Up – Define: Capitalism (On the back of the chart.). World History B – Seminar 4. Definitions. Capitalism Economic system in which the means of production are privately owned and operated for profit. Urbanization - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Wheels, Deals and Wheels, Deals and Automobiles: Automobiles: The Industrial The Industrial

RevolutionRevolutionWorld History B – World History B –

Seminar 4Seminar 4

Warm Up – Define: Capitalism (On the back of the chart.)

Page 2: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Definitions

• Capitalism

• Economic system in which the means of production are privately owned and operated for profit.

• Urbanization

• Urbanization – Movement of people from rural areas to cities.

Page 3: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Traditional Farming Methods 1. List all of the

MACHINES in the picture.

2. How many POWER SOURCES are in the picture?

3. What SOCIAL CLASSES are represented here?

4. Using the picture, write a sentence describing life before industrialization.

Page 4: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Industrialization

The golf links lie so near the mill

That almost every day

The laboring children can look out

And see the men at play.(Sara Cleghorn)

1. What does the quotation mean?

2. Does it apply to today? How?

Page 5: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

How did the world go from this?

Page 6: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

To this?

Page 7: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Revolution in Technology:

A Pattern that Repeats?Watch the video “Technology Transforms an

Age,” and answer the following questions.

1. Explain the needs that led to the spread of the steam engine in 18th and 19th century Europe.

2. For what purposes was the steam engine used during the Industrial Revolution?

3. How did the Industrial Revolution change the way many people lived and worked?

Page 8: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

The First Industrial Revolution Began in Great Britain

(page 582-583)Contributing Factors: Why did the Industrial Revolution Begin in

Great Britain? page 582

Changes in Cotton Production:

What technological changes made the cottage industry inefficient? page

582

Coal and Iron Industries/Railroads: How did the steam engine change the world? page 583

Page 9: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Wheels, Deals and Wheels, Deals and Automobiles: Automobiles: The Industrial The Industrial

RevolutionRevolutionMarch 1, 2007March 1, 2007

Warm Up – Complete the Illustrated Dictionary Definitions and turn them in!

You have 15 minutes.

Page 10: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

James Watt’s Steam Engine: World Changing Invention

James Watt's improvements in 1769 and 1784 to the steam engine converted a machine of limited use, to one of efficiency and many applications.

Page 11: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

James Watt’s Steam Engine: World Changing Invention

• Watt’s improved steam engine was the foremost energy source in the emerging Industrial Revolution, and greatly multiplied its productive capacity.

Page 12: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

James Watt’s Steam Engine: World Changing Invention

Watt was a creative genius who radically transformed the world from an agricultural society into an industrial one. Through Watt’s invention of the first practical steam engine, our modern world eventually moved from a 90% rural basis to a 90% urban basis.

Page 13: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

James Watt’s Steam Engine: World Changing Invention

Improved steam engines led to improved systems for transporting people and factory goods.

Page 14: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

The Steam Engine Revolutionized the Textile

Industry• The steam engine and water

power closed the “cottage industry” for textile making.

• “Flying shuttle” and “spinning jenny” invented.

• Fabric was no longer woven in homes by individuals.

• Textile production moved to the new factories.

• Factory system created. (page 582)

Page 15: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Urbanization• In the mid 1700s, more than half the population

of Britain lived and worked on farms.• Between 1750 and 1851, displaced farming

families moved to the cities to work in the new factories.

Page 16: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Urban Living Conditions

• Factory owners rushed to build housing

• Back to back row houses

• Several people in very small spaces

• Poor sanitation• High disease rates• Crime• Massive pollution

Page 17: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Urban Living Conditions

CITY GENTRY TRADESPEOPLE LABORERS

Rutland 52 41 38

Truro 40 33 28

Derby 49 38 21

Manchester 38 20 17

Bethnal Green

45 26 16

Liverpool 35 22 15

Average Age at Death for Different Classes

Rutland – agricultural area in central EnglandTruro – tin mining centerOther locations – major industrial

centers

Page 18: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Working Conditions and Wages

• Common working day: 12 – 14 hours

• One short break for lunch• Work week: 6 days per

week• 80 degree heat• Workers were beaten if

they did not perform well.• Hot, polluted factory air.• Workers risked losing

limbs from the machines.• Low wages.

Page 19: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Child Labor

• Children shifted from farm work to factory work.

• 12 – 14 hour days• 6 day weeks• Lower wages than

adults.• Began at age 5.• Mining work

deformed bodies.

Page 20: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Child Labor• As concerns about the

welfare of children rose in mid 1800s, Parliament held investigations into working conditions.

• New laws and new labor unions improved conditions.

Page 21: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Labor Laws• Read pages 586-587 “Young People in the

Industrial Revolution” and “The Industrial Working Class.”

• Using the information you now have about the factory system, child labor and poor working conditions, write a law governing working conditions that is fair to BOTH the mine and mill owners and the workers.

• This law should be about one half page in length and will be presented to the class.

Page 22: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

The Industrial The Industrial RevolutionRevolution

Turn in your illustrated Turn in your illustrated dictionary definitions, dictionary definitions,

NOW!NOW!Wednesday, Wednesday, March 7, 2007March 7, 2007

Warm Up – Define: Socialism (On the back of the chart.)

You need a book!

Page 23: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Definitions

• SocialismSocialism• A system in which society, usually in

the form of the government, owns and controls the means of production.

• CapitalismCapitalism• Economic system in which the means of

production are privately owned and operated for profit.

Page 24: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Economists of the Industrial Revolution

• Adam Smith: advocated laissez- faire economics. No government regulation of business. A free market will produce more goods at lower prices, making them affordable by everyone. The basis of Capitalism.

Page 25: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Reformers

• Jeremy Bentham: utilitarianism – “greatest happiness for the greatest number.”

Page 26: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Reformers

• John Stuart Mill: advocated government help for the poor and giving the vote to workers and women.

Page 27: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Reformers

• Robert Owen

• actually built a factory based on the idea that an employer could offer decent living and working conditions and still make a profit. • Owen persuaded a group

on the way to America to abandon their journey and come to work in his mill instead. The environs, the wages and conditions and the education provided for the children was more than a century ahead of his time.

Page 28: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Karl Marx• Scientific socialism• Economics really a struggle

between the “haves” (upper class and merchants) and the “have nots” (proletariat working class.)

• Advocated a workers’ revolution to replace private ownership of property with cooperative ownership.

• Led to system of Communism.

Page 29: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

Debriefing Rock, Paper, Scissors

1. How did you feel at the start of the game?2. How did you feel when you ran out of paper

clips and had to quit the game? Explain.3. What tactics could you have used to get back

into the game? Why didn’t you try those tactics?

4. Do you think this game was fair? Why or why not?

5. Now that the game is over, what action could the teacher take, if any to make the game fair? Should the teacher take such an action? Why or why not?

Page 30: Wheels, Deals and Automobiles:  The Industrial Revolution

• New inventions and development of factories

• Rapidly growing industry in the 1800s

• Increased production and higher demand for raw materials

•Growth of worldwide trade

• Population explosion and a large labor force

• Exploitation of mineral resources

• Highly developed banking and investment system

• Advances in transportation, agriculture, and communication

Economic Effects

• Child labor laws to end abuses

• Reformers urging equal distribution of wealth (i.e. Karl Marx)

• Trade unions

• Social reform movements, such as utilitarianism, utopianism, socialism, and Marxism

• Reform bills in Parliament

Political Effects

The Industrial Revolution

• Long hours worked by children in factories• Increase in

population of cities• Poor city planning • Loss of family

stability • Expansion of middle

class• Harsh conditions for

laborers•Workers’ progress

vs. laissez-faire economic attitudes • Improved standard

of living• Creation of new jobs• Encouragement of

technological progress

Social Effects