the industrial revolution 1750 - 1850. the industrial revolution: britain leads the way 1750 - 1850

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The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850

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Page 1: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

The Industrial Revolution

1750 - 1850

Page 2: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

The Industrial Revolution:

Britain Leads the Way1750 - 1850

Page 3: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

HS-SS-5.1.2HS-SS-4.1.1

• Students will analyze how history is a series of connected events shaped by multiple cause-and-effect relationships, tying past to present.• Students will use a variety of geographic tools to explain and analyze the reasons for the distribution of physical and human features on Earth’s surface.

Page 4: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Learning ObjectivesI will be able to…• Analyze how geography allowed Great Britain to begin the Industrial Revolution• Analyze how the improvements in agriculture created the conditions that allowed the Industrial Revolution to begin

Page 5: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Opening ActivityWhat is a revolution?

Page 6: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Agriculture Spurs Industry

Improvements in farming techniques• Fertilizer• Soil restoration• Seed driller

Page 7: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Enclosure and Population

Parliament allows rich landowners to seize land owned by peasants• Large farms >> Better tended farms >> increase in crop production >> larger population

•Large farms >> fewer small farms >> more unemployed peasants >> large, unemployed labor force

Page 8: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Enclosure and Population

Page 9: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

New Technologies• Steam engine• Cheaper, higher quality ironThese two inventions allow the building of bridges, trains, and railroads.

Page 10: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Great Britain Leads the Way

• Abundant natural resources in colonies• Strong international shipping• Extra spending money due to international trade (capital)• Natural deep water ports• Navigable river system

Page 11: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

New InventionsTextiles• Flying Shuttle• Spinning Jenny• Cotton Gin

Large buildings were needed to house the large machines; led to the creation of factories

Page 12: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Independent Work• Complete the worksheet I’ve handed out• Work on your vocabulary if you haven’t finished it yet

Page 13: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Exit SlipHow did an agricultural revolution contribute to population growth? Think about how the enclosure movement started it…

Page 14: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

The Industrial Revolution:

Social Impacts1750 - 1850

Page 15: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Bellringer• What were the geographic features that allowed the Industrial Revolution to occur in Great Britain?• How did agriculture play a role in the Industrial Revolution?

Page 16: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Learning ObjectivesI can…• Examine growing tensions between the middle and working classes• Describe the economic effects of industrialization

Page 17: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Social Impact• Rapid urbanization• Towns focused near natural resources• Massive amounts of pollution• Development of a new class system

Page 18: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Industrial Middle Class

• Entrepreneurs benefited most• New Middle class: The Bourgeoisie• Merchants or skilled artisans• Lived in well-furnished, spacious homes on paved streets with clean water• Many did not have sympathy for the poor• Women did not work outside of the home

Page 19: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Industrial Working Class

• Poor farmers and city dwellers• Lived in foul-smelling slums• Tiny one-room apartments called tenements• No running water• No sewage or sanitation, waste and garbage piled up in the streets• Contaminated drinking water and spread of disease

Page 20: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Life in the Tenements

Page 21: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Life in the Tenements

Page 22: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Child Labor

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuJen1vZSmA

Page 23: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Child Labor

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuJen1vZSmA

Page 24: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Laissez-Faire Economics

• Developed by Adam Smith• Believed that gov’t should not interfere in the free operation of the economy• The free market would help everyone by making goods cheaper

• Laissez-Faire literally means “hands off”• Big idea: FREE TRADE (OMG please remember this)

Page 25: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Socialist Thought Emerges

• Socialism was created to end poverty and injustice• The people as a whole rather than individuals would own and operate the means of production (farms, factories, railways, etc.)• Utopian communities pop up around Europe• No difference between rich and poor means no fighting…or so they thought

Page 26: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Communism• Founded by German philosopher Karl Marx• Wrote The Communist Manifesto• Advocated for Communism

• Communism is a form of socialism where there are no classes in society and production is owned by the community• Modern class struggles between the “haves” and “have-nots” (proletariat)• History is the story of class struggle. The working class will rise up and revolt against the wealthy.

Page 27: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Marxism Fails• Marxism briefly flourishes, spreading through Russia, Asia, Latin America, and Africa• Failures of these Marxist govts show the flaws in Marxism• Nationalism wins out over working class loyalty• People feel stronger ties to their country than the communist movement

Page 28: The Industrial Revolution 1750 - 1850. The Industrial Revolution: Britain Leads the Way 1750 - 1850

Exit SlipWhat new ideas about economics and society were fostered as a result of the Industrial Revolution?