Cach mang KHKT lan I

Chia sẻ bởi Nguyễn Kim Tường Vy | Ngày 10/05/2019 | 154

Chia sẻ tài liệu: Cach mang KHKT lan I thuộc Lịch sử 11

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By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer
Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
Late 18c: French Economic Advantages
Napoleonic Code.
French communal law.
Free contracts
Open markets
Uniform & clear commercial
regulations
Standards weights & measures.
Established technical schools.
The government encouraged & honored inventors & inventions.
Bank of France  European model
providing a reliable currency.
French Economic Disadvantages
Years of war
Supported the American
Revolution.
French Revolution.
Early 19c  Napoleonic Wars
Heavy debts.
High unemployment  soldiers
returning from the battlefronts.
French businessmen were afraid to take risks.
That Nation of Shopkeepers!
-- Napoleon Bonaparte
The Enclosure Movement
“Enclosed” Lands Today
Metals, Woolens, & Canals
Early Canals
Britain’s Earliest Transportation Infrastructure
Mine & Forge [1840-1880]
More powerful than water is coal.

More powerful than wood is iron.

Innovations make steel feasible.
“Puddling” [1820] – “pig iron.”
“Hot blast” [1829] – cheaper, purer steel.
Bessemer process [1856] – strong, flexible steel.
Coalfields & Industrial Areas
Coal Mining in Britain:
1800-1914
Young Coal Miners
Child Labor in the Mines
Child
“hurriers”
British Pig Iron Production
Richard Arkwright:
“Pioneer of the Factory System”
The “Water Frame”
Factory Production
Concentrates production in one
place [materials, labor].

Located near sources of power
[rather than labor or markets].

Requires a lot of capital investment
[factory, machines, etc.] more
than skilled labor.

Only 10% of English industry in
1850.
Textile Factory
Workers in England
The Factory System
Rigid schedule.
12-14 hour day.
Dangerous conditions.
Mind-numbing monotony.
Textile Factory
Workers in England
British Coin Portraying a Factory, 1812
Young “Bobbin-Doffers”
Jacquard’s Loom
John Kay’s “Flying Shuttle”
The Power Loom
James Watt’s Steam Engine
Steam Tractor
Steam Ship
An Early Steam Locomotive
Later Locomotives
The Impact of the Railroad
“The Great Land Serpent”
Crystal Palace Exhibition: 1851
Exhibitions of the new industrial utopia.
Crystal Palace: Interior Exhibits
Crystal Palace:
British Ingenuity on Display
Crystal Palace:
American Pavilion
19c Bourgeoisie:
The Industrial Nouveau Riche
Criticism of the New Bourgeoisie
Stereotype of the Factory Owner
“Upstairs”/“Downstairs” Life
Factory Wages
in Lancashire, 1830
Industrial Staffordshire
Problems of Polution
The Silent Highwayman - 1858
The New Industrial City
Early-19c London
by Gustave Dore
Worker Housing in Manchester
Factory Workers at Home
Workers Housing in Newcastle Today
The Life of the New Urban Poor: A Dickensian Nightmare!
Private Charities: Soup Kitchens
Private Charities:
The “Lady Bountifuls”
The Luddites: 1811-1816
Ned Ludd [a mythical figure supposed to live in Sherwood Forest]
Attacks on the “frames” [power looms].
The Luddite Triangle
The Luddites
The Neo-Luddites Today

British
Soldiers
Fire on
British
Workers:


Let us die like men, and not be sold like slaves!
Peterloo Massacre, 1819
The Chartists
The “Peoples’ Charter”
Drafted in 1838 by William Lovett.
Radical campaign for Parliamentary reform of the inequalities created by the Reform Bill of 1832.
Votes for all men.
Equal electoral districts.
Abolition of the requirement that Members of Parliament [MPs] be property owners.
Payment for Members of Parliament.
Annual general elections.
The secret ballot.
The Chartists
A physical force—
Chartists arming for
the fight.
A female Chartist
Anti-Corn Law League, 1845
Give manufactures more outlets for
their products.
Expand employment.
Lower the price of bread.
Make British agriculture more
efficient and productive.
Expose trade and agriculture to
foreign competition.
Promote international peace through
trade contact.
Thomas Malthus
Population growth will
outpace the food supply.

War, disease, or famine
could control population.

The poor should have
less children.

Food supply will then keep up with population.
David Ricardo
“Iron Law of Wages.”

When wages are high,
workers have more
children.

More children create a
large labor surplus that
depresses wages.
The Utilitarians:
Jeremy Bentham & John Stuart Mill
The goal of society is the greatest good for the greatest number.
There is a role to play for government
intervention to provide some social safety
net.
Jeremy Bentham
The Socialists:
Utopians & Marxists
People as a society would operate and own the
means of production, not individuals.
Their goal was a society that benefited
everyone, not just a rich, well-connected few.
Tried to build perfect communities [utopias].
Government Response
Abolition of slavery in the colonies
in 1832 [to raise wages in Britain].

Sadler Commission to look into
working conditions
Factory Act [1833] – child labor.

New Poor Law [1834] – indoor relief.
Poor houses.

Reform Bill [1832] – broadens the
vote for the cities.
British Reform Bill of 1832
British Reform Bills
By 1850:
Zones of Industrialization
on the European Continent
Northeast France.
Belgium.
The Netherlands.
Western German states.
Northern Italy
East Germany  Saxony
Industrialization By 1850
Railroads on the Continent
Share in World Manufacturing Output: 1750-1900
The Politics of Industrialization
State ownership of some industries.
RRs  Belgium & most of Germany.
Tariffs  British Corn Laws.
National Banks granted a monopoly on
issuing bank notes.
Bank of England.
Bank of France.
Companies required to register with the government & publish annual budgets.
New legislation to:
Establish limited liability.
Create rules for the formation of corporations.
Postal system.
Free trade zones  Ger. Zollverein
Bibliographic Sources
“Images of the Industrial Revolution.”
Mt. Holyoke College. http://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/rschwart/ind_rev/images/images-ind-era.html

“The Peel Web: A Web of English History.”
http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/mbloy/c-eight/primary.htm

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