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Course: World History Project - 1750 to the Present > Unit 3
Lesson 2: Origins of the Industrial Revolution | 3.1- BEFORE YOU WATCH: Origins of the Industrial Revolution
- WATCH: Origins of the Industrial Revolution
- READ: Scale of the Industrial Revolution
- READ: The Scientific Revolution
- READ: The Industrial Revolution
- BEFORE YOU WATCH: Coal, Steam, and the Industrial Revolution
- WATCH: Coal, Steam, and the Industrial Revolution
- Origins of the Industrial Revolution
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WATCH: Origins of the Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution transformed life on Earth more than any event since the Agricultural Revolution. In this video, Nick Dennis explores how industrialization changed our lives and why it started in Britain. There are many reasons that industrialization took off in Britain, including its abundance of coal, its geography and environment, and its economy. Still, many believe British industrialization would have been impossible without resources extracted from its colonies.
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- When they are under ground, at3:20the guy in the middle has a left eye that doesn't move around or blink. So it is just the right eye that blinks on its own. This is something that only the most observant would notice.(3 votes)
- even if AI sucks up jobs, nobody will earn money because of them. i mean, what are robots going to do with money?(2 votes)
- That’s a good question!
The people who will make money are the companies that use the robots. Think of it this way:
Robots only require electricity, which is cheap. They can work for many hours without failing, unlike humans.
Their only setback is that they are (currently) not as skilled as a human. Once they are improved to the level of a human, they will be both faster and cheaper than a human.(1 vote)
- How did railroads lead people to experience the Industrial Revolution? How was this different across different classes?(1 vote)
Video transcript
The Industrial Revolution was probably
one of the greatest transformations in human history. Arguably, it has changed how humans live more than any event since the
Agricultural Revolution. Industrialization - producing goods on a
scale beyond what could be made in the home - has helped to shape the kind of
work we do today. It led to fewer farmers, fewer artisans, and more people in wage paid jobs in factories, or in jobs that support factories. It changed where we
live, moving us from rural villages or small towns into apartments and houses
and big cities. And it even influenced how our days are structured. The school bell
and the factory whistle and shift work reshaped our understanding of time. It
gave us a world of mass-produced stuff, from clothing, to tools, to iPhones, all
obtainable only with money we earn from our industrial jobs. And increasingly it
affects the very air we breathe and the water we drink. And since the Industrial
Revolution began in the 18th century, these changes have happened more rapidly and spread to more places around the world. How did the Industrial Revolution
begin? To answer that question, we are going to focus on the region where it
all started: northern England. It was here that the coal-fired steam engine, the
textile factory, and the other elements of modern industrialization first all
came together in the mid-18th century. But why was this part of England
specifically at the heart of these incredible and turbulent transformations?
I'm here at the Caphouse Colliery, at the National Coal Mining Museum, to begin the search for answers to that question. This is a colliery - a mine from which
coal is extracted. Coal fueled the Industrial Revolution; it was coal that
made new steam engines possible, and it was these new steam engines that powered industrial factories, trains, and steam ships. The first steam engines were rudimentary and were not invented in Britain. They were first invented in
China, some hundred years before the Industrial Revolution. So why did
steam-powered industrialization take off in Britain, and not China? Some historians
argue Britain had a unique set of environmental factors that made
coal-fired steam power cheap and easy here. First, Britain had very large coal
deposits. The coal was also quite near the surface - that means they were easy to mine with 18th-century technology. The only problem was that these mines
sometimes filled up with water, but steam engines solved that problem. The first
steam engines in England, which were very inefficient, were, in fact, used to pump
water out of coal mines. They were so inefficient, that they were only useful
in a place where coal was pretty much free, at the head of the mines. In addition,
British coal mines were close to cities where factories and cheap labor to
work in them were in ready supply. Finally, Britain is quite flat, which made
it possible to build canals to connect the cities to the coal. I'm here with Alan and Taz, 459 feet and two and a half inches underground to find out about the importance of coal, and what life was
like for miners. NICK: So why was coal important for the
Industrial Revolution in Britain? TAZ: Well, they discovered it could make steam. There's no steam without coal. Coal was important, and obviously steam, it were used to generate pumps, steam engines to wind men in and out of [the] mine. The first cars were steam, yeah? So it's been a massive part of this country's history, and helped
to make it what it is today. Without coal and steam, well, this country wouldn't be as great as what it is today. NICK: So how was the coal taken out of the mine, and where
did it go? ALAN: Well, in early days, it were taken out [of the] mine by manual labor. Women, children, anybody that needed employment were employed in the mines. TAZ: In the early days, when they started getting into what you'd call, you might think's a deep mine at 140 meters, there were a bucket, big bucket called the cable,
yeah, that would be lowered down to load it up, and then they'd have a horse on a rope, going around a wheel gin, which lifted the coal. Slow process but, still managed
to get it out. ALAN: Then obviously they started shallow, and then they went deeper and
deeper as technology progressed. The turning point was steam power, really. 'Cuz the coal burnt in steam boilers to produce steam power, which then motivated the production of coal - just, we could pump water out [of] the ground, and we could go deeper and deeper into thicker and more productive seams. NICK: The availability of coal wasn't the only reason that Britain was uniquely suited to industrialization. For better or for
worse, Britain was a nation with a long history of trade. In particular, Britain
had been in the textile industry for centuries, raising sheep, turning their
wool into cloth, and selling that cloth to Europe and the wider world. In 1700,
about 70% of British exports were woolen products, so it was a short but
significant step from the kinds of small-scale textile production in the
pre-industrial era, to the large textile mills of the industrial era. I've come to Nottingham, in the Midlands of England, to find out more about the role of textiles
in the development of the Industrial Revolution. I'm here at the Lace Hall
with Richard Brawn. NICK: So Richard, what kinds of textiles were produced here in
Nottingham? RICHARD: Lace - mainly lace. After 200 lace factories, [there's] only one actually running still in Nottingham. NICK: So how was the lace produced before the Industrial
Revolution? RICHARD: Most likely by hand. Then they produced the machine, which, you had to
power it yourself, moving pedals and things like this. Then they produced the
first lace machine which was powered by a shaft driven by steam engine.
And then after that it went from steam engine to an electric motor. NICK: Beyond commodities, Britain had finance. Partly because of the long history of textile production, Britain had lots of
merchants and other people who financed and made money from trade. These people became increasingly powerful in British government over many centuries. As a
result, by the 18th century, British laws were very friendly to those in industry
and trade. The country had a number of banks that supported new industrial
ventures, and there were lots of laws to protect private property. The availability of finance and legal protections encouraged people in England to take risks, and invest in new enterprises like factories. Some of the most
important of the new laws were patent laws, which protected people's rights to
profit from their new inventions, such as the machines that run the collieries
and mills. Another reason that factory owners in England adopted machines so
rapidly, was because wages were so high here, compared to many other parts of the world. As a result, it was too expensive to hire lots of people, so business owners looked for ways to save money by having machines do the work, instead. You might consider the rise of AI and robots that do the work of humans today, pretty
similar thinking. Some historians think that Britain's
industrialization wasn't principally a result of these internal factors at all,
but rather, really, a result of its place in global networks of trade, and at the
head of a vast empire. The list of global contributions to industrialization
proposed by historians is a long one. Some historians argue that profits made
from the trade in enslaved Africans, and their labor on Caribbean plantations,
helped fund technological innovations like the steam engine. Others point out that
food grown or fished in the American colonies by settlers, often taught by
indigenous people, flooded into Britain, allowing people there to concentrate on
factory work rather than farming. Similarly, natural resources flowed into
Britain from their colonies. Timber and cotton were particularly important, but
also the colonies were a captive market for British industrial products, once
British factories began to produce them. All of these factors - money, food, resources and markets - may well have spurred industrialization in Britain,
first. The Industrial Revolution helped to make Britain a global power and create
the largest territorial Empire in history. Slavery, the exploitation of
workers at home and abroad, and questionable trade arrangements were
fueled by technology, personal ingenuity, geography, and the laws of the land. The term 'Industrial Revolution' can hide these unique elements coming together,
that not only changed the lives of everyone involved, but also the lives of
everyone who came after.