The industrial revolution refers to a period of rapid economic
and social change between the end of the Eighteenth Century and the mid
Nineteenth Century. The industrial revolution involved a prolonged
evolution in the the nature of economic activity. It led to an
unprecedented rise in output and total national income. In particular,
old traditional methods of hand production was replaced by the use of
machines, leading to large scale factory production. The industrial
revolution was helped by technological innovations such as steam power,
cheaper iron, specialisation, the growth of modern banking, and new
machines which could do the work of several people.
The start of the industrial revolution is often held to begin around
1760-80, with the development of the steam engine, coke produced iron,
and innovations such as the spinning jenny.
A ‘Second Industrial revolution’ from around 1840-1870 built on this
initial burst of innovation and development . The second industrial
revolution saw further economic progress, through the greater use of
railways, cheaper steel, and the greater use of steam engines.
Key people in the Industrial Revolution
Edmund Cartwright
(1743-1823) – English inventor, and member of the Anglican clergy.
Cartwright invented the power loom which significantly increased the
efficiency of textile production. He also developed a wool combing
machine.
Robert Owen
(1771 – 1858) – Welsh social reformer who attempted to build a utopian
socialist and co-operative movement. Owen sought to consider the welfare
of his workers, something usually overlooked in the industrial
revolution.
Sir Humphrey Davy
(1778 – 1829) – English chemist and inventor. He inventor the Davy lamp
used by miners to help detect gas and improve safety. He also
discovered several alkaline earth metals and discovered more about the
chemical properties of chlorine and iodine.
George Stephenson
(1781 – 1848) Mechanical engineer, who developed the steam engine for
use in trains. He was a key figure in building the 25 mile Stockton and
Darlington railway. Stephenson also built the first intercity railway
between Liverpool and Manchester – ushering in the ‘railway age’.
Joseph Locke
(1805 – 1860) English civil engineer. Locke was an important railway
pioneer. He built the Grand Junction Railway which connected the
Liverpool railway to Crewe and Birmingham. He developed new techniques
for laying rails and was considered better at finishing projects than
Stephenson.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel
(1806 – 1859) English engineer. Brunel was at the heart of many of the
key building projects of the British industrial revolution. He built the
Great Western Railway from Bristol to London and also developed
powerful steam ships. He also built the first tunnel under a navigable
river.
Sir Henry Bessemer
(1813 – 1898) an English engineer, inventor, and businessman.
Bessemer’s greatest contribution was to the mass production of steel,
which was a key component of the second wave of the industrial
revolution.
Social Activists
Karl Marx(1818
– 1883) Marx saw the industrial revolution as being a stage in the
eventual struggle and triumph of the Proletariat. Marx felt it was a
historical inevitability that the oppressed workers of industrial states
would eventually revolt against the capitalist class.
Friedrich Engels (1820 – 1895) German social scientist and political activist. His work
The Condition of the Working Class in England
(1844) explained the dire conditions of the workers caught up in the
industrial revolution. In 1848, he co-authored the ‘Communist Manifesto’
with Karl Marx.
Charles Dickens
(1812 – 1870) English writer and social critic. Dickens lived through
the industrial revolution and became a harsh critic of its worst
excesses.
Political Groups
The Luddites
were a group of 19th-century English skilled workers who were concerned
about losing their skilled jobs in the textile industry. They saw power
looms and spinning frames as the death knell for their profession. They
began smashing machines in different factories in protest.
Tolpuddle Martyrs
In 1834, a group of Dorset agricultural labourers who were arrested for
and convicted of swearing a secret oath as members of the
Friendly Society of Agricultural Labourers.
Their case attracted considerable sympathy and eventually they were
released. The event is considered an important milestone in the trade
union movement.
Chartists
– Chartists were a political reform movement, active between 1838 and
1850. Their main aim was to achieve universal male suffrage. They gained
mass petitions and organised mass protests hoping to put pressure on
politicians to extend the franchise.
American industrial revolution
Andrew Carnegie
(1835 – 1919) Born in Scotland to poor parents, Carnegie moved to
America where he became very wealthy through dominating the US steel
industry.
John D. Rockefeller
(1839 – 1937) Rockefeller became one of the richest persons in the
world through his dominance of the oil and railroad industries. He
became a generous philanthropists giving money to his church, education,
medical science and public health.
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