In the 1750’s the world was changed forever. This was because of the industrial revolution. Many changes occurred during the period of 1750 to 1840.Hand based productions were replaced by machines, there was an increased use of steam power, development of machines and machine tools as well as a rise of the factory system and its workers. The most dominant industry of the industrial revolution was textiles. This was due to large numbers of employment and value of output; the textile industry was the…
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of the 18th to the 19th century, two revolutions occurred the Industrial and Agricultural which caused a significant amount of people to move from the countryside to the city, changing many agrarian lifestyles. Many moved into the city of London where it was overcrowded, filthy and full of diseases. These revolutions allowed many new machines to be invented and improved which helped manufacture goods as well as the planting of crops. The Agricultural revolution began between the 18th and 19th century…
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The industrial revolution had a negative effect on the world, not to mention its devastating impact on the environment and the urban development. Industrial revolution completely changed the way people lived and worked. Steam power was used to quickly manufacture things that used to rely on manpower. All these industries were centered in large towns and cities. People started leaving their farm jobs in the country to come work in the city--in factories. But life in a new industrial city and…
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Industrial revolution is classified as, “ a period in which fundamental changes occurring in agriculture, textile and metal manufacture, transportation, economic policies and the social structure” (Yale) Before the industrial revolution began in Britain, which started in around the end of the 1700’s, people usually made goods in their homes to sell. They did so by using machines that were basic and poor quality to do so. Then Industrial development made a clear change of power. The demand for special-purpose…
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The effect of Industrial Revolution is it was a shame in humanity and no amount of trade progress that could be explained by the price of human pain, like the social changes, environmental changes, and economic changes. Industrial Revolution is a movement where machines are made to change people’s ways of life as well as their methods of manufacture, to teach people hard work and what long hours do to them and how it well pay off in the end. Women and children were required to work regardless of…
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Stanley Edwards U.S History Brigitte Powell Summer 2014 Page 2 The Industrial Revolution was a major change in the U.S. Until the early 1800s, the majority of the people had to make their clothes and tools by hand. The Industrial Revolution was very important to the American people and the economic future of the United States. The American Revolution also improved communication, banking, and improved transportation. It was a time of major inventions being…
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Isaac Zipp History Mr. Johnson 12/17/14 Industrial Revolution The industrial revolution affected the means of production, the availability of products, population distribution and the social structure. The Industrial Revolution changed the means of production. Craftsmen used to make everything by hand, this process was very slow, and not many products were being made. With industrialization the time to make a product was drastically reduced, so more products were made. This new means of production was improved over time…
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Bessemer process; this process improved the strength of iron. Henry Bessemer developed the Bessemer process, which made is possible to convert pig iron to steel by removing impurities rather than adding carbon. This process was the first inexpensive industrial process for the mass-production of steel. This allowed for steel to be used as a structural component more easily and readily. It also required less coal, less time and was less expensive than other methods making Bessemer processed steel a famous…
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The Industrial Revolution was a period of great change and rapid industrialization. The discovery of oil, also known as the oil industry, provided a new source of fuel for trains and other means of transportation as well as greasing wagon wheels and the like. The discovery of the Spindletop geyser in 1901 had a huge growth in the oil industry. Within a year, more than 1,500 oil companies had been chartered, and oil became the dominant fuel of the 20th century and an integral part of the American…
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An early landmark moment in the Industrial Revolution came near the end of the eighteenth century, when Samuel Slater brought new manufacturing technologies from Britain to the United States and founded the first U.S. cotton mill in Beverly, Massachusetts. Slater’s mill, like many of the mills and factories that sprang up in the next few decades, was powered by water, which confined industrial development to the northeast at first. The concentration of industry in the Northeast also facilitated the…
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