THE
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Like the Neolithic Revolution that occurred 10,000 years before it, the
Industrial Revolution brought about such sweeping changes that it virtually
transformed the world, even areas in which industrialization did not occur. The
concept seems simple; invent and perfect machinery to help make human labor
more efficient - but that's part of its importance. The change was so basic
that it could not help but affect all areas of people's lives in every part of
the globe.
The Industrial Revolution began in England
in the late 18th century, and spread during the 19th century to Belgium,
Germany, Northern
France, the United States,
and Japan.
Almost all areas of the world felt the effects of the Industrial Revolution
because it divided the world into "have" and "have not"
countries, with many of the latter being controlled by the former. England's
lead in the Industrial Revolution translated into economic prowess and
political power that allowed colonization of other lands, eventually building a
worldwide British Empire.
WHY BRITAIN?
The Industrial Revolution helped England
greatly increase its output of manufactured goods by substituting hand labor
with machine labor. Economic growth in Britain
was fueled by a number of factors:
- An Agricultural Revolution -
The Industrial Revolution would not have been possible without a series of
improvements in agriculture in England.
Beginning in the early1700s, wealthy landowners began to enlarge their
farms through enclosure, or fencing or hedging large blocks of land for
experiments with new techniques of farming. These scientific farmers
improved crop rotation methods, which carefully controlled nutrients in
the soil. They bred better livestock, and invented new machines, such as Jethro Tull's seed drill
that more effectively planted seeds. The larger the farms and the better
the production the fewer farmers were needed. Farmers pushed out of their
jobs by enclosure either became tenant farmers or they moved to cities.
Better nutrition boosted England's
population, creating the first necessary component for the Industrial
Revolution: labor.
- A technological revolution - England
also was the first to experience a technological revolution, a series of
inventions built on the principles of mass production, mechanization, and
interchangeable parts. Josiah Wedgwood developed a mold for pottery that
replaced the potters wheel, making mass
production of dishes possible. Many experimented with machinery to speed
up human labor, and interchangeable parts meant that machines were more
practical and easier to repair.
- Natural resources - Britain
had large and accessible supplies of coal and iron - two of the most
important raw materials used to produce the goods for the early Industrial
Revolution. Also available was water power to fuel the new machines,
harbors for its merchant ships, and rivers for inland transportation.
- Economic strength - During
the previous era, Britain
had already built many of the economic practices and structures necessary
for economic expansion, as well as a middle class (the bourgeoisie) that
had experience with trading and manufacturing goods. Banks were well
established, and they provided loans for businessmen to invest in new
machinery and expand their operations.
- Political stability - Britain's
political development during this period was fairly stable, with no major
internal upheavals occurring. Although Britain
took part in many wars during the 1700s, none of them took place on
British soil, and its citizens did not seriously question the government's
authority. By 1750 Parliament's power far exceeded that of the king, and
its members passed laws that protected business and helped expansion.
NEW INVENTIONS
The earliest transformation of the Industrial Revolution was Britain's
textile industry. In 1750 Britain
already exported wool, linen, and cotton cloth, and the profits of cloth
merchants were boosted by speeding up the process by which spinners and weavers
made cloth. One invention led to another since none were useful if any part of
the process was slower than the others. Some key inventions were:
- The flying shuttle - John
Kay's invention carried threads of yarn back and forth when the weaver
pulled a handle, greatly increasing the weavers' productivity.
- The spinning jenny - James Hargreaves' invention allowed one spinner to work
eight threads at a time, increasing the output of spinners, allowing them
to keep up with the weavers. Hargreaves named
the machine for his daughter.
- The water frame - Richard Arkwright's invention replaced the hand-driven
spinning jenny with one powered by water power, increasing spinning
productivity even more.
- The spinning mule - In 1779,
Samuel Crompton combined features of the
spinning jenny and the water frame to produce the spinning mule. It made
thread that was stronger, finer, and more consistent than that made by
earlier machines. He followed this invention with the power loom that sped
up the weaving process to match the new spinners.
These machines were bulky and expensive, so spinning and weaving could no
longer be done at home. Wealthy textile merchants set up the machines in
factories, and had the workers come to these places to do their work. At first
the factories were set up near rivers and streams for water power, but other
inventions later made this unnecessary. Before the late 1700s Britain's
demand for cotton was met by India,
but they increasingly came to depend on the American south, where plantation
production was speeded by Eli Whitney's invention of the cotton gin, a machine
that efficiently separated the cotton fiber from the seed. By 1810 southern
plantations used slave labor to produce 85 million pounds of cotton, up from
1.5 million in 1790.
TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENTS
Once the textile industry began its exponential growth, transportation of
raw materials to factories and manufactured goods to customers had to be worked
out. New inventions in transportation spurred the Industrial Revolution
further. A key invention was the steam engine that was perfected by James Watt
in the late 1790s. Although steam power had been used before, Watt invented
ways to make it practical and efficient to use for both water and land
transportation.
Perhaps the most revolutionary use of steam energy was the railroad engine,
which drove English industry after 1820. The first long-distance rail line from
the coastal city of Liverpool to
inland Manchester was an immediate
success upon its completion in 1830, and within a few decades, most British
cities were connected by rail. Railroads revolutionized life in Britain
in several ways:
1) Railroads gave manufacturers a cheap way to transport materials and
finished products.
2) The railroad boom created hundreds of thousands of new jobs for both
railroad workers and miners.
3) The railroad industry spawned new industries and inventions and increased
the productivity of others. For example, agricultural products could be
transported farther without spoiling, so farmers benefited from the railroads.
4) Railroads transported people, allowing them to work in cities far away
from their homes and travel to resort areas for leisure.
THE SPREAD OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
The Industrial Revolution occurred only in Britain
for about 50 years, but it eventually spread to other countries in Europe,
the United States,
Russia, and Japan.
British entrepreneurs and government officials forbade the export of machinery,
manufacturing techniques, and skilled workers to other countries but the
technologies spread by luring British experts with lucrative offers, and even
smuggling secrets into other countries. By the mid-19th century
industrialization had spread to France,
Germany, Belgium,
and the United States.
The earliest center of industrial production in continental Europe
was Belgium,
where coal, iron, textile, glass, and armaments production flourished. By 1830
French firms had employed many skilled British workers to help establish the
textile industry, and railroad lines began to appear across western
Europe. Germany
was a little later in developing industry, mainly because no centralized
government existed there yet, and a great deal of political unrest made
industrialization difficult. However, after the 1840s German coal and iron
production skyrocketed, and by the 1850s an extensive rail network was under
construction. After German political unification in 1871, the new empire
rivaled England
in terms of industrial production.
Industrialization began in the United States
by the 1820s, delayed until the country had enough laborers and money to invest
in business. Both came from Europe, where overpopulation
and political revolutions sent immigrants to the United
States to seek their fortunes. The American
Civil War (1861-1865) delayed further immigration until the 1870s, but it
spurred the need for industrial war products, all the way from soldiers'
uniforms to guns to railroads for troop transport. Once the war was over,
cross-country railroads were built which allowed more people to claim parts of
vast inland America
and to reach the west coast. The United States had abundant natural resources;
land, water, coal and iron ore; and after the great wave of immigration from
Europe and Asia in the late 19th century; it also had the labor.
During the late 1800s, industrialization spread to Russia
and Japan, in
both cases by government initiatives. In Russia
the tsarist government encouraged the construction of railroads to link places
within the vast reaches of the empire. The most impressive one was the
Trans-Siberian line constructed between 1891 and 1904, linking Moscow
to Vladivostock on the Pacific Ocean.
The railroads also gave Russians access to the empire's many coal and iron
deposits, and by 1900 Russia
ranked fourth in the world in steel production. The Japanese government also
pushed industrialization, hiring thousands of foreign experts to instruct
Japanese workers and mangers in the late 1800s. Railroads were constructed,
mines were opened, a banking system was organized, and industries were started
that produced ships, armaments, silk, cotton, chemicals, and glass. By 1900 Japan
was the most industrialized land in Asia, and was set to
become a 20th century power.