WH 25-1 The Beginnings of Industrialization
Boom
A time of increased activity, wealth, and prosperity
The Agricultural Revolution Paves the Way
After buying up the land of village farmers, wealthy landowners enclosed their land with fences or hedges. The increase in their landholdings enabled them to cultivate larger fields. Within these larger fields, called enclosures, landowners experimented with more productive
Changes in the Textile Industry
As you will learn in the feature on textile tech-nology on page 719, by 1800, several major inventions had modernized the cotton industry. One invention led to another. In 1733, a machinist named John Kay made a shuttle that sped back and forth on wheels.
Road Transportation
British roads improved, too, thanks largely to the efforts of John McAdam, a Scottish engineer. Working in the early 1800s, McAdam equipped road beds with a layer of large stones for drainage. On top, he placed a carefully smoothed layer of crushed rock.
Factory
Building where goods are made
Agricultural Revolution
Changes that led to great increases in the amount of food farmers produced
Factors of Production
Conditions needed to produce goods and services
Previewing Main Idea. Science and Technology
From the spinning jenny to the locomotive train, there was an explosion of inventions and technological advances. These improvements pave the way for the Industrial Revolution.
Section Vocabulary. Industrial Revolution
Great increase in machine production that began in England in the 18th century
Industrial Revolution Begins in Britain
In 1700, small farms covered England's landscape. Wealthy landowners, however, began buying up much of the land that village farmers had once worked. The large landowners dramatically improved farming methods. These innovations amounted to an agricultural revolution.
Steam-Driven Locomotives
In 1804, an English engineer named Richard Trevithick won a bet of several thousand dollars. He did this by hauling ten tons of iron over nearly ten miles of track in a steam-driven locomotive. Other British engineers soon built improved versions of Trevithick's locomotive. One of these
Why the Industrial Revolution Began in England
In addition to a large population of workers, the small island country had extensive natural resources. Industrialization, which is the process of developing machine production of goods, required such resources. These natural resources included
Inventions Spur Industrialization
In an explosion of creativity, inventions now revolutionized industry. Britain's textile industry clothed the world in wool, linen, and cotton. This industry was the first to be transformed.
SETTING THE STAGE
In the United States, France, and Latin America, political revolutions brought in new governments. A different type of revolution now transformed the way people worked. The Industrial Revolution refers to the
Watt's Steam Engine
James Watt, a mathematical instrument maker at the University of Glasgow in Scotland, thought about the problem for two years. In 1765, Watt figured out a way to make the steam engine work faster and more efficiently while burning less fuel.
Enclosure
Large closed-in field for farming
The Liverpool-Manchester Railroad
News of this success quickly spread throughout Britain. The entrepreneurs of northern England wanted a railroad line to connect the port of Liverpool with the inland city of Manchester.
Entrepreneur
Person who always organizes, manages, and takes on the financial risk of a business enterprise
Crop Rotation
Planting a different crop in a different field each year
Industrialization
Process of developing machine production of goods
Improvements in Transportation
Progress in the textile industry spurred other industrial improvements. The first such development, the steam engine, stemmed from the search for a cheap, convenient source of power. As early as 1705, coal miners were using steam-
Water Transportation
Steam could also propel boats. An American inventor named Robert Fulton ordered a steam engine from Boulton and Watt. He built steamboat called the Clermont, which made its first successful trip in 1807. The Clermont later ferried passengers up and down New York's Hudson River.
The Railway Age Begins
Steam-driven machinery powered English factories in the late 1700s. A steam engine on wheels—the railroad locomotive—drove English industry after 1820.
Economics
The Industrial Revolutions transform economic systems. In part, this was because nations dramatically change the way they produced and distributed goods.
Empire Building
The global power balance shifted after the Industrial Revolution. This shift occurred because the industrialized nations dominated the rest of the world.
Railroads Revolutionize Life in Britain
The invention and perfection of the locomotive had at least four major effects. First, railroads spurred industrial growth by giving manufacturers a cheap way to transport materials and finished products.
Rotating Crops
The process of crop rotation proved to be one of the best developments by the scientific farmers. The process improved upon older methods of crop rotation, such as the medieval three-field system discussed in Chapter 14.
CHAPTER VOCABULARY. Abolish
To end
Ban
To forbid
NM 9-12.IC.4 Analyze the pattern of historical change as evidenced by the industrial revolution, to include:
a. Conditions that promoted industrialization;