AP Euro Chapter 22
Charles Dickens
-Attacks child labor -Workers from foundling homes -Kids got no money and were abused
Friedrich List
-Considered the growth of modern industry of the utmost importance because manufacturing was a primary means of increasing people's well-being and relieving their poverty -He was a dedicated nationalist -Wrote National System of Political Economy -He focused on the practical policies of railroad building and the tariff -Supported the formation of a customs union among the separate German states
Edwin Chadwick
-Edwin Chadwick concluded that the "whole mass of the laboring community" was increasingly able "to buy more of the necessities and minor luxuries of life"
Samuel Slater
-Emigrated to the United States -Built a spinning machine from memory and a partial design
John McAdam
-Equipped road beds with a layer of large stones for drainage -On top he placed a carefully smoothed layer of crushed rock
Isaac & Emile Periere
-Established the Credit Mobilier of Paris -It built railroads all over France and Europe
Fritz Harkort
-He was a business pioneer in the German machinery industry -He concluded that Germany had to match all these English achievements as quickly as possible -Lacking skilled laborers to work for him, he turner to England for experience, though expensive, mechanics -In 1832 he was forced out of his company by his financial bankers
John Cockerill
-In 1817, his son John Cockerill purchased the old summer palace of the deposed bishops of Liege in southern Belgium -He converted the palace into a large industrial enterprise, which produced machinery, steam engines, and then railway locomotives -Many British workers came over illegally to work for him
William Cockerill
-Left England illegally and introduced new methods abroad -He and his sons began building cotton-spinning equipment in French-occupied Belgium in 1799
Adam Smith
-Wealth of Nations -Father of capitalism -Laissez faire -Free trade -Companies - bigger profit -Problem? Mistreated workers & pollution
Richard Trevithick
-Won a bet of several thousand dollars -Hauled ten tons on iron over nearly ten miles of track in a steam-driven locomotive
Karl Marx
-Workers need to revolt -Just society (workers own factories)
Thomas Malthus
-Wrote Essay on the Principle of Population -Argued that population would always grow faster than the food supply -Positive checks: war, famine, and disease -Prudential restraint: young men and women could limit population growth by marrying late in life
Elizabeth Gaskell
-Wrote Mary Burton in 1848 -Presents a strikingly accurate portrayal of urban life experienced by many at the time
Friedrich Engles
-Wrote The Condition of the Working Class in England -The new poverty of industrial workers was worse than the old poverty of cottage workers and agricultural laborers -The culprit was industrial capitalism with its relentless competition and constant technical change
Robert Bakewell
-allowed only his best sheep to breed -animal husbandry
Robert Owen
-stated that "very strong facts" demonstrated that employing children under 10 years of age as factory workers was "injurious to the children, and not beneficial to the proprietors" -Factory owner -Makes a just treatment of factory workers -Children under age 9 go to school -Supplies cheap housing for workers -Paid reasonably -Moves to New Harmony, Indiana -Creates socialist society -Everyone shares equally & paid same
Matthew Bulton
An entrepreneur (person who organizes, manages, and takes on the risks of a business) who joined with Watt
economic nationalism
List's Ideas
Francis Cabot Lowell
Mechanized every stage in the manufacture of cloth
Moses Brown
Opened the first factory in the United States
David Ricardo
Wages would be just high enough to keep workers from starving
David Copperfield
Written by Charles Dickens
Great Expectations
Written by Charles Dickens
National System of Political Economy
Written by Friedrich List
industrial revolution
a term first coined from awed contemporaries in the 1830s to describe the burst of major inventions and technical changes they had witnessed in certain industries
Water Frame
acquired a capacity of several hundred spindles and demanded water power; it required large, specialized mills and factories that employed as many as one thousand workers from the very beginning; it could only spin coarse, strong thread which was then put out for respinning on hand-powered cottage jennies
crystal palace
an architectural masterpiece made entirely of glass and iron
Luddites
attacked whole factories in England and smashed new machines, which they believed were putting them out of work
iron law of wages
because of the pressure of population growth, wages would always sink to subsistence level
Jedediah Strutt
believed that children should be at least 10 years old to work in his mills, but he reluctantly hired 7-year-olds to satisfy their parents
George Stephenson
built an effective locomotive
William Blake
called the early factories "satanic mills" and protested against the hard life of the London poor
Henry Cort
developed the puddling furnace, which allowed pig iron to be refined in turn with coke; he also developed heavy-duty, steam-powered rolling mills, which were capable of spewing out iron in every shape and form
tariff protection
governments placed high tariffs on foreign goods
Samuel Crompton
invented an alternative technique called the spinning mule that began to require more power than the human arm could supply
Rocket
invented by George Stephenson; sped down the track of the just-completed Liverpool to Manchester Railway at 16 miles per hour
Thomas Newcomen
invented one of the first primitive steam engines
Thomas Savery
invented one of the first primitive steam engines
Eli Whitney
invented the cotton gin
Edmund Cartwright
invented the power loom
Jethro Tull
invented the seed drill
James Hargreaves
invented the spinning jenny
Richard Arkwright
invented the water frame
John Kay
invents the Flying Shuttle
Robert Fulton
invents the first steamboat (Clermont)
William Wordsworth
lamented the destruction of the rural way of life and the pollution of the land a water
Factory Act of 1833
limited the factory workday for children between nine and thirteen to eight hours and that of adolescents between fourteen and eighteen to twelve hours; children under nine were to be enrolled in the elementary schools that factory owners were required to establish
10 Hours Act
limits work hours of women and children to 10 hours a day
coke
made from coal and used to produce iron
Grand National Consolidated Trades Union
one of the largest and most visionary of the early national unions
Combination Acts
outlawed unions and strikes
Mines Act of 1842
prohibited underground work for all women as well as for boys under 10
James Watt
saw that the Newcomen engine's waste of energy could be reduced by adding a separate condenser
Spinning Jenny
simple and inexpensive; six to twenty-four spindles were mounted on a sliding carriage, and each spindle spun a fine, slender thread; the woman moved that carriage back and forth with one hand and turned a wheel to supply power with the other
Claude Monet
succeeded in expressing the new sense of power and awe inspired by the Industrial Revolution
Joseph M. W. Turner
succeeded in expressing the new sense of power and awe inspired by the Industrial Revolution
body linen
underwear made from expensive linen cloth that only the aristocracy could afford
Wealth of Nations
written by Adam Smith
Sanitary Conditions of the Laboring Classes
written by Edwin Chadwick
Mary Burton
written by Elizabeth Gaskell
The Condition of the Working Class in England
written by Friedrich Engles
Essay on the Principle of Population
written by Thomas Malthus
Andrew Ure
wrote that conditions in most factories were not harsh and were even quite good