5.1 The Industrial Revolution Begins
- 4 Activities
- 3 Videos
- 2 Articles
Introduction
It’s everywhere now, but it had to start somewhere. If we focus on the evidence, we can trace our world of what is now commonplace industrial technology to its earliest stages. We’ll explore the moment in our recent history when the need for more energy led to the hunger for “burnable rock,” also known as coal, also known as fossil fuel. We’ll look at the internal factors that made this possible—the significance and scale of scientific revolution, politics, economics, and the law. We’ll also look at the global roots of industrialization—empire, trade, and slaving. Ready? Start your engines.
Learning Objectives
- Analyze the scale of the Industrial Revolution and its impact on various regions of the world.
- Describe how European thinkers built upon scientific and technological exchanges with Asia and the Muslim world to develop “revolutionary” ideas that helped drive industrialization.
- Evaluate how the Industrial Revolution changed human communities and societies during this era.
- Describe how innovations made possible by the Industrial Revolution changed the movement of goods and people.
- Interpret images from the Industrial Revolution to describe how this revolution impacted human communities.
Urbanization Game
Preparation
Purpose
This activity will introduce you to the concept of urbanization, both as a shift in demographics and as a shift in the physical environment resulting from the rise of industrialization. By providing a narrative glimpse of how one fictional village transformed over 150 years into a city, you’ll be drawn into the chaos of rapid urban growth. This will help you begin to see how the Industrial Revolution created significant changes in human communities, how humans produced and distributed goods, and how networks began to expand. In addition, you’ll see the impacts of industrialization on the environment. Finally, this activity serves as an introduction to the Industrial Revolution, which is the central theme of this lesson.
Practices
Causation, CCOT
By drawing the development of cities, you’ll be creating what is in many ways a causal map of the urbanization process. In particular, you’ll show the social and environmental effects of industrialization. In addition, you’ll identify both significant changes and continuities over that period, which will help prepare you for content and activities that develop these ideas later in the course.
Process
This is a multipart activity that first asks you to analyze a passage from Thomas Carlyle’s “Signs of the Times,” an essay that appeared in The Edinburgh Review in 1829. Then, you’ll listen to portions of a narrative about how life changed in an English village from 1700 to 1850. As you listen to passages from different years, you’ll draw how the effects of industrialization significantly altered life in England. Finally, you’ll answer a series of follow-up questions as you examine the drawings that your group and others created. This will help you visualize how the Industrial Revolution changed almost all aspects of life for those living in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century England and beyond.
Part 1
Your teacher will project the following excerpt from “Signs of the Times,” an essay by the Scottish philosopher Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881), published in The Edinburgh Review in 1829. Follow along as your teacher reads it.
“Were we required to characterise this age of ours by any single epithet [description], we should be tempted to call it, not an Heroical, Devotional, Philosophical, or Moral Age, but, above all others, the Mechanical Age. It is the Age of Machinery, in every outward and inward sense of that word; the age which, with its whole undivided might, forwards, teaches and practises the great art of adapting means to ends. Nothing is now done directly or by hand; all is by rule and calculated contrivance [plan]. For the simplest operation, some helps and accompaniments, some cunning abbreviating process is in readiness. On every hand, the living artisan is driven from his workshop, to make room for a speedier, inanimate one. The shuttle drops from the fingers of the weaver, and falls into iron fingers that ply it faster. The sailor furls his sail, and lays down his oar; and bids a strong, unwearied servant, on vaporous wings, bear him through the waters.”
Then, have a discussion about how Carlyle describes the changes that took place during his lifetime by answering the following questions.
- What was Thomas Carlyle’s point of view regarding life in Europe in the early part of the nineteenth century? What evidence did you use to arrive at that answer?
- Using the excerpt by Carlyle, how do you think life in Europe changed over time (politically, socially, and/or economically speaking) by the mid-nineteenth century?
Part 2
Your teacher will organize the class into pairs and pass out paper, markers, and a template to each pair. First, your teacher will read short narratives about life in a small English village from 1700 to 1850. After each narrative is read, you’ll draw various elements of the village, following your teacher’s directions and using the template to determine the size and shape of the icons used. These include dwellings, canals, roads, railroads, and schools, among others. Note that the template should be used for reference and you won’t be graded on your artistic abilities, we promise!
After your teacher has read all of the narratives and you’ve finished drawing, you’ll post your work on the board for everyone to see. Take note of any similarities that you see between your drawing and those of the rest of the class.
Part 3
To wrap up this activity, you’ll examine the board full of drawings and the lesson experience to define the term urbanization. Then, answer the following questions and be prepared to discuss them with the class.
- Define the term urbanization based on what you now know about industrialization in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
- Write three questions this activity raises about urbanization in England from the eighteenth to the nineteenth century.
- What can you now add to your list from before the activity about how life in Europe changed over time (politically, socially, and/or economically) by the mid-nineteenth century?
- What do you think the central themes of this unit will be?
- Why do you think the Industrial Revolution is considered a major turning point in world history? Explain your reasoning.
Origins of the Industrial Revolution
Summary
The Industrial Revolution transformed life on Earth more than any event since the Agricultural Revolution. In this video, Nick Dennis explores how industrialization changed our lives and why it started in Britain. There are many reasons that industrialization took off in Britain, including its abundance of coal, its geography and environment, and its economy. Still, many believe British industrialization would have been impossible without resources extracted from its colonies.
Origins of the Industrial Revolution (9:18)
Key Ideas
Purpose
The Industrial Revolution was probably the most revolutionary event in human history during the last 10,000 years. It reshaped global trade and power, but it also produced change in societies on the national and local scales. This video provides you with evidence to respond to the unit question, which asks you to examine how the Industrial Revolution was experienced differently by different people in different places. It explores the various reasons for Britain’s early industrialization and how those factors changed life in industrial Britain and in its global empire.
Process
Preview – Skimming for Gist
As a reminder, open and skim the transcript, and read the questions before you watch the video.
Key Ideas – Understanding Content
Think about the following questions as you watch this video:
- How did coal and other environmental factors help Britain industrialize first?
- How did coal mining change over the course of the Industrial Revolution?
- How did England’s pre-industrial wool industry help it industrialize?
- How did Britain’s financial system help launch new industrial ventures?
- How might high wages in Britain have contributed to industrialization there?
- According to the video, what global factors may have fed Britain’s industrialization?
Evaluating and Corroborating
- This video provides a look at some of the possible causes of Britain’s early industrialization. Which factor do you think was the most important? Why?
- Using evidence from this video, provide one impact of industrialization on networks, communities, and production and distribution in Britain.
The Scientific Revolution
- astronomical
- cosmos
- prevail
- proof
Preparation
Summary
This article introduces the Scientific Revolution and questions the usual story that it happened in Europe and involved only men. People had been experimenting with math and science before the sixteenth century. For example, much of the knowledge that made the Scientific Revolution possible either came from or was preserved by Islamic and Indian scholars working centuries earlier. The article explains that this was only a revolution for those wealthy enough to be a part of it. And most women were excluded, with some important exceptions. The article concludes by asking if the Scientific Revolution inspired the later Industrial Revolution.
Purpose
This article provides an overview of the Scientific Revolution and considers its connections to the Unit 5 Problem: “How did industrialization transform societies around the world?” This article will provide evidence to help you question the usual story and evaluate the importance of the European Scientific Revolution using the networks frame.
Process
Preview – Skimming for Gist
Fill out the Skimming for Gist section of the Three Close Reads worksheet as you complete your first close read. As a reminder, this should be a quick process!
Key Ideas – Understanding Content
For this reading, you should be looking for unfamiliar vocabulary words, the major claim and key supporting details, and analysis and evidence. By the end of the second close read, you should be able to answer the following questions:
- What is the usual story of the Scientific Revolution?
- How does the author challenge the usual story of the Scientific Revolution?
- Who participated in the Scientific Revolution?
- What were some negative social effects of the Scientific Revolution?
- Does the author think the Scientific Revolution caused the Industrial Revolution?
Evaluating and Corroborating
At the end of the third close read, respond to the following questions:
- You just read an article about scale and the Industrial Revolution. In that article, the author questioned whether the Industrial Revolution happened in Britain because of local or global factors. What do you think explains the emergence of the Scientific Revolution in Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries? Was this the result of local or global processes?
- Using the networks frame, explain why the Scientific Revolution happened in Europe and how it might have led to the Industrial Revolution.
The Industrial Revolution
- entrepreneurial
- factory
- fossil fuel
- imperialism
- industrialization
- patent
- textile
Preparation
Summary
During the Industrial Revolution, humans started using fossil fuels like coal and oil in new ways. These new energy sources transformed life on Earth. The machines that kickstarted industrialization were steam engines used to pump water from England’s soggy coal mines. That innovation sparked many more inventions, as people used the steam engine for new purposes, like powering factories, steamships, and trains. This article specifically asks why the Industrial Revolution started in Britain and not in China. The article then explores how, why, and where industrialization spread. It concludes by considering some of the many impacts of industrialization.
Purpose
This article provides evidence to respond to several parts of the unit problem. It will allow you to evaluate why the Industrial Revolution started in Britain using the production and distribution frame. It provides a summary of some long-term impacts of industrialization, and helps you answer the question of why some regions of the world managed to industrialize sooner than others. Be sure to keep track of the reasons that the author thinks industrialization started in Britain and not China. Which reasons do you find most convincing?
Process
Preview – Skimming for Gist
Fill out the Skimming for Gist section of the Three Close Reads worksheet as you complete your first close read. As a reminder, this should be a quick process!
Key Ideas – Understanding Content
For this reading, you should be looking for unfamiliar vocabulary words, the major claim and key supporting details, and analysis and evidence. By the end of the second close read, you should be able to answer the following questions:
- What was the initial reason that people in Britain started mining coal?
- How did the fact that wet conditions made British coal hard to get to turn into an advantage for Britain?
- Why did the Industrial Revolution spread out of Britain?
- What were some consequences of the Industrial Revolution?
Evaluating and Corroborating
At the end of the third close read, respond to the following question:
- This article discusses the consequences of the Industrial Revolution. Which of these consequences would be considered long-term impacts of industrialization and how are they apparent in today's world?
Macartney’s Expedition and the Global Economy
Summary
In 1793, the world economy was beginning a huge transformation. Yet, most people weren’t aware of it. Though Britain and Western Europe would soon emerge as dominant global empires, in 1793, China and South Asia remained the most important regions in the global economy. This video considers the global economy through an encounter between Britain and China. In 1793, Lord Macartney launched an expedition from Portsmouth. He traveled to meet with the Qianlong Emperor in China to request more trade between England and China. His failure highlighted several facts about the shifting global economy.
Macartney’s Expedition and the Global Economy (10:12)
Key Ideas
Purpose
This video provides an introduction to the global economy at the end of the eighteenth century and offers a detailed examination of one important world-historical event. This video will provide you with evidence in the form of an overview of the global economy and the Macartney expedition to explore how Britain and China were connected across vast distances. But it will also reveal several important differences in their respective worldviews.
Process
Preview – Skimming for Gist
As a reminder, open and skim the transcript, and read the questions before you watch the video.
Key Ideas – Understanding Content
Think about the following questions as you watch this video:
- Why was Portsmouth important?
- Where was the economic center of the world at the end of the eighteenth century?
- Why were Europeans more interested in trade with China than the Chinese were in trade with Europe?
- What roles did European powers in the Indian Ocean (other than Britain) play in the global economy?
- Why did Lord Macartney travel to China?
- Did Macartney succeed? Why or why not?
Evaluating and Corroborating
- Based on this video, do you think China or Britain had the stronger economy in 1793?Which would you predict would become the economic powerhouse of the nineteenth century? Why?
- How were British and Chinese society similar in 1793? How were they different?
Images of the Industrial Revolution
Preparation
Purpose
In this activity, you will examine images from before and after the Industrial Revolution, which should give you a sense of how quickly change accelerated once the Industrial Revolution began. Seeing these changes through image analysis will also help reinforce the specific impacts on communities, networks, and production and distribution.
Process
In this activity, you will look at images from before and after the Industrial Revolution, and then answer questions about how these pictures can help us see changes in communities, networks, and production and distribution.
Start by looking at the images from Denis Diderot’s Encyclopédie. Diderot’s Encyclopédie was published from 1751 to 1772, and is famous for representing the philosophy of the Enlightenment. Diderot’s goal was to create an encyclopedia of knowledge that included intellectual topics as well as everyday themes, such as the tools people used in their work. In addition, he wanted to influence the way people thought and some of the entries on politics and religion were revolutionary for the time. When you look at the Encyclopédie images, what do you notice and what do you think each picture represents? Now, look at the images from after the Industrial Revolution. Try to get a sense of what each one is about, and how they are different from Diderot’s Encyclopédie illustrations.
Now, look at the images side by side, comparing pre- and post-industrialization. After you’ve looked at the pictures, answer the following question: When examining these images, what kinds of changes do you see happening rather quickly to communities, networks, and production and distribution as a result of industrialization? Note that this is really three questions, since you need to respond in relation to each of the frames. Also, in answering the question, you should refer back to the illustrations and the specifics of the images that influenced your answers. Once you’re done, be prepared to discuss your responses as a class.
Do you think one frame was more impacted than another, or was the change similar across all three? While we usually think about the frames separately, they do overlap, and it’s hard for one to grow and change without the others being impacted. Your teacher will either have you discuss this last question as a class, or, create a chalkboard splash. To do that, you’ll answer the question in 15 words or less. When you are ready, write your response on the board. This is a good way to share your thinking and see what your classmates are thinking, too.
Railroads & the Industrial Revolution: Crash Course World History
- industrialization
- locomotion
- railroad
- standardization
- technology
Summary
The Industrial Revolution changed most aspects of human life. But railroads were perhaps the most visible change for people in the long nineteenth century. Trains allowed us to travel much faster. Before trains, how fast people and goods traveled depended on how fast a horse could run or the wind could blow. But trains traveled so much faster, and as a result, they shrunk our world. They also created the concept of absolute time. When most people were farmers and had to walk or ride a horse to the next town, the sun was more important than the exact time. Trains changed that.
Railroads & the Industrial Revolution: Crash Course World History (12:30)
Key Ideas
Purpose
This video provides evidence at the global level for responding to the Unit Problem: How did industrialization transform societies around the world? In particular, it will allow you to explore how the changes of the Industrial Revolution affected people from different classes. As you watch, think about how rapid transit changed human communities, information networks, and how we distributed food.
Process
Preview – Skimming for Gist
As a reminder, open and skim the transcript, and read the questions before you watch the video.
Key Ideas – Understanding Content
Think about the following questions as you watch this video:
- How did widespread railways help bring the Industrial Revolution to more people?
- How did railroads shape our ideas of space and time?
- What were some arguments that people in the Long Nineteenth Century used against railroads?
- What effect does John Green argue industrialization had on our worldview about progress?
- How does John Green argue that the Internet is like the railroad?
Evaluating and Corroborating
- Do you agree with John Green that railroads changed the way that humans think about time and space? How do your ideas about time and space change if you’re walking, driving, or flying to a place?
- John Green argues that trains made people read more and that their windows might have even prepared people to watch television many years later. Do you believe him? How has the way we travel changed the entertainment we consume? What impacts has this had on our communities?
Redraw the Frames
Preparation
Purpose
Working with frames allows you to understand how and why people lived the way they did throughout history. They help you recognize how communities (such as societies and nations); networks (such as those for trade and exchange); and the production and distribution of goods, impacted, and still impact, people in different parts of the world. Viewing history through frames gives us a usable knowledge of history that allows us to make sense of the world today and think critically about the future. The process of depicting frames by drawing them—mixing language with imagery—will make the information more memorable.
Process
In this activity, you will draw the course frames, much like you did earlier in the course. However, instead of coming up with your own ideas about each of the frames, you will draw them according to the frame narratives at this point in the course. This will not only help you gain a sense of your understanding of the frames, but will also give you a chance to review what you’ve already learned, which will help you remember all that stuff!
Don’t worry about your drawing skills—you don’t have to be an artist to complete this activity. However, try to use more pictures than words. And feel free to be creative! Here are the criteria:
- Draw a representation of community based on the content of this unit. Be sure to label that area of the picture with “community.”
- Draw a representation of production and distribution based on the content of this unit. Be sure to label that area of the drawing with “P&D.”
- Finally, draw the networks between communities (people, states, empires, and so on) based on the content of this unit.
- Where possible, use arrows and other lines to show movement. This will largely apply to P&D and networks.
Once you’re done, be ready to share your drawings and thinking behind them with your class. Was your approach the same as your classmates? Or did you think about the frames differently? Frames are no different from anything else we study in history—there can be many perspectives on the same topic.