spread of the industrial revolution

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Spread of the Industrial Revolution. Ch. 21, Sect. 1. Other Nations Join the Race to Industrialization. Mid 1800s British mechanics opened factories in other countries Germany, France, and US had more abundant supplies of coal, iron, and other resources than Britain - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Spread of the Industrial Revolution

Ch. 21, Sect. 1

Other Nations Join the Race to Industrialization

• Mid 1800s

• British mechanics opened factories in other countries

• Germany, France, and US – had more abundant supplies of coal, iron, and

other resources than Britain– Borrowed British experts or technology

• By 1900, US was the #1 industrial nation

The Bessemer Process• Henry Bessemer, 1856

• New process for making steel from iron

• Lighter, harder, and more durable than iron

• Could be produced very cheaply

• Became the major material used in tools, bridges, and railroads.

Innovations in Chemistry

• Alfred Nobel: Dynamite– Safer– Used in construction & warfare– Funded Nobel Prize

Electric Power

• Electricity replaced steam as the dominate source of industrial power

• Michael Faraday – 1st simple electric motor – 1st dynamo: machine that generates electricity)

• Thomas Edison– 1st electric light bulb

• Quickened pace of city life• Factories could operate after dark

thom_edison Thomas Alva Edison Darn candles! Another dinner date wasted. Will never get lucky unless I can ‘set the mood’ w/o setting bed on fire.10:01 PM November 11, 1877

New Methods of Production

• Interchangeable parts: identical components that could be used in place of one another.– Simplified both the assembly and repair

• Assembly line: workers add parts to a product that moves along a belt from one work station to the next– Made production faster and cheaper– Lowered the price of goods– Took joy out of the work

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0YGF5R9i53A&feature=related

http://videos.howstuffworks.com/discovery/31814-industrial-revelations-bessemer-converter-video.htm

FordTough Henry Ford @AssemblyLine Dudes, where’s my cars?

10:12 AM December 10, 1908

Advances in Transportation• Steamships

• Transcontinental railroad stretched from the Atlantic to the Pacific

• Nikolaus Otto: 1st gasoline-powered engine

• Henry Ford: made the U.S. a leader in the automobile industry

1886 Karl Benz, 1st Automobile

Gottlieb Daimler’s Automobile

Airplanes!

• Made possible by the Otto’s engine

• 1903, Orville, & Wilbur Wright– Kitty Hawk, NC– Flying machine only stayed aloft for a few

seconds– Ushered in the air age– Commercial passenger travel did not begin

until the 1920s.

FlyBoy Wilber Wright I believe I can fly.

I believe I can touch the sky.

I think about it every night and day.10:04 PM December 16, 1903

Communication

• Samuel Morse: Telegraph (1844)-Trans-Atlantic cable

between Europe & N. America

• Alexander Graham Bell (1876) : Telephone

• Guglielmo Marconi: radio (1901)

AlexGB Alexander Graham Bell Sick of chatting with @Watson, but he’s the only other person with a phone.

11:03 AM March 20, 1876

… -- Samuel Morse .. / ..-. .- .-. - . -.. LOL

7:40 PM September 10, 1837

Rise of Big Business• New technology required more $!

• Owners sold stock to investors to get money– Stock: shares in a company – Stockholders = owner of a tiny part of the

company– Corporations: businesses that are owned by

many investors who buy shares of stock• Able to expand into many areas

Monopolies

• Powerful business leaders created monopolies & trusts– Huge corporate structures that controlled entire

industries or areas of the economy

• John D. Rockefeller: Standard Oil Company– Dominated the American petroleum industry

30Rock John D. Rockefeller Someday, I’ll be as rich as Jay-Z. #hov

6:35 PM January 30, 1868

Move Toward Regulation

• With competition gone, they were free to raise prices

• Group of corporations would join and form a cartel– Cartel: an association to fix prices, set production quotas,

or control markets

Move Toward Regulation

• “Captains of Industry” vs. “Robber Barons”• Reformers wanted laws to prevent monopolies

and regulate large corporations• Political & economic power of business leaders

hindered efforts at regulation

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