РефератыИностранный языкInIndustrial Revolution Essay Research Paper A report

Industrial Revolution Essay Research Paper A report

Industrial Revolution Essay, Research Paper


A report concerning critical thinking and the Industrial Revolution.


The 18th century brought about many changes to European countries.


Advancements in science, technology and engineering brought about an


improvement in living conditions to the widespread area. The improved living


conditions induced an increase of population by the millions. From


1750-1800, the English population grew from 6 to 9 million and the French


population grew from 19 to an enormous increase of 26 million. Stricter


sanitation came about decreasing the amount of disease drastically. Food


became cheaper because of increased purchases. Items that once considered


luxuries became necessities. Sugar, chocolate, coffee, tea, and furs changed


into household items instead of extravagances only the very wealthy could


afford. Even the poor were able to afford new vegetables, such as potatoes


and carrots, and cotton and linen clothing. The increase in population also


brought about the demanding for the increase of goods. In order to meet the


needs of the countries, vendors, store owners and merchants were forced into


large scale production of their merchandise.


The creation of factories came about by retailers struggling to meet the


requirements of the masses surrounding them. The formation of power driven


machinery was launched in order to compete with others. The machinery turned


out products by the thousands or even millions depending on the needs of the


country. The first factories were relatively small in scale, but there were


also large employers who had a few thousand. The factory system destroyed


the great majority of old hand trades because the desire for hand crafted


materials was decreased due to the expense and the slow creation process.


Some farmers abandoned their farming because of the changing conditions and


began working at factories for low wages.


The Industrial Revolution brought about a new way of distributing goods. It


made production quicker, more efficient and cost effective. All people


thought the advancements made created a better environment surrounding them,


but the workers in the factories were frequently plagued by ailments received


while working in dangerous conditions that came with the job. People may say


that the Industrial Revolution was a great time in history where living


conditions of all were better, but in actuality many became unhealthy because


of unpleasant working conditions. In effect, the Revolution did more harm


then it did help.


School children were taught that they were to keep busy in their work


because of the consequences facing them in the lines of a simple school hymn


which say, ?In works of labour or of skill I would be busy too; For Satan


finds some mischief for idle hands to do. (Isaac Watts, Divine and Moral


Songs for Children 1869) This document very reliable not only because an


author and date are provided, but because it is probably wide known


throughout England since it is a hymn taught to the children of the middle


class.


Workers during the Industrial Revolution often felt overworked because of


the long, stressful hours placed upon them by their employers. A Manchester


spinner explains that they are ?locked up in factories eight stories high,


(the worker) has no relaxation till the ponderous engine stops, and then they


go home to get refreshed for the next day; no time for sweet association with


their families; they are all alike fatigued and exhausted.? (Black Dwarf,


1818) This document highlights good points surrounding the overworking of


the workers, but since there is no name, the reliability of the document is


decreased greatly. There was a great deal of back breaking work that workers


were forced to do during continuous and strenuous hours.


This did not happen during the whole period of industrialization, but began


when the introduction of machines such as the steam engine explains the


spinner. They say that when steam engines were incorporated, ?workmen lost


their power over their labor? implying that they needed now to keep up with


the machine?s pace instead of their own. Not only did factory workers feel


overworked, many other occupations felt the strain put on them by their


unending hours. A miner in Germany also explains ?my forehead burns like


fire… when it becomes unbearable I stop my slow, energyless working.? This


document is highly unreliable because it lacks a citation of where it is


from. It also lacks a specific date. We were given the timing of this


excerpt to a vague time of ?early in the twentieth century.? Both documents


display the objection to the long hours put in by workers , but they do have


a reason to distort information in order to get others to sympathize with


them. Some professional people also agreed that the ceaseless toiling was


unhealthy for the workers. A doctor?s report on Manchester textile workers


declares that ?prolonged and exhausting labour, continued from day to day,


and from year to year, is not calculated to develop the intellectual or moral


faculties of man… to condemn man to such severity of toil is, in some


measu

re, to cultivate him in the habits of an animal.? (The Moral and


Physical Conditions of the Working Classes ?Employed in Cotton Manufacture in


Manchester, 1832) Since this document includes a full citation including the


author, the publication, and a date, it can be considered a reliable source.


There is little reason for a doctor to distort the information because his


position looks out for the wellness of man. If we had known more about the


social life of the doctor we may find that he may have acquaintances in the


industry giving him great reason to distort if he wanted to help his friends


in the factory system. This can work both ways because the doctor could have


friends that worked the long hours in the factories and he didn?t enjoy their


abuse.


Owners and those employing the workers have a totally different view on the


treatment of the employees. For example, the owner of a textile factory in


Lille, France feels that ?it is simply false to equate the hours of work in


our factories with arduous work.? (From Archives Nationales de France, 1837)


He also says his workers ?put in ninety hours a week, but he is lucky to get


seventy-two hours of work from them.? The owners and manufacturers have


presumed that all their workers were lazy without really thinking about how


their workers felt about the prolonged hours that they labor. They have


expressed that workers do not really care for what they are doing by


explaining ?they show little concern for maintaining their skill or


productivity, for they believe they are pushed to produce more than men ought


to produce in any event.? (Collected Sources on the History of the Social


Management– Worker Agreements in Industry in the Ruhr Area, 1888) This


excerpt is from a management report created by a Ruhr coal mining company.


This document could be considered highly reliable because it is a publicized


source with a name and date, but since there is reason for the management to


distort evidence to get others on their side of thinking that all the workers


are lazy.


During this time period child labor was very prevalent because factory


owners knew that children as workers could be paid much less than an adult.


Children in orphanages were often hired and forced to work for hours much


longer than any child should be able to bear. Some children were chained to


their machinery so they did not run off, and usually they were looked in


rooms at night so they were unable to escape the harshness of their work


life. They were all tired and lacked the ability to participate in


recreational activities or be in the company of their families. One child


laborer in a British textile mill said in a recollection ?I shall never


forget the fatigue often felt before the day ended, and all the anxiety of us


all to be relieved from the unvarying and irksome toil we had gone through


before we could obtain relief by such play and amusement as restorted to when


liberated from our work.? (The Curse of the Factory System, 1836) This


document could be consider quite unreliable because it is a recollection of


what happened many years before the account was taken. Recollections occur


when the author recalls events that have taken place many years beforehand.


The differences in the time of the occurrence and the time of the account


often arises in information that has been forgotten or modified because the


author can?t quite remember all the facts correctly. There is a name and


date to supplement the citation of the source making this to be a highly


reliable document had it been accounted for years before it was. A textile


manufacturer said they had ?never seen a child in ill-humour. They seemed to


be always cheerful and alert, taking pleasure in the light of play of their


muscles-enjoying the mobility natural to their age.? (Philosophy of


Manufactures, 1835) This document is reliable because it includes the name


of the author, date and title of the source, but there is reason for the


manufacturer to distort because they want to convey a feeling of the


children?s enjoyment of the long hours in the crowded and dark places.


During the years of the Industrial Revolution, the advancements made were


thought to be great feats that only bettered the Europeans way of life.


Reality proves, though, that the advancements often came with consequences.


A factory worker?s general well-being was challenged by the long hours


worked in conditions confirmed to be hazardous to one?s health. At the time,


all was good, but years later the effects of the toils are still felt in


today?s society.


A Document Based Essay Question:


Compare middle class and working class attitudes and its effects


on the worker in nineteenth-century Western Europe. Did any attitudes


cross social class lines?


Jen Guy


June 3. 1997


Modern World


1. Ford, Colin. and Brian Harrison. A Hundred Years Ago. Great Britain:


Harvard University Press, 1983.


2. Langer, William. A Survey of European Civilization. Boston: Houghton


Mifflin Co., 1958.


3. Mingay, G. E. The Transformation of Britain. England: Broadway House,


1986.

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