The Industrial Revolution. Industrial Diffusion How do industrial regionalization, uneven development, and core-periphery patterns come to exist?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Industrial Revolution.
Advertisements

The Cottage Industry and Early Capitalism Merchants’ Role in Cottage Industry Supplied materials – wool and cotton – to cottages to be carded and spun.
The Rise of Industrialism
A New Kind of Revolution
Rise of Industrialism M. Gonzalez World History. 2.1A: Traditional or Pre-Industrial Society.
The Industrial Revolution
Unit 4 Chapter 7: The Industrial Revolution Section 1: A New Kind of Revolution.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Industrial Revolution
Beginning of the Industrial Revolution HSLPS * Global III * Mr. McEntarfer.
Industry Review.
As I Enter Think about/Write out: A major North American city not on a river or with access to an ocean. Where the clothing you are wearing is.
Introduction to the Industrial Revolution
Industry Chapter 11.
The Beginnings of Industrialization
The Industrial Revolution
Beginnings of Industrialization
AP Human Geography.  What is industry?  What impacts did the Industrial Revolution have?  What regions are heavily industrial?
Innovations of the Industrial Revolution Innovations of the Industrial Revolution Preview: –What was life like in England before the Industrial Revolution?
The Industrial Revolution A.What is it? B.What led to it? C.What do you need? D.Why England? E.The Textile Industry.
History Mindset  What is the definition of revolution?
■ Essential Question: – What caused an Industrial Revolution in England in the 1800s? ■ Warm Up Question:
Dawn of the Industrial Age  For thousands of years, most of human civilization lived and worked in small farming villages.  However, in the mid-1700’s,
Industrial Revolution LT: I can describe the Industrial Revolution and how it impacted the transformation of industries today.
A New Kind of Revolution
Slide 1 Introduction to the Industrial Revolution.
Industrial Revolution Begins. Revolution in Great Britain  1700s = change in _____________________  energy source changed from ____________& ________.
Energy for the Industrial Revolution. The need for energy The need for energy –Early factories relied on horses, oxen, water mills –Factories grew and.
The Industrial Revolution
Pre-Industrial Society Farming & Cottage Industry –Inefficient land use –Not enough food to feed population –Products made in cottages Merchants supplied.
As I Enter Think about/Write out: A major North American city not on a river or with access to an ocean. Where the clothing you are wearing is.
Industrial Revolution Industrialization – The process by which a country develops machine production of goods.
The Industrial Revolution is when people stopped making stuff at home and started making stuff in factories!
Pre-Industrial Society
The Industrial Revolution How It Changed the WORLD!
Origins of the industrial revolution Pre-Industry Middle Ages-Traditional Farming Families owned strips of land for farming; there were no Fences to divide.
Industrial Revolution. Background Info  Name given to the movement in which machines replaced manual labor.  Began in Great Britain during the middle.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Chapter 21. A NEW KIND OF REVOLUTION Chapter 21.1.
Origins of the Industrial Revolution or Where Did All of These Machines Come From?
The Industrial Revolution. What was the industrial revolution? Where did it start? Why England? Why did it start? What changed as a result?
The Industrial Revolution By: Mr. Snell World History HRHS.
Industrial Revolution:
The First Industrial Revolution
A New Kind of Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution: Britain Begins Industrialization
The Industrial Revolution
Where Did Industry Originate & Where is it distributed today?
The Industrial Revolution
As I Enter Think about/Write out Agenda Homework:
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
A New Kind of Revolution
Types of Industrial Activity
The Industrial Revolution
Origins of the Industrial Revolution
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Rostow’s Stages of Development
The Industrial Revolution: Britain Begins Industrialization
A New Kind of Revolution
Beginnings of Industrialization
The Industrial Revolution
The Rise of Industrialism
Welcome back! Please take your ASSIGNED seat.
The Industrial Revolution
Introduction to the Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution: Britain Begins Industrialization
The Industrial Revolution: Britain Begins Industrialization
Pre-industrialization
Presentation transcript:

The Industrial Revolution

Industrial Diffusion How do industrial regionalization, uneven development, and core-periphery patterns come to exist?

The Industrial Revolution A.Pre-Industrialization: what did the Revolution change? 1.People had made goods for thousands of years before IR a.things made slowly (low productivity), all by hand b.workmen handled all facets of production > different quality goods c.guilds created production standards, but prices were high

The Industrial Revolution A.Pre-Industrialization: what did the Revolution change? 2.Spatial distribution a.work done at home (cottage industry) goods sold locally workers paid by the “piece” b.industry was dispersed in all locales

The Industrial Revolution (Cont) B.Why did it begin in the Great Britain? 1.capitalist system a.guilds had created a middle class of workmen b.people free to form businesses c.education d.patent system encouraged development 2.labor: a.Jethro Tull’s seed drill (1701) and other developments > improved productivity in farming > people can leave farms and work elsewhere

The Industrial Revolution (cont) B.Why did it begin in the Great Britain? (CONT) 3.raw materials (iron ore, coal) 4.rivers, canals, harbors (ease in trade) 5.small, compact size (iron and coal near rivers and harbors) 6.existing banking system (borrow $ to buy machinery) 7.stable political system 8.colonies (guaranteed markets, additional raw materials)

The Industrial Revolution (cont) C.Key developments 1.James Watt patents the steam engine (1769) a.wood replaces running water as source of energy b.changes location of machinery –was located by running water (streams, rivers) –now can be located wherever wood exists (more flexibility)

The Industrial Revolution (cont) C.Key developments (cont) 2.steam engine adapts to iron industry (iron deposits in Midlands, So. Scotland, So. Wales) a.steam engine provides steady supply of hot air for blast furnace b.ease in (s)melting iron and shaping it into “pig iron” [common size]

The Industrial Revolution (cont) C.Key developments (cont) 3.steam engine adapts to textile industry a.cotton fiber spun into thread (inefficient by hand; efficient by machine) b.thread woven into cloth with power looms in large factories

The Industrial Revolution (cont) C.Key developments (cont) 2.Steam engine adapts to iron industry (iron deposits in Midlands, So. Scotland, So. Wales) (cont) c.other industries arise from iron industry wood becomes scarce > coal > coke (factories move to coal fields) > integrated factories where iron is smelted and processed into steel need to transport coal and iron > railroad

The Industrial Revolution (cont) D.Effects 1.economic: more goods at lower prices 2.social: available labor leaves farms and clusters in cities a.urban blight, pollution b.canned food (encourages new industry) 3.political: surplus labor > mistreated workers > liberalism and communism

The Industrial Revolution (cont) D.Effects 4.technological: > railroad, steamship 5.agricultural: > 2d Agricultural Revolution a.increased productivity b.use of machinery > larger farms > enclosures 6.demographic: caused move from Stage 1 to Stage 2 of DTM

The Industrial Revolution (cont) E.Early Diffusion 1.eastward to Belgium, France, and Germany (early 1800s; delay due to Napoleonic Wars) 2.further diffusion to Italy, Netherlands, Russia and Sweden by late 1800s 3.U.S. not affected by political instability in Europe: diffusion by early 1800s a.8,000 spindles of textiles in 1808 > 80,000 spindles by 1811 b.by Civil War, U.S. was world’s 2d largest industrial power

End of Part I

Industrial Regions How can the theme of culture regions be applied to industrial activity?

Types of industrial activity A.Primary = extracting resources. Ex.? B.Secondary = processing stage. Ex? C.Tertiary = services 1.Transportation/Communication 2.Producer Services 3.Consumer Services D.Each type of industrial activity displays unique spatial patterns, or “industrial regions.”

Primary Industry A.Extract resources 1.Renewable can be used without being permanently depleted. Risk of overexploitatio n 2.Nonrenewable are depleted when used.

Secondary Industry A.A.K.A. “manufacturing” 1.Traditionally clustered together in several regions 2.Each region is specialized because each activity has certain requirements; locations are chosen based on how advantageous they are. Ex.? 3.Regional specialization  core-periphery dynamic (UNEVEN DEVELOPMENT)

Secondary Industry (cont) A.Global trends since 1950’s 1.Secondary industry declining in core countries a.Factories closing down; people out of work b.Core countries retain industries that require highly skilled or artisanal work. Ex. technopoles c.Service industry boom d.This is called deindustrialization e.Core countries entering post-industrial phase 2.Periphery countries becoming industrialized 3.Transnational corporations manage a complex business system with multiple specialized locations.  Effect of globalization.

Service Industries A.U.S., Canada, Europe and Japan = postindustrial B.Transportation/communication services 1.Services that facilitate the distribution of goods, services and information to meet the requirements of modern industry. 2.Regional differences in the relative importance of various modes of transportation. EX Russia = rails; US=highway 3.Ex.?

Service Industries (cont) A.Producer services 1.Required by those who produce goods; necessary for business growth and development a.Generally located in the core b.Require more educated labor force 2.Ex.? 3.Leads to more uneven development; industrialization of LDCs makes them more dependent upon industrial powers. 4.Information technology – growing field a.Requires skilled, creative labor force, and little land –High-tech corridors developing. Ex. “Silicon Valley”

Service Industries (cont) A.Consumer Services 1.Services aimed at keeping people healthy, educated, safe and happy. 2.Ex.?

The End