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Modern World History 3.1 Oh, to Industrialize in England 143 Views


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Description:

Sure, we owe the conveniences of modern life to the Industrial Revolution, but it still had its fair share of problems. 

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

While we credit the Industrial Revolution with finally shoving our world into the beautiful neon glow of modernity,

00:10

it wasn't all fuzzy kittens and unicorns with rainbow tails.

00:14

Let's break it down.

00:15

The Industrial Revolution first

00:16

revved its engine in England in 1775.

00:19

That was the year a Scottish mechanical engineer named

00:22

James Watt took Thomas Newcomen's

00:24

1712 version of the steam engine,

00:27

fiddled with the separate condenser, switched the machine over to rotary motion, and...

00:32

Voila. Life got easier for a whole lot of people.

00:35

For the first time, products, like clothing, were being turned out in mass quantities.

00:39

Imagine: no more flipping your dirty tighty-whities inside out so you could get another day's wear out of them.

00:44

Unless you're lazy, well then, keep on keeping on.

00:46

Building materials were also abruptly in abundance,

00:49

thanks to the inventor Henry Bessemer.

00:52

The Bessemer process involved blowing air through iron to create steel. Lots and lots and lots of steel.

00:58

This enabled businessmen to construct everything from skyscrapers to Superman.

01:03

And how did the folks of this era get in touch with one another to talk about the very latest whatchamacallits and doohickeys?

01:09

Not with letters. Those were so 1836.

01:12

Instead, people turned to portrait-painter Samuel Morse,

01:16

who is less known today for his artwork than he is

01:18

for Morse code and the single-wire telegraph system.

01:22

And fun fact:

01:23

Thomas Edison, who would go on to invent pretty much

01:26

everything, except alternating current, got his start as a telegraph operator.

01:30

So, yeah, life was good.

01:31

Ships didn't have to wait on the wind anymore

01:33

to get from Point A to Point B.

01:35

Travelers could take trains instead of horses to their destination.

01:39

Farmhands had the option of leaving the fields where they'd worked for pennies a day,

01:43

to work in a factory for...pennies a day.

01:46

But not every invention produced during the Industrial Revolution was pure magic for everyone involved.

01:52

Take Eli Whitney's cotton gin.

01:54

Sure, this 1793 product of mechanical genius made the

01:58

mass production of cotton, and therefore clothing, possible.

02:02

However, the cotton gin also expanded slavery in the American South.

02:06

Planters wanted to make more money, which meant they needed to grow more cotton lickety-split, which meant they needed more slaves to plant and pick in the fields.

02:14

Stellar job there, Eli.

02:16

Furthermore, the marvelous machines of the Industrial Revolution couldn't prevent major societal upheaval.

02:21

For example, factory conditions were bad and often downright dangerous.

02:26

As cities grew more and more crowded, the lack of sanitation sparked frequent and deadly epidemics.

02:32

Families came apart at the seams as parents died or were forced to work endless hours on factory floors to make ends meet.

02:39

We owe the conveniences of modern life to the Industrial Revolution.

02:42

Seriously, there are cities in this country that couldn't function without air conditioning.

02:46

But the Industrial Revolution, awesome as it was, had its fair share of problems, some of which are still hanging around.

02:52

Here's looking at you, climate change. Here's looking at you.

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