Author: Lewis Hackett Date: 1992
Industrialization: The First Phase

Most products people
in the industrialized nations use today are turned out swiftly by
the process of mass production, by people (and sometimes, robots)
working on assembly lines using power-driven machines. People of
ancient and medieval times had no such products. They had to spend
long, tedious hours of hand labor even on simple objects. The
energy, or power, they employed in work came almost wholly from
their own and animals' muscles. The Industrial Revolution is the
name given the movement in which machines changed people's way of
life as well as their methods of manufacture.
About the time of the American
Revolution, the people of England began to use machines to make
cloth and steam engines to run the machines. A little later they
invented locomotives. Productivity began a spectacular climb. By
1850 most Englishmen were laboring in industrial towns and Great
Britain had become the workshop of the world. From Britain the
Industrial Revolution spread gradually throughout Europe and to the
United States.
Changes That Led to the Revolution
The most important of the changes that
brought about the Industrial Revolution were (1) the invention of
machines to do the work of hand tools; (2) the use of steam, and
later of other kinds of power, in place of the muscles of human
beings and of animals; and (3) the adoption of the factory system.
It is almost impossible to imagine what the
world would be like if the effects of the Industrial Revolution were
swept away. Electric lights would go out. Automobiles and airplanes
would vanish. Telephones, radios, and television would disappear
Most of the abundant stocks on the shelves of department stores
would be gone. The children of the poor would have little or no
schooling and would work from dawn to dark on the farm or in the
home. Before machines were invented, work by children as well as by
adults was needed in order to provide enough food, clothing, and
shelter for all.
The Industrial Revolution came gradually.
It happened in a short span of time, however, when measured against
the centuries people had worked entirely by hand. Until John Kay
invented the flying shuttle in 1733 and James Hargreaves the
spinning jenny 31 years later, the making of yarn and the weaving of
cloth had been much the same for thousands of years. By 1800 a host
of new and faster processes were in use in both manufacture and
transportation.
This relatively sudden change in the way
people live deserves to be called a revolution. It differs from a
political revolution in its greater effects on the lives of people
and in not coming to an end, as, for example, did the French
Revolution.
Instead, the Industrial Revolution grew
more powerful each year as new inventions and manufacturing
processes added to the efficiency of machines and increased
productivity. Indeed, since World War I the mechanization of
industry has increased so enormously that another revolution in
production is taking place
Expanding Commerce Affects Industry
Commerce and industry have always been
closely related. Sometimes one is ahead and sometimes the other, but
the one behind is always trying to catch up. Beginning in about
1400, world commerce grew and changed so greatly that writers
sometimes use the term "commercial revolution" to describe the
economic progress of the next three and a half centuries.
Many factors helped bring about this
revolution in trade. The Crusades opened up the riches of the East
to Western Europe. America was discovered, and European nations
began to acquire rich colonies there and elsewhere. New trade routes
were opened. The strong central governments which replaced the
feudal system began to protect and help their merchants. Trading
firms, such as the British East India Company, were chartered by
governments. Larger ships were built, and flourishing cities grew
up.
With the expansion of trade, more money was
needed. Large-scale commerce could not be carried on by barter, as
much of the earlier trade had been. Gold and silver from the New
World helped meet this need. Banks and credit systems developed. By
the end of the 17th century Europe had a large accumulation of
capital. Money had to be available before machinery and steam
engines could come into wide use for they were costly to manufacture
and install.
By 1750 large quantities of goods were
being exchanged among the European nations, and there was a demand
for more goods than were being produced. England was the leading
commercial nation, and the manufacture of cloth was its leading
industry.
Organizing Production
Several systems of making goods had grown
up by the time of the Industrial Revolution. In country districts
families produced most of the food, clothing, and other articles
they used, as they had done for centuries. In the cities merchandise
was made in shops much like those of the medieval craftsmen, and
manufacturing was strictly regulated by the guilds and by the
government. The goods made in these shops, though of high quality,
were limited and costly.
The merchants needed cheaper items, as well as larger quantities, for their growing trade. As early as the 15th century they already had begun to go outside the cities, beyond the reach of the hampering regulations, and to establish another system of producing goods.
The merchants needed cheaper items, as well as larger quantities, for their growing trade. As early as the 15th century they already had begun to go outside the cities, beyond the reach of the hampering regulations, and to establish another system of producing goods.
From Cottage Industry to Factory
Cloth merchants, for instance, would buy
raw wool from the sheep owners, have it spun into yarn by farmers'
wives, and take it to country weavers to be made into textiles.
These country weavers could manufacture the cloth more cheaply than
city craftsmen could because they got part of their living from
their gardens or small farms.
The merchants would then collect the cloth
and give it out again to finishers and dyers. Thus they controlled
clothmaking from start to finish. Similar methods of organizing and
controlling the process of manufacture came to prevail in other
industries, such as the nail, cutlery, and leather goods.
Some writers call this the putting-out
system. Others call it the domestic system because the work was done
in the home ("domestic" comes from the Latin word for home). Another
term is cottage industry, for most of the workers belonged to the
class of farm laborers known as cotters and carried on the work in
their cottages.
This system of industry had several
advantages over older systems. It gave the merchant a large supply
of manufactured articles at a low price. It also enabled him to
order the particular kinds of items that he needed for his markets.
It provided employment for every member of a craft worker's family
and gave jobs to skilled workers who had no capital to start
businesses for themselves. A few merchants who had enough capital
had gone a step further. They brought workers together under one
roof and supplied them with spinning wheels and looms or with the
implements of other trades. These establishments were factories,
though they bear slight resemblance to the factories of today.
Why the Revolution Began in England
English merchants were leaders in
developing a commerce which increased the demand for more goods. The
expansion in trade had made it possible to accumulate capital to use
in industry. A cheaper system of production had grown up which was
largely free from regulation.
There also were new ideas in England which
aided the movement. One of these was the growing interest in
scientific investigation and invention. Another was the doctrine of
laissez-faire, or letting business alone. This doctrine had been
growing in favor throughout the 18th century. It was especially
popular after the British economist Adam Smith argued powerfully for
it in his great work 'The Wealth of Nations' (1776).
For centuries the craft guilds and the
government had controlled commerce and industry down to the smallest
detail. Now many Englishmen had come to believe that it was better
to let business be regulated by the free play of supply and demand
rather than by laws. Thus the English government for the most part
kept its hands off and left business free to adopt the new
inventions and the methods of production which were best suited to
them.
The most important of the machines that
ushered in the Industrial Revolution were invented in the last third
of the 18th century. Earlier in the century, however, three
inventions had been made which opened the way for the later
machines. One was the crude, slow-moving steam engine built by
Thomas Newcomen (1705), which was used to pump water out of mines.
The second was John Kay's flying shuttle (1733). It enabled one
person to handle a wide loom more rapidly than two persons could
operate it before. The third was a frame for spinning cotton thread
with rollers, first set up by Lewis Paul and John Wyatt (1741).
Their invention was not commercially practical, but it was the first
step toward solving the problem of machine spinning.
Inventions in Textile Industry
As the flying shuttle sped up weaving, the
demand for cotton yarn increased. Many inventors set to work to
improve the spinning wheel. James Hargreaves, a weaver who was also
a carpenter, patented his spinning jenny in 1770. It enabled one
worker to run eight spindles instead of one.
About the same time Richard Arkwright
developed his water frame, a machine for spinning with rollers
operated by water power. In 1779 Samuel Crompton, a spinner,
combined Hargreaves' jenny and Arkwright's roller frame into a
spinning machine, called a mule. It produced thread of greater
fineness and strength than the jenny or the roller frame. Since the
roller frame and the mule were large and heavy, it became the
practice to install them in mills, where they could be run by water
power. They were tended by women and children.
These improvements in spinning machinery
called for further improvements in weaving. In 1785 Edmund
Cartwright patented a power loom. In spite of the need for it,
weaving machinery came into use very slowly. First, many
improvements had to be made before the loom was satisfactory.
Second, the hand weavers violently opposed its adoption because it
threw many of them out of work. Those who got jobs in the factories
were obliged to take the same pay as unskilled workers. Thus they
rioted, smashed the machines, and tried to prevent their use. The
power loom was only coming into wide operation in the cotton
industry by 1813. It did not completely replace the hand loom in
weaving cotton until 1850. It was not well adapted to the making of
some woolens. As late as 1880 many hand looms were still in use for
weaving woolen cloth.
Many other machines contributed to the
progress of the textile industry. In 1785 Thomas Bell of Glasgow
invented cylinder printing of cotton goods. This was a great
improvement on block printing. It made successive impressions of a
design "join up" and did the work more rapidly and more cheaply. In
1793 the available supply of cotton was increased by Eli Whitney's
invention of the cotton gin. In 1804 J.M. Jacquard, a Frenchman,
perfected a loom on which patterns might be woven in fabrics by
mechanical means. This loom was later adapted to the making of lace,
which became available to everyone
Watt's Steam Engine
While textile machinery was developing,
progress was being made in other directions. In 1763 James Watt, a
Scottish mechanic, was asked to repair a model of a Newcomen steam
engine. He saw how crude and inefficient it was and by a series of
improvements made it a practical device for running machinery.
Wheels turned by running water had been the chief source of power for the early factories. These were necessarily situated on swift-running streams. When the steam engine became efficient, it was possible to locate factories in more convenient places.
Wheels turned by running water had been the chief source of power for the early factories. These were necessarily situated on swift-running streams. When the steam engine became efficient, it was possible to locate factories in more convenient places.
Coal and Iron
The first users of steam engines were the
coal and iron industries. They were destined to be basic industries
in the new age of machinery. As early as 1720 many steam engines
were in operation. In coal mines they pumped out the water which
usually flooded the deep shafts. In the iron industry they pumped
water to create the draft in blast furnaces.
The iron industry benefited also from other early inventions of the 18th century. Iron was scarce and costly, and production was falling off because England's forests could not supply enough charcoal for smelting the ore. Ironmasters had long been experimenting with coal as a fuel for smelting. Finally the Darby family, after three generations of effort, succeeded with coal that had been transformed into coke. This created a new demand for coal and laid the foundation for the British coal industry. The next great steps were taken in the 1780s, when Henry Cort developed the processes of puddling and rolling. Puddling produced nearly pure malleable iron. Hand in hand with the adoption of the new inventions went the rapid development of the factory system of manufacture.
The iron industry benefited also from other early inventions of the 18th century. Iron was scarce and costly, and production was falling off because England's forests could not supply enough charcoal for smelting the ore. Ironmasters had long been experimenting with coal as a fuel for smelting. Finally the Darby family, after three generations of effort, succeeded with coal that had been transformed into coke. This created a new demand for coal and laid the foundation for the British coal industry. The next great steps were taken in the 1780s, when Henry Cort developed the processes of puddling and rolling. Puddling produced nearly pure malleable iron. Hand in hand with the adoption of the new inventions went the rapid development of the factory system of manufacture.
Changing Conditions in England
The new methods increased the amount of
goods produced and decreased the cost. The worker at a machine with
100 spindles on it could spin 100 threads of cotton more rapidly
than 100 workers could on the old spinning wheels. Southern planters
in the United States were able to meet the increased demand for raw
cotton because they were using the cotton gin. This machine could do
the job of 50 men in cleaning cotton. Similar improvements were
being made in other lines of industry. British merchants no longer
found it a problem to obtain enough goods to supply their markets.
On the contrary, at times the markets were glutted with more goods
than could be sold. Then mills were closed and workers were thrown
out of employment.
With English factories calling for
supplies, such as American cotton, and sending goods to all parts of
the world, better transportation was needed. The roads of England
were wretchedly poor and often impassable. Packhorses and wagons
crawled along them, carrying small loads. Such slow and inadequate
transportation kept the cost of goods high. Here again the need
produced the invention. Thomas Telford and John MacAdam each
developed a method of road construction better than any that had
been known since the ancient Romans built their famous roads.
Building Canals and Railways
Many canals were dug. They connected the
main rivers and so furnished a network of waterways for transporting
coal and other heavy goods. A canalboat held much more than a wagon.
It moved smoothly if slowly over the water, with a single horse
hitched to the towline. In some places, where it was impossible to
dig canals and where heavy loads of coal had to be hauled, mine
owners laid down wooden or iron rails. On these early railroads one
horse could haul as much coal as 20 horses could on ordinary roads.
Early in the 19th century came George Stephenson's locomotive and Robert Fulton's steamboat, an American invention. They marked the beginning of modern transportation on land and sea. Railroads called for the production of more goods, for they put factory-made products within reach of many more people at prices they could afford to pay.
Early in the 19th century came George Stephenson's locomotive and Robert Fulton's steamboat, an American invention. They marked the beginning of modern transportation on land and sea. Railroads called for the production of more goods, for they put factory-made products within reach of many more people at prices they could afford to pay.
The Condition of Labor
As conditions in industry changed, social
and political conditions changed with them. Farm laborers and
artisans flocked to the manufacturing centers and became industrial
workers. Cities grew rapidly, and the percentage of farmers in the
total population declined.
The population of England as a whole began
to increase rapidly after the middle of the 18th century. Because of
progress in medical knowledge and sanitation, fewer people died in
infancy or childhood and the average length of life increased.
Far-reaching changes were gradually brought
about in the life of the industrial workers. For one thing, machines
took a great burden of hard work from the muscles of human beings.
Some of the other changes, however, were not so welcome.
The change from domestic industry to the
factory system meant a loss of independence to the worker. The home
laborer could work whenever he pleased. Although the need for money
often drove him to toil long hours, he could vary the monotony of
his task by digging or planting his garden patch. When he became a
factory employee, he not only had to work long hours, but he had to
leave his little farm. He lived near the factory, often in a crowded
slum district. He was forced to work continuously at the pace set by
the machine. The long hours and the monotonous toil were an
especially great hardship for the women and children. The vast
majority of the jobs were held by them by 1816.
The change was particularly hard on the
weavers and the other skilled workers who sank to the position of
factory workers. They had been independent masters, capitalists in a
small way, and managers of their own businesses. They had pride in
their skill. When they saw themselves being forced into factories to
do other men's bidding for the same pay as unskilled workers, it is
no wonder that they rioted and broke up looms.
Problems of Capital and Labor
A person had to have a lot of capital to
buy machines and open a factory. Those who were successful made huge
profits with which to buy more machines, put up larger buildings,
and purchase supplies in greater quantities at enormous savings.
Thus capital increased far more rapidly than it ever had before.
Much of it was invested in building canals, railroads, and
steamships and in developing foreign trade. The men who controlled
these enterprises formed a powerful new class in England--the
industrial capitalists.
The capitalists had a struggle to obtain a
voice in the government. They needed a better system of banking,
currency, and credit. They had to find and hold markets for their
products. They had many difficulties in organizing their factories
to run efficiently. They also had to make a profit on their
investments in the face of intense competition.
Laissez-faire was the rule in England. This
meant that the government had accepted the doctrine that it should
keep hands off business. Factory owners could therefore arrange
working conditions in whatever way they pleased. Grave problems
arose for the workers--problems of working hours, wages,
unemployment, accidents, employment of women and children, and
housing conditions.
Children could tend most of the machines as
well as older persons could, and they could be hired for less pay.
Great numbers of them were worked form 12 to 14 hours a day under
terrible conditions. Many were apprenticed to the factory owners and
housed in miserable dormitories. Ill-fed and ill-clothed, they were
sometimes driven under the lash of the overseer. The high death rate
of these child slaves eventually roused Parliament to pass laws
limiting the daily toil for apprentices.
Rise of Labor Unions
Workers sought to win improved conditions
and wages through labor unions. These unions often started as
"friendly societies" that collected dues from workers and extended
aid during illness or unemployment. Soon, however, they became
organizations for winning improvements by collective bargaining and
strikes.
Industrial workers also sought to benefit
themselves by political action. They fought such legislation as the
English laws of 1799 and 1800 forbidding labor organizations. They
campaigned to secure laws which would help them. The struggle by
workers to win the right to vote and to extend their political power
was one of the major factors in the spread of democracy during the
19th century.
Revolution Spreads to the United States
Until 1815 France was busy with the
Napoleonic wars. It had little opportunity to introduce machinery.
When peace came France began to follow England. It followed slowly,
however, and has never devoted itself as exclusively to
manufacturing as England has. Belgium was ahead of France in
adopting the new methods. The other European countries made little
progress until the second half of the 19th century.
The United States too was slow in adopting
machine methods of manufacture. Farming and trading were its chief
interests until the Civil War. The new nation had little capital
with which to buy the machinery and put up the buildings required.
Such capital as existed was largely invested in shipping and
commerce. Labor was scarce because men continued to push westward,
clearing the forests and establishing themselves on the land.
A start in manufacturing, however, was made
in New England in 1790 by Samuel Slater. An employee of Arkwright's
spinning mills, Slater came to the United States in 1789. He was
hired by Moses Brown of Providence, R. I., to build a mill on the
Pawtucket, or Seekonk, River. English laws forbade export of either
the new machinery or plans for making it. Slater designed the
machine from memory and built a mill which started operation in
1790. When the Napoleonic wars and the War of 1812 upset commerce
and made English products difficult to obtain, more American
investors began to build factories.
Pioneer Industries and Inventions
New England soon developed an important
textile industry. It had swift streams for power and a humid
climate, which kept cotton and wool fibers in condition for spinning
and weaving. In Pennsylvania iron for machines, tools, and guns was
smelted in stone furnaces. They burned charcoal, plentiful in this
forested land. Spinning machines driven by steam were operating in
New York by 1810. The first practical power loom was installed at
Waltham, Mass., by Francis Cabot Lowell in 1814. Shoemaking was
organized into a factory system of production in Massachusetts in
the early 19th century. New England was the first area in the United
States to industrialize.
American inventors produced many new
machines that could be applied to industry as well as to
agriculture. Oliver Evans designed a steam engine more powerful than
that of James Watt. Engineers quickly adopted the new engine and
used it to power locomotives and steamboats.
Cyrus McCormick invented several machines
used to mechanize farming. His mechanical reaper, patented in 1834,
revolutionized harvesting, making it quicker and easier. Elias
Howe's sewing machine eased the life of the housewife and made the
manufacture of clothing less expensive.
Techniques of factory production were
refined in American workshops. Eli Whitney led the movement to
standardize parts used in manufacture. They became interchangeable,
enabling unskilled workers to assemble products from boxes of parts
quickly. American factories used machine tools to make parts. These
machines were arranged in lines for more efficient production. This
was called the "American system of manufacturing," and it was
admired by all other industrial nations. It was first applied to the
manufacture of firearms and later spread to other industries like
clock and lock making.
Second Industrial Revolution
The machines of the Industrial Revolution
in the 18th and early 19th centuries were simple, mechanical devices
compared with the industrial technology that followed. Many new
products were devised, and important advances were made in the
system of mass production. Changes in industry were so great that
the period after 1860 has been called the Second Industrial
Revolution. New scientific knowledge was applied to industry as
scientists and engineers unlocked the secrets of physics and
chemistry. Great new industries were founded on this scientific
advance: steel, chemicals, and petroleum benefited from new
understandings of chemistry; breakthroughs in the study of
electricity and magnetism provided the basis for a large electrical
industry. These new industries were larger and more productive than
any industries existing before. Germany and the United States became
the leaders, and by the end of the 19th century they were
challenging Great Britain in the world market for industrial goods.
The age of electricity began in 1882 when
Thomas A. Edison introduced a system of electric lighting in New
York City. Electricity was later applied to driving all kinds of
machinery as well as powering locomotives and streetcars. Electric
lighting quickly spread across the United States and was soon
adopted in Europe. The electrical industry was dominated by large
companies that developed new products and then manufactured and
marketed them. These companies were based in Germany and the United
States but sold their goods all over the world. They were the first
multinational companies. Companies like Westinghouse and General
Electric helped to electrify cities in Europe, Africa, and South
America.
The steel and chemical industries used new
technology that greatly increased production. The size of factories
increased rapidly, employing more workers and using more machinery.
These industries integrated all stages of production under a single
corporate structure. They bought out competitors and acquired
sources of raw materials and retail outlets. Corporations such as
U.S. Steel and Standard Oil controlled all stages of manufacturing
the product, from mining and drilling to delivering it to the
customer. This gave them great economic power, and the United States
government took measures to limit their monopolies in steel and
petroleum.
The larger size of business presented great
challenges to managers who administered enormous organizations with
many branches and subsidiaries. Advances in communications and
transportation helped decision makers to maintain control. The
electric telegraph was invented by Samuel Morse in 1844 and was used
to relay commercial information about prices and markets. It was
used in the stock exchanges and on the railway systems. Alexander
Graham Bell patented his telephone in 1876, and networks of
telephone lines were built quickly across the United States.
The telephone became a useful tool for
managers to keep in contact with the widely dispersed parts of their
businesses. New methods of management were devised that stressed
central control, planning, and efficient production methods. One of
the leading advocates of "scientific management" was Frederick
Winslow Taylor.
The Second Industrial Revolution marked
great progress in the methods of mass production. More and more
industries used interchangeable parts and machine tools. Electric
power replaced steam power in factories; it was cheaper, faster, and
more flexible. It allowed machine tools to be arranged more
efficiently. Human power was replaced by machine power. In 1913
Henry Ford introduced the assembly line in the manufacture of his
Model T Ford. Parts were assembled on a moving conveyor belt, and
the Model T took shape as it moved from one work station to the
next. The assembly line greatly increased the speed of manufacture
and soon was used in many industries.
By the outbreak of World War I in 1914,
only a small number of industries in the most industrialized nations
of the world had adopted advanced production methods and
organization. Much of the world had not yet begun a first industrial
revolution. Russia, Canada, Italy, and Japan were just beginning to
industrialize.
Only Great Britain, the United States,
Germany, France, and some parts of the Scandinavian countries had
successfully completed an industrial revolution. Most of the world's
population still worked in primitive agricultural economies. China,
India, and Spain did not begin to industrialize until well into the
20th century.
http://history-world.org/Industrial%20Intro.htm
http://history-world.org/Industrial%20Intro.htm
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