{"id":813,"date":"2023-03-23T00:30:48","date_gmt":"2023-03-23T00:30:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/chapter\/chapter-2-the-industrial-revolution-new\/"},"modified":"2023-03-24T20:23:37","modified_gmt":"2023-03-24T20:23:37","slug":"chapter-2-the-industrial-revolution-new","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/chapter\/chapter-2-the-industrial-revolution-new\/","title":{"raw":"Chapter 2: The Industrial Revolution","rendered":"Chapter 2: The Industrial Revolution"},"content":{"raw":"<h2 id=\"h.ihv636\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Big Changes<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">One of the most vexing questions for historians is how to identify the causes of nineteenth-century European dominance: how does one explain the simple fact that Europe controlled a staggering amount of territory all around the globe by 1900? \u00a0The old Eurocentric viewpoint was that there was something unique about European culture that gave it a competitive edge in the world. \u00a0The even older version, popular among Europeans themselves in the late nineteenth century, was openly racist and chauvinistic: it claimed that European civilization was the bearer of critical thought itself, of technological know-how, of piercing insight and practical sense. \u00a0All other civilizations were, in this model, regarded as either hopelessly backward or stuck in a previous stage of cultural or even biological evolution.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">That explanation was, obviously, not just self-serving but inaccurate. \u00a0Nineteenth-century Europeans rarely lived up to their own inflated view of themselves, and more to the point, their dominance was extremely short-lived. \u00a0Europe had a technological lead on most other world regions for less than a century. \u00a0The Industrial Revolution began in England in about 1750, took almost a century to spread to other parts of western Europe (a process that began in earnest around 1830), and reached maturity by the 1850s and 1860s. In turn, European industrial power was overwhelming in comparison to the rest of the world, except the United States starting in the last decades of the nineteenth century, from about 1860 - 1914. \u00a0After that, Europe\u2019s competitive edge began a steady decline, one that coincided with the collapse of its global empires after World War II.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">A more satisfying explanation for the explosion of European power than one that claims that Europeans had some kind of inherent cultural advantage has to do with energy. \u00a0For about a century, Europe and, eventually, the United States, had almost exclusive access to what amounted to unlimited energy in the form of fossil fuels. \u00a0The iconic battles toward the end of the century between rifle-wielding European soldiers and the people they conquered in Africa and parts of Asia were not just about the rifles; they were about the factories that made those rifles, the calories that fed the soldiers, the steamships that transported them there, the telegraph lines that conveyed orders for thousands of miles away, the medicines that kept them healthy, and so on, all of which represented an epochal shift from the economic and technological reality of the people trying to resist European imperialism. \u00a0All of those inventions could be produced in gigantic quantities thanks to the use of coal and, later, oil power. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">While many historians have taken issue with the term \u201crevolution\u201d in describing what was much more of a slow <span class=\"c4\">evolution <\/span>at the time, there is no question that the changes industrial technology brought about really were revolutionary. \u00a0Few things have mattered as much as the Industrial Revolution, because it fundamentally transformed almost everything about how human beings live, perhaps most strikingly including humankind\u2019s relationship with nature. \u00a0Whole landscapes can be transformed, cities constructed, species exterminated, and the entire natural ecosystem fundamentally <span class=\"c4\">changed<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> in a relatively short amount of time. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">Likewise, \u201cthe\u201d Industrial Revolution was really a linking together of distinct \u201crevolutions\u201d \u2013 technology started it, but the <span class=\"c4\">effects<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> of those technological changes were economic and social. \u00a0All of society was eventually transformed, leading to the phrase \u201cindustrial society,\u201d one in which everything is in large part based on the availability of a huge amount of cheap energy and an equally huge number of mass-produced commodities (including people, insofar as workers can be replaced). \u00a0To sum up, the Industrial Revolution was as momentous in human history as was the agricultural revolution that began civilization back in about 10,000 BCE. \u00a0Even if it was a revolution that took over a century to come to fruition, from a long-term world-historical perspective, it still qualifies as revolutionary.<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"h.32hioqz\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Geography of the Industrial Revolution<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">The Industrial Revolution occurred first in Great Britain, and that simple fact goes a long way toward explaining why Britain became the single most powerful European country of the nineteenth century. \u00a0Britain was well positioned to serve as the cradle of industrialism. \u00a0One of the background causes of the Industrial Revolution was the combination of rapidly increasing populations and more efficient agriculture providing more calories to feed that population. \u00a0Even fairly rudimentary improvements in sanitation in the first half of the eighteenth century resulted in lower infant mortality rates and lower disease rates in general. \u00a0The Little Ice Age of the early modern period ended in the eighteenth century as well, increasing crop yields. \u00a0Despite the fact that more commercially-oriented agriculture, something that was well underway in Britain by the middle of the eighteenth century, was often experienced as a disaster by peasants and farmers, the fact is that it did increase the total caloric output of crops at the same time. \u00a0In short, agriculture definitively left the subsistence model behind and became a commercial enterprise in Britain by 1800. \u00a0Thus, there was a \u201csurplus population\u201d (to quote Ebenezer Scrooge of <span class=\"c4\">A Christmas Carol<\/span><span class=\"c3\">, speaking of the urban poor) of peasants who were available to work in the first generations of factories.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6 c9\"><span class=\"c3\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"350\"]<img src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image62-5.jpg\" alt=\"Crowd of English working men outside of a factory, with a boy of about 12 years among them.\" width=\"350\" height=\"266\" \/> English workers arriving for their shift in 1900. Note the young boy on the right, employed by the factory in lieu of being in school.[\/caption]\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">In addition, Britain has abundant coal deposits concentrated in northern England. \u00a0In a very lucky coincidence for British industry, northern England in the eighteenth century was the heart of the existing British textile industry, which became the key commercial force in the early period of industrialization. \u00a0The northern English coal deposits are part of an underground band of coal that reaches across to Belgium, eastern France, and western Germany. \u00a0This stretch of land would become the industrial heartland of Europe - one can draw a line down a map of Western Europe from England stretching across the English Channel toward the Alps and trace most of the industrial centers of Europe in the first half of the nineteenth century. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Britain had coal, and the English and Scottish had long known that you could burn it and produce heat. \u00a0For many centuries, however, it was an unpopular fuel source. \u00a0Coal produces a noxious, toxic smoke, along with heaps of black ash. \u00a0It has to be mined, and coal mines in northwestern Europe tended to rapidly fill with water as they dipped below the water table, requiring cumbersome pumping systems. \u00a0In turn, conditions in those mines were extremely dangerous and difficult. \u00a0Thus, coal was only used in small amounts in England until well into the Renaissance period. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">What changed was, simply, Britain ran out of forests. \u00a0Thanks to the need for firewood and charcoal for heat, as well as timber for building (especially shipbuilding; Britain's navy consumed a vast quantity of wood in construction and repairs), Britain was forced to import huge quantities of wood from abroad by the end of the seventeenth century. \u00a0As firewood became prohibitively expensive, British people increasingly turned to coal. \u00a0Already by the seventeenth century, former prejudices against coal as dirty and distasteful had given way to the necessity of its use as a fuel source for heat. \u00a0As the Industrial Revolution began in the latter half of the eighteenth century, thanks to a series of key inventions, the vast energy capacity of coal was unleashed for the first time. \u00a0By 1815, annual British coal production yielded energy equivalent to what could be garnered from burning a hypothetical forest equal in area to all of England, Scotland, and Wales. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">There were a series of technological breakthroughs that powered the expansion of the Industrial Revolution, all of them originating in Britain. \u00a0Most importantly, a Scottish engineer named James Watt developed an efficient steam engine in 1763, which was subsequently manufactured in 1775 (Watt was not the inventor of the concept, but his design was vastly more effective than earlier versions). \u00a0Steam engines were originally used to pump water out of mines, but soon it was discovered that they could be used to substitute for water-power itself at mills, with Watt developing a rotary (spinning) mechanism tied to the engine. \u00a0In turn, this enabled the conversion of thermal energy unleashed by burning a fossil fuel like coal into kinetic energy (the energy of movement). \u00a0With a steam engine, coal did not just provide heat, it provided\r\n<span class=\"c4\">power<\/span><span class=\"c3\">. \u00a0Watt, in turn, personally invented the term \u201chorsepower\u201d in order to explain to potential customers what his machine could do. \u00a0Almost anything that moved could now be tied to coal power instead of muscle power, and thus began the vast and dramatic shift toward the modern world\u2019s dependence on fossil fuels. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The first and most important industry to benefit from coal power besides mining itself was the northern English textile industry, which harnessed steam power to drive new machines that processed the cotton and transformed it into finished cloth. \u00a0Building on various other machine breakthroughs, an inventor named Edmund Cartwright developed the power loom in 1787, the first large-scale textile machine that could process an enormous amount of cotton fiber. \u00a0By the end of the 1800s, a single \u201cmule\u201d (a spinning invention linked to steam power in 1803) could produce thread 200 to 300 times as fast as could be done by hand. \u00a0By 1850 Britain was producing 200 times as much cotton cloth than it had in 1780. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"500\"]<img src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image61-5.jpg\" alt=\"A woman worker at a power loom with a male supervisor looming over her.\" width=\"500\" height=\"345\" \/> Power looms in 1835. \u00a0Female labor was preferred by factory-owners because women could be paid less than men for doing the same work.[\/caption]\r\n<p class=\"c6\">In turn, textiles were the basis of the Industrial Revolution for straightforward practical reasons: raw material was available from the American south thanks to slave labor, and there was an <span class=\"c4\">endless<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> market for textiles all across Europe. British cloth processed by the new machines was of very high quality and, because of the vast quantity that British mills could produce, it was far cheaper than textiles produced by hand. \u00a0Thus, British cloth rapidly cornered the market everywhere in Europe, generating tremendous profits for British industrialists. \u00a0The impact on Britain\u2019s economy was enormous, as was its textile industry\u2019s growing dominance over its European rivals. \u00a0France initially tried to keep British fabric out of its own markets, but in 1786 the two kingdoms negotiated the Eden Treaty, which allowed the importation of British manufactured goods. \u00a0The result was a tidal wave of British cloth in French markets, which forced French manufacturers to implement industrial technology in their own workshops. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">In its first century, the areas in Europe that benefited the most from the Industrial Revolution were the ones closest to coal. \u00a0Besides access to coal, the other major factors driving industrial expansion in Britain were political and cultural. \u00a0The reason that Britain was far and away the leading industrial power is that its parliament was full of believers in the principles of free trade, which meant that commercial enterprises were not hampered by archaic restrictions or cultural prejudices. \u00a0Britain was also the richest society in Europe in terms of available capital: money was available through reliable, trustworthy banking institutions. \u00a0Thus, investors could build up a factory after securing loans with fair interest rates and they knew that they had a legal system that favored their enterprise. \u00a0Finally, taxes were not arbitrary or extremely high (as they were in most parts of Spain and Italy, for example).<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The other major reason that Britain enjoyed such an early and long-lasting lead in industrialization is that British elites, especially the powerful gentry class of landowners, were not hostile to commercial enterprise. \u00a0In many kingdoms on the continent, members of the nobility were banned from actively practicing commerce until the period of the French Revolution. \u00a0Even after the Napoleonic wars, when noble titles could no longer be lost by engaging in commerce, banking, or factory ownership, there remained deep skepticism and arrogance among continental nobles about the new industries. \u00a0In short, nobles often looked down on those who made their wealth not from land, but from factories. \u00a0This attitude helped to slow the advent of industrialism for decades.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The only continental region to industrialize in earnest before the 1840s was the southern swath of the Netherlands, which became the newly-created nation of Belgium in 1830 after a revolution. \u00a0That region, immediately a close ally of Great Britain, had usable waterways, coal deposits, and a skilled artisanal workforce. \u00a0By the 1830s the newly-minted country was rapidly industrializing. \u00a0Belgium\u2019s neighbor to the southwest, France, was comparatively slow to follow despite its large population and considerable overall wealth, however. \u00a0The traditional elites who dominated the restored monarchy were deeply skeptical of British-style commercial and industrial innovations. \u00a0Despite Napoleon\u2019s having established the first national bank in 1800, the banking system as a whole was rudimentary and capital was restricted. \u00a0In turn, the transportation of goods across France itself was prohibitively expensive due to the lack of navigable waterways and the existence of numerous tolls. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">There were also important cultural factors that impeded industrial expansion in France. \u00a0Whereas Britain\u2019s large population of landless rural laborers and poor peasants had little option but to seek factory work, most French peasants were independent farmers who had no interest in going to cities to work in miserable conditions. \u00a0Second, French industry had always concentrated on high-quality luxury goods, and French artisans fiercely resisted the spread of lower-quality and lower-skilled work and goods. \u00a0Industrialization was thus limited to the northeastern part of the country, which had coal deposits, until the second half of the century.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">In the German lands, it was not until the establishment of the Zollverein, a customs union, in 1834 that trade could flow freely enough to encourage industrial growth in earnest. \u00a0Following its creation, railroads spread across the various kingdoms of northern Germany. \u00a0Western Germany had extensive coal deposits, and by 1850 German industry was growing rapidly, especially in the Ruhr valley near the border with France.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Meanwhile, outside of Western Europe, there was practically no large-scale industry. \u00a0It took until the late nineteenth century for the Industrial Revolution to \"arrive\" in places like northern Italy and the cities of western Russia, with some countries like Spain missing out entirely until the twentieth century. <\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"568\"]<img src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image67-2.png\" alt=\"Chart noting the relative national outputs of various countries. The UK was in the lead until overtaken by the US around the turn of the twentieth century.\" width=\"568\" height=\"347\" \/> While the UK enjoyed the early lead in industrial manufacturing, its share of global output had dropped by 1900. \u00a0The United States became the major industrial power of the world in the first two decades of the twentieth century.\u00a0[\/caption]\r\n<h2 id=\"h.1hmsyys\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Transportation and Communication<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The Industrial Revolution began with mining and textiles, but its effects were probably most dramatic in transportation. The first experimental railroad was put in use in 1820, and the first passenger railroad followed in 1830, traveling between the industrial cities of Manchester and Liverpool in northern England. \u00a0By the middle of the century some trains could go 50 MPH, far faster than any human had ever gone before (except when falling from a great height). \u00a0About 6,500 miles of rail was built in Britain between 1830 and 1850, just 20 years, and railroad expansion soon followed suit on the continent. \u00a0The construction of railroads became a massive industry unto itself, fueling both profitable investment and the occasional disastrous financial collapse. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">Above and beyond their economic impact, railroads had a myriad of social and cultural effects. \u00a0The British developed the system of time zones, based on Greenwich (part of London) Mean Time as the \u201cdefault,\u201d because the railroads had to be coordinated to time departures and arrivals. \u00a0This was the first time when a whole country, and soon a whole continent, had to have a precise shared sense of timing.<\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Likewise, the telegraph was invented in 1830 and used initially to warn train stations when multiple trains were on the track. \u00a0Telegraphs allowed almost instant communication over huge distances - they sent a series of electrical impulses over a wire as \"long\" and \"short\" signals. \u00a0The inventor of the telegraph, Samuel Morse, invented a code based off of those signals that could be translated into letters and, as a result, be used to send messages. \u00a0Morse Code thus enabled the first modern mass communications device. \u00a0This was the first time when a message could travel faster than a messenger on horseback, vastly increasing the speed by which information could be shared and disseminated.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Simultaneously, steamships were transforming long-distance commerce. \u00a0The first sailed in 1816, going about twice as fast as the fastest sailing ship could. \u00a0This had obvious repercussions for trade, because it became cheaper to transport basic goods via steamship than it was to use locally-produced ones; this had huge impacts on agriculture and forestry, among other industries. \u00a0Soon, it became economically viable to ship grain from the United States or Russia across oceans to reach European markets. \u00a0The first transatlantic crossing was a race between two steamships going from England to New York in 1838; soon, sailing vessels became what they are today: archaic novelties.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Two other advances in transportation are often overlooked when considering industrialization: paved roads and canals. \u00a0A Scottish engineer invented a way to cheaply pave roads in the 1830s, and in the 1850s an overland, pan-European postal service was established that relied on \u201cpost roads\u201d with stations for changing horses. \u00a0Thus, well before the invention of cars, road networks were being built in parallel to railroads. \u00a0Likewise, even though canals had been around since ancient times, there was a major canal-building boom in the second half of the eighteenth century and first half of the nineteenth century. \u00a0Canals linked Manchester to coal fields, the Erie Canal was built in the US to link the Great Lakes to the eastern seaboard, and even Russia built a canal between Moscow and St. Petersburg.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">The net effect of these innovations was that travel was vastly cheaper, simpler, and faster than it\r\n<span class=\"c4\">had ever been in human history<\/span><span class=\"c3\">. \u00a0In essence, every place on earth was closer together than ever before.<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"h.41mghml\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Social Effects<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The most noteworthy transformation that occurred in quotidian life due to the Industrial Revolution was urbanization, which absolutely exploded in the nineteenth century. \u00a0Manchester, in northern England, is the quintessential example of an industrial city. \u00a0It was close to major coal deposits, it had a large textile industry, it was linked to the sea via canal as of 1761, and it had an army of artisans and laborers because of its historic role as a site of wool production. \u00a0In 1750 it had a population of 20,000, by 1775 it was 40,000, by 1831 it was 250,000, and by 1850 it was 400,000 - a 200% increase in a century.<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"746\"]<img src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image65-2.jpg\" alt=\"Black and white depiction of Manchester, with a nature scene in the foreground and the factory city in the distance.\" width=\"746\" height=\"506\" \/> View of Manchester in 1840. \u00a0While the painting is in the Romantic style, with the nature scene in the foreground, the masses of factory smokestacks are visible in the distance.[\/caption]\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The living conditions, however, were abysmal. \u00a0Whole families were crammed into one-room cellars, hovels, and cheap apartments. \u00a0Pollution produced by the new factories streamed unfiltered into the air and water. \u00a0Soot and filth covered every surface - early evolutionary biologists noted that certain moths that had a mutation that made them soot-brown survived and multiplied while their normal lightly-colored cousins died off. \u00a0To deal with the pollution, factory owners simply started building taller smokestacks, which spread the pollution farther. \u00a0Waste from mining (which was often toxic) was simply left in \u201cslag heaps,\u201d through which rainwater ran and from which toxic runoff reached water supplies. \u00a0A coal miner who entered the mines as a teenager would almost certainly be dead by \u201cmiddle age,\u201d (40 at the oldest) since his or her lungs were ridden with toxic coal dust.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Landlords in the cities took advantage of the influx of laborers and their families by building cheap tenements in which several families often lived in a single room. \u00a0There was no running water and sanitation was utterly inadequate. \u00a0Food was expensive, in part because of an 1815 act in the British Parliament called the Corn Laws that banned the importation of grain and kept prices up (the wealthy, land-owning gentry class had pushed the law through parliament). \u00a0Given the incredible squalor, epidemics were frequent. \u00a0In turn, wages were paid at a near-subsistence level until after (roughly) 1850. \u00a0Whenever there was a market downturn, sometimes lasting for years (e.g. 1839 \u2013 1842), workers were summarily fired to cut costs, and some starved as a result. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">The English poet William Blake famously referred to the factories as \u201csatanic mills.\u201d \u00a0Likewise, the English novelist Charles Dickens used the grim reality of cities like Manchester as inspiration and setting for his novels like\r\n<span class=\"c4\">Hard Times <\/span>and <span class=\"c4\">Oliver Twist<\/span>. \u00a0Since real wages did not increase among working people until fairly late in the century, the actual living conditions of the majority of the population generally <span class=\"c4\">worsened<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> in industrial regions until the second half of the century. \u00a0In Britain, laws were passed to protect horses before they were passed to protect children working in mines and factories.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The major cause of this misery was simple: the ruthless pursuit of profit by factory owners and manufacturers. \u00a0The aim of the early factory owners and managers was to simplify the stages of the manufacturing process so that they could be executed by cheap, unskilled labor. \u00a0Many skilled workers or artisans experienced the factory system as a disaster, bringing in its wake subjection to harsh work discipline, the degradation of craft skills, long hours, cheap wages, and the abuse of young women and children (who worked under the same conditions as did adult men). \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">While they had little reason to consider it, the industrial workers of northern England lived in a state of misery that was tied to another that was even worse across the Atlantic: the slave-based cotton economy of the American south which provided the raw material. \u00a0Despite the British ban on the trans-Atlantic slave trade in 1807, the existing population of African-American slaves was sustained by natural reproduction and remained locked in a position of complete legal subservience, enforced with brutal violence. \u00a0In a startling parallel, the efficiency of cotton production increased to keep pace with textile manufacturing in Britain despite the absence of major new technologies besides the invention of the cotton gin in 1794. \u00a0That increase was due to the application of ever-increasing degrees of brutality, as slaves were forced to pick and process cotton at unprecedented speed, spurred on by raw violence at the hands of overseers.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Back in Europe, one unforeseen effect of the Industrial Revolution, tied to the misery of working conditions, was the creation of social classes. \u00a0Until the modern era \u201cclass\u201d was usually something one was born into; it was a legally-recognized and enforced \u201cestate.\u201d \u00a0With industrialization, the enormous numbers of dirt-poor industrial workers began to recognize that their social identity was defined by their poverty and their working conditions, just as rich industrialists and tenement-owning slumlords recognized that they were united by their wealth and their common interest in controlling the workers. \u00a0The non-noble rich and middle class came to distinguish themselves both from the working class and the old nobility by taking pride in their morality, sobriety, work ethic, and cleanliness. \u00a0They often regarded the workers as little better than animals, but some also regarded the old nobles as corrupt, immoral, and increasingly archaic.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The middle classes that arose out of industrialization were the ranks of engineers, foremen, accountants, and bureaucrats that were in great demand for building, overseeing, and running new industrial and commercial operations. \u00a0Some were genuine \u201cself-made men\u201d who worked their way up, but most came from families with at least some wealth to begin with. \u00a0The most vulnerable group were the so-called \u201cpetty bourgeoisie,\u201d shop-owners and old-style artisans, whose economic life was precarious and who lived in constant fear of losing everything and being forced to join the working class.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">From this context, socialism, the political belief that government should be deeply invested in the welfare of the common people, emerged. \u00a0Well before mass socialist parties existed, there were struggles and even massacres over working conditions; one notorious event was the Peterloo Massacre of 1819 in which hundreds of protesting workers in Manchester were gunned down by middle-class volunteer cavalry. \u00a0Another famous group, the Luddites, destroyed factory equipment in a vain attempt to turn back the clock on industrialization and go back to hand-work by artisans.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Appalled more by the sexual impropriety of young girls and women being around male workers in mines and factories than by the working conditions per se, the British parliament did pass some laws mandating legal protections. \u00a0The Factory Act of 1833 limited child labor in cotton mills, the Miners Act of 1842 banned the employment of girls and women (and boys under 10) underground, and in 1847 a Ten Hour Law limited the workday for women and children. \u00a0These were exceptional laws; further legal protections for workers took decades and constant struggle by the emerging socialist groups and parties to achieve.<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"282\"]<img src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image72-2.png\" alt=\"Illustration of a young girl hauling a huge cart full of coal up a mine shaft by means of ropes around her head and shoulders.\" width=\"282\" height=\"171\" \/> Image of a girl hauling a \u201ctub\u201d of coal up a narrow mine shaft. \u00a0The image originates with the British parliament\u2019s investigation of working conditions in mines.[\/caption]\r\n<h2 id=\"h.8l2b6eiscjgs\" class=\"c31\"><span class=\"c35\">Gender<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<p class=\"c28\"><span class=\"c3\">The Industrial Revolution had very different effects on gender roles depending on social class. \u00a0Women in the working class, as noted above, labored alongside or even in lieu of men in factories, in mines, and in mills, almost always doing the same or similar work for lower wages (laws banning wage differentials based solely on sex were not put in place the late nineteenth century at the earliest, and they were rarely enforced even then). \u00a0Women industrial workers were still expected to carry out domestic labor as well, tending to children, cooking, and cleaning, a nearly impossible combination of demands that made life for women in the industrial cities even harder than it was for men.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c2\"><span class=\"c3\">The hardest workers of all, however, were probably the legions of domestic servants that toiled in the houses of others. \u00a0A \u201cmaid of all work\u201d in a middle-class household could expect to rise before dawn to light the home\u2019s hearth and cookfire, cook and clean throughout the day, run errands if necessary, and finally collapse after up to seventeen hours of nearly nonstop work. \u00a0Domestic service was the single largest employment sector in nineteenth-century Britain, yet economic thinkers (even communists like the great theorist Karl Marx) routinely ignored servants - they were both taken for granted and effectively invisible, replaceable when injured or sick, and paid so little that they were only a minor item in a household budget. \u00a0As late as 1940, more than half of European women who earned an income were domestic servants of one kind or another.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c2\"><span class=\"c3\">These \u201cmaids\u201d were necessary because of the growth of the middle classes and a concomitant shift in gender roles. \u00a0A badge of honor for the middle classes was that the woman of the house did not have to work for wages, nor was she to perform hard work around the house if possible. \u00a0Thus, a servant was believed to be essential. \u00a0\u201cIdleness\u201d was still thought of as dangerous and sinful, however, so middle-class women were increasingly involved with raising their own children, maintaining the social relationships that demonstrated membership in the polite classes, and involving themselves in charity. \u00a0A cult of \u201csentimentality\u201d grew throughout the nineteenth century associated with family life, with middle-class women leading the way in placing greater emphasis on loving bonds between family members. \u00a0That cultural shift was a byproduct of two factors brought about by industrialism: the wealth that allowed middle-class women to \u201coutsource\u201d the drudgery of domestic duties to a poor servant girl, and medical and sanitary advances that saw more children survive infancy.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c28\">Men, meanwhile, often struggled to maintain their own sense of masculine worth in the face of the changes brought about by industrial society. \u00a0For the working classes, it was almost impossible for a family to survive on one man\u2019s wages, so while men stubbornly insisted on their leadership of the family unit, they were codependent on their wives (and, all too often, their children) to work as well. \u00a0Artisanal skills were slowly but surely rendered obsolete, and as noted above it took until the second half of the nineteenth century for socialist movements to grow large and strong enough to effect meaningful improvements in the daily lives of most working people. \u00a0Thus, all too often working class men turned to alcohol as their consolation; it is no coincidence the the first-wave feminist movement (described in a subsequent chapter) was closely tied to the temperance movement that sought legal bans on alcohol. \u00a0Simply put, too many women saw their male family members plummet into alcoholism, leading to even greater financial struggles and horrific scenes of domestic violence.<\/p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"h.2grqrue\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Cultural Effects<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The Industrial Revolution was responsible for enormous changes in how people lived their everyday lives, not just how they made a living or how the things they used were made. \u00a0Many of those changes were due to the spread of the transportation and communication technologies noted above. \u00a0The speed of railway travel made everything \"closer\" together, and in doing so it started a long, slow process of tying together distant regions. \u00a0People could travel to the capital cities of their kingdom or, later, their \"nations,\" and the intense localism of the past started to fade. \u00a0For the first time, members of the middle classes could travel just for fun - middle-class vacations were an innovation made possible by the railroad, and the first beneficiaries were the English middle class, who \"went on holiday\" to the seashore whenever they could.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Simultaneously, new, more advanced printing presses and cheaper paper made newspapers and magazines available to a mass reading public. \u00a0That encouraged the spread of not just information and news, but of shared written languages. People had to be able to read the \"default\" language of their nation, which encouraged the rise of certain specific vernaculars at the expense of the numerous dialects of the past. \u00a0For example, \"French\" was originally just the language spoken in the area around the city of Paris, just as \"Spanish\" was just the dialect spoken around Madrid. \u00a0Rulers had long fought, unsuccessfully, to impose their language as the daily vernacular in the regions over which they ruled, but most people continued to speak regional dialects that often had little in common with the language of their monarch. \u00a0With the centers of newspaper production often being in or near capital cities, usually written in the official language of state, more and more people at least acquired a decent working knowledge of those languages over time.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\">Those capital cities grew enormously, especially in the second half of the nineteenth century. \u00a0Industry, finance, government itself, and railroads all converged on capitals. \u00a0Former suburbs were simply swallowed up as the cities grew, and there was often a sense among cultural elites that the only places that <span class=\"c4\">mattered <\/span><span class=\"c3\">were the capitals: London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, St. Petersburg, etc. \u00a0One peculiar phenomenon arising from the importance of capital cities was that political revolutions often began as revolutions of a single city - if a crowd could take over the streets of Paris, for example, they might well send the king running for the proverbial hills and declare themselves to be a new government (which happened in 1830 and 1848). \u00a0In some cases, the rest of the nation would read about the revolution in their newspapers or via telegraph after the revolution had already succeeded.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">While all of the cultural effects of the Industrial Revolution are too numerous to detail here, one other effect should be noted: the availability of food. \u00a0With cheap and fast railway and steamship transport, not only could food travel hundreds or even thousands of miles from where it was grown or farmed or caught to where it was consumed, but the daily diet itself underwent profound changes. Tea grown in India became cheap enough for even working people to drink it daily; the same was true of South American coffee on the continent. \u00a0Fruit appeared in markets halfway across the world from where it was grown, and the long term effect was a more varied (although not always more nutritious) diet. \u00a0Whole countries sometimes became economic appendages of a European empire, producing a single product: for a time, New Zealand (which became a British colony in 1840) was essentially the British Empire\u2019s sheep ranch.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The great symbol of changes in the history of food brought on by the Industrial Revolution is that quintessential English invention: fish and chips. Caught in the Atlantic or Pacific, packed on steamships, and transported to Britain, the more desirable parts of fish were sold at prices the upper and middle classes could afford. \u00a0The other bits - tails, fins and all - were fried up with chunks of potato, heavily salted, and wrapped in the now-cheap newspaper. \u00a0The result was the world's first greasy, cheap, and wildly popular fast food.<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\r\n<h3 class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c8 c4\">Image Citations (Creative Commons):<\/span><\/h3>\r\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\"><a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:MandK_Industrial_Revolution_1900.jpg&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960670000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2hgF2OW809Oo2dK0zMTIDo\">Workers Arriving<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\"> - Public Domain<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\">\r\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Textile_manufacture_during_the_Industrial_Revolution%23mediaviewer\/File:Powerloom_weaving_in_1835.jpg&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960671000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2XzIv2rtQIGa7PUbF1lWJm\">Power Looms<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\"> - Public Domain<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\">\r\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/File:Graph_rel_share_world_manuf_1750_1900_01.png&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960671000&amp;usg=AOvVaw1-WoJL6gjzbX98rOhlBvTT\">Output Graph<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\">- TwoOneTwo<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\">\r\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/File:Cottonopolis1.jpg&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960672000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2ZWnTMllggCGpoZxBpg61g\">Manchester<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\"> - Public Domain<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\">\r\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/File:Coaltub.png&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960672000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2k5IrlX7mZOL4kCXXiiTrC\">Coal Mine\u00a0 <span class=\"c3\">- <\/span><\/a><span class=\"c3\">Public Domain<\/span><\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n&nbsp;\r\n\r\n&nbsp;\r\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c3\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"c14 c9\"><\/p>","rendered":"<h2 id=\"h.ihv636\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Big Changes<\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">One of the most vexing questions for historians is how to identify the causes of nineteenth-century European dominance: how does one explain the simple fact that Europe controlled a staggering amount of territory all around the globe by 1900? \u00a0The old Eurocentric viewpoint was that there was something unique about European culture that gave it a competitive edge in the world. \u00a0The even older version, popular among Europeans themselves in the late nineteenth century, was openly racist and chauvinistic: it claimed that European civilization was the bearer of critical thought itself, of technological know-how, of piercing insight and practical sense. \u00a0All other civilizations were, in this model, regarded as either hopelessly backward or stuck in a previous stage of cultural or even biological evolution.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">That explanation was, obviously, not just self-serving but inaccurate. \u00a0Nineteenth-century Europeans rarely lived up to their own inflated view of themselves, and more to the point, their dominance was extremely short-lived. \u00a0Europe had a technological lead on most other world regions for less than a century. \u00a0The Industrial Revolution began in England in about 1750, took almost a century to spread to other parts of western Europe (a process that began in earnest around 1830), and reached maturity by the 1850s and 1860s. In turn, European industrial power was overwhelming in comparison to the rest of the world, except the United States starting in the last decades of the nineteenth century, from about 1860 &#8211; 1914. \u00a0After that, Europe\u2019s competitive edge began a steady decline, one that coincided with the collapse of its global empires after World War II.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">A more satisfying explanation for the explosion of European power than one that claims that Europeans had some kind of inherent cultural advantage has to do with energy. \u00a0For about a century, Europe and, eventually, the United States, had almost exclusive access to what amounted to unlimited energy in the form of fossil fuels. \u00a0The iconic battles toward the end of the century between rifle-wielding European soldiers and the people they conquered in Africa and parts of Asia were not just about the rifles; they were about the factories that made those rifles, the calories that fed the soldiers, the steamships that transported them there, the telegraph lines that conveyed orders for thousands of miles away, the medicines that kept them healthy, and so on, all of which represented an epochal shift from the economic and technological reality of the people trying to resist European imperialism. \u00a0All of those inventions could be produced in gigantic quantities thanks to the use of coal and, later, oil power. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\">While many historians have taken issue with the term \u201crevolution\u201d in describing what was much more of a slow <span class=\"c4\">evolution <\/span>at the time, there is no question that the changes industrial technology brought about really were revolutionary. \u00a0Few things have mattered as much as the Industrial Revolution, because it fundamentally transformed almost everything about how human beings live, perhaps most strikingly including humankind\u2019s relationship with nature. \u00a0Whole landscapes can be transformed, cities constructed, species exterminated, and the entire natural ecosystem fundamentally <span class=\"c4\">changed<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> in a relatively short amount of time. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\">Likewise, \u201cthe\u201d Industrial Revolution was really a linking together of distinct \u201crevolutions\u201d \u2013 technology started it, but the <span class=\"c4\">effects<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> of those technological changes were economic and social. \u00a0All of society was eventually transformed, leading to the phrase \u201cindustrial society,\u201d one in which everything is in large part based on the availability of a huge amount of cheap energy and an equally huge number of mass-produced commodities (including people, insofar as workers can be replaced). \u00a0To sum up, the Industrial Revolution was as momentous in human history as was the agricultural revolution that began civilization back in about 10,000 BCE. \u00a0Even if it was a revolution that took over a century to come to fruition, from a long-term world-historical perspective, it still qualifies as revolutionary.<\/span><\/p>\n<h2 id=\"h.32hioqz\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Geography of the Industrial Revolution<\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"c6\">The Industrial Revolution occurred first in Great Britain, and that simple fact goes a long way toward explaining why Britain became the single most powerful European country of the nineteenth century. \u00a0Britain was well positioned to serve as the cradle of industrialism. \u00a0One of the background causes of the Industrial Revolution was the combination of rapidly increasing populations and more efficient agriculture providing more calories to feed that population. \u00a0Even fairly rudimentary improvements in sanitation in the first half of the eighteenth century resulted in lower infant mortality rates and lower disease rates in general. \u00a0The Little Ice Age of the early modern period ended in the eighteenth century as well, increasing crop yields. \u00a0Despite the fact that more commercially-oriented agriculture, something that was well underway in Britain by the middle of the eighteenth century, was often experienced as a disaster by peasants and farmers, the fact is that it did increase the total caloric output of crops at the same time. \u00a0In short, agriculture definitively left the subsistence model behind and became a commercial enterprise in Britain by 1800. \u00a0Thus, there was a \u201csurplus population\u201d (to quote Ebenezer Scrooge of <span class=\"c4\">A Christmas Carol<\/span><span class=\"c3\">, speaking of the urban poor) of peasants who were available to work in the first generations of factories.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6 c9\"><span class=\"c3\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 350px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image62-5.jpg\" alt=\"Crowd of English working men outside of a factory, with a boy of about 12 years among them.\" width=\"350\" height=\"266\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">English workers arriving for their shift in 1900. Note the young boy on the right, employed by the factory in lieu of being in school.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">In addition, Britain has abundant coal deposits concentrated in northern England. \u00a0In a very lucky coincidence for British industry, northern England in the eighteenth century was the heart of the existing British textile industry, which became the key commercial force in the early period of industrialization. \u00a0The northern English coal deposits are part of an underground band of coal that reaches across to Belgium, eastern France, and western Germany. \u00a0This stretch of land would become the industrial heartland of Europe &#8211; one can draw a line down a map of Western Europe from England stretching across the English Channel toward the Alps and trace most of the industrial centers of Europe in the first half of the nineteenth century. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Britain had coal, and the English and Scottish had long known that you could burn it and produce heat. \u00a0For many centuries, however, it was an unpopular fuel source. \u00a0Coal produces a noxious, toxic smoke, along with heaps of black ash. \u00a0It has to be mined, and coal mines in northwestern Europe tended to rapidly fill with water as they dipped below the water table, requiring cumbersome pumping systems. \u00a0In turn, conditions in those mines were extremely dangerous and difficult. \u00a0Thus, coal was only used in small amounts in England until well into the Renaissance period. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">What changed was, simply, Britain ran out of forests. \u00a0Thanks to the need for firewood and charcoal for heat, as well as timber for building (especially shipbuilding; Britain&#8217;s navy consumed a vast quantity of wood in construction and repairs), Britain was forced to import huge quantities of wood from abroad by the end of the seventeenth century. \u00a0As firewood became prohibitively expensive, British people increasingly turned to coal. \u00a0Already by the seventeenth century, former prejudices against coal as dirty and distasteful had given way to the necessity of its use as a fuel source for heat. \u00a0As the Industrial Revolution began in the latter half of the eighteenth century, thanks to a series of key inventions, the vast energy capacity of coal was unleashed for the first time. \u00a0By 1815, annual British coal production yielded energy equivalent to what could be garnered from burning a hypothetical forest equal in area to all of England, Scotland, and Wales. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\">There were a series of technological breakthroughs that powered the expansion of the Industrial Revolution, all of them originating in Britain. \u00a0Most importantly, a Scottish engineer named James Watt developed an efficient steam engine in 1763, which was subsequently manufactured in 1775 (Watt was not the inventor of the concept, but his design was vastly more effective than earlier versions). \u00a0Steam engines were originally used to pump water out of mines, but soon it was discovered that they could be used to substitute for water-power itself at mills, with Watt developing a rotary (spinning) mechanism tied to the engine. \u00a0In turn, this enabled the conversion of thermal energy unleashed by burning a fossil fuel like coal into kinetic energy (the energy of movement). \u00a0With a steam engine, coal did not just provide heat, it provided<br \/>\n<span class=\"c4\">power<\/span><span class=\"c3\">. \u00a0Watt, in turn, personally invented the term \u201chorsepower\u201d in order to explain to potential customers what his machine could do. \u00a0Almost anything that moved could now be tied to coal power instead of muscle power, and thus began the vast and dramatic shift toward the modern world\u2019s dependence on fossil fuels. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The first and most important industry to benefit from coal power besides mining itself was the northern English textile industry, which harnessed steam power to drive new machines that processed the cotton and transformed it into finished cloth. \u00a0Building on various other machine breakthroughs, an inventor named Edmund Cartwright developed the power loom in 1787, the first large-scale textile machine that could process an enormous amount of cotton fiber. \u00a0By the end of the 1800s, a single \u201cmule\u201d (a spinning invention linked to steam power in 1803) could produce thread 200 to 300 times as fast as could be done by hand. \u00a0By 1850 Britain was producing 200 times as much cotton cloth than it had in 1780. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 500px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image61-5.jpg\" alt=\"A woman worker at a power loom with a male supervisor looming over her.\" width=\"500\" height=\"345\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Power looms in 1835. \u00a0Female labor was preferred by factory-owners because women could be paid less than men for doing the same work.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"c6\">In turn, textiles were the basis of the Industrial Revolution for straightforward practical reasons: raw material was available from the American south thanks to slave labor, and there was an <span class=\"c4\">endless<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> market for textiles all across Europe. British cloth processed by the new machines was of very high quality and, because of the vast quantity that British mills could produce, it was far cheaper than textiles produced by hand. \u00a0Thus, British cloth rapidly cornered the market everywhere in Europe, generating tremendous profits for British industrialists. \u00a0The impact on Britain\u2019s economy was enormous, as was its textile industry\u2019s growing dominance over its European rivals. \u00a0France initially tried to keep British fabric out of its own markets, but in 1786 the two kingdoms negotiated the Eden Treaty, which allowed the importation of British manufactured goods. \u00a0The result was a tidal wave of British cloth in French markets, which forced French manufacturers to implement industrial technology in their own workshops. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">In its first century, the areas in Europe that benefited the most from the Industrial Revolution were the ones closest to coal. \u00a0Besides access to coal, the other major factors driving industrial expansion in Britain were political and cultural. \u00a0The reason that Britain was far and away the leading industrial power is that its parliament was full of believers in the principles of free trade, which meant that commercial enterprises were not hampered by archaic restrictions or cultural prejudices. \u00a0Britain was also the richest society in Europe in terms of available capital: money was available through reliable, trustworthy banking institutions. \u00a0Thus, investors could build up a factory after securing loans with fair interest rates and they knew that they had a legal system that favored their enterprise. \u00a0Finally, taxes were not arbitrary or extremely high (as they were in most parts of Spain and Italy, for example).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The other major reason that Britain enjoyed such an early and long-lasting lead in industrialization is that British elites, especially the powerful gentry class of landowners, were not hostile to commercial enterprise. \u00a0In many kingdoms on the continent, members of the nobility were banned from actively practicing commerce until the period of the French Revolution. \u00a0Even after the Napoleonic wars, when noble titles could no longer be lost by engaging in commerce, banking, or factory ownership, there remained deep skepticism and arrogance among continental nobles about the new industries. \u00a0In short, nobles often looked down on those who made their wealth not from land, but from factories. \u00a0This attitude helped to slow the advent of industrialism for decades.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The only continental region to industrialize in earnest before the 1840s was the southern swath of the Netherlands, which became the newly-created nation of Belgium in 1830 after a revolution. \u00a0That region, immediately a close ally of Great Britain, had usable waterways, coal deposits, and a skilled artisanal workforce. \u00a0By the 1830s the newly-minted country was rapidly industrializing. \u00a0Belgium\u2019s neighbor to the southwest, France, was comparatively slow to follow despite its large population and considerable overall wealth, however. \u00a0The traditional elites who dominated the restored monarchy were deeply skeptical of British-style commercial and industrial innovations. \u00a0Despite Napoleon\u2019s having established the first national bank in 1800, the banking system as a whole was rudimentary and capital was restricted. \u00a0In turn, the transportation of goods across France itself was prohibitively expensive due to the lack of navigable waterways and the existence of numerous tolls. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">There were also important cultural factors that impeded industrial expansion in France. \u00a0Whereas Britain\u2019s large population of landless rural laborers and poor peasants had little option but to seek factory work, most French peasants were independent farmers who had no interest in going to cities to work in miserable conditions. \u00a0Second, French industry had always concentrated on high-quality luxury goods, and French artisans fiercely resisted the spread of lower-quality and lower-skilled work and goods. \u00a0Industrialization was thus limited to the northeastern part of the country, which had coal deposits, until the second half of the century.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">In the German lands, it was not until the establishment of the Zollverein, a customs union, in 1834 that trade could flow freely enough to encourage industrial growth in earnest. \u00a0Following its creation, railroads spread across the various kingdoms of northern Germany. \u00a0Western Germany had extensive coal deposits, and by 1850 German industry was growing rapidly, especially in the Ruhr valley near the border with France.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Meanwhile, outside of Western Europe, there was practically no large-scale industry. \u00a0It took until the late nineteenth century for the Industrial Revolution to &#8220;arrive&#8221; in places like northern Italy and the cities of western Russia, with some countries like Spain missing out entirely until the twentieth century. <\/span><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 568px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image67-2.png\" alt=\"Chart noting the relative national outputs of various countries. The UK was in the lead until overtaken by the US around the turn of the twentieth century.\" width=\"568\" height=\"347\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">While the UK enjoyed the early lead in industrial manufacturing, its share of global output had dropped by 1900. \u00a0The United States became the major industrial power of the world in the first two decades of the twentieth century.\u00a0<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2 id=\"h.1hmsyys\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Transportation and Communication<\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The Industrial Revolution began with mining and textiles, but its effects were probably most dramatic in transportation. The first experimental railroad was put in use in 1820, and the first passenger railroad followed in 1830, traveling between the industrial cities of Manchester and Liverpool in northern England. \u00a0By the middle of the century some trains could go 50 MPH, far faster than any human had ever gone before (except when falling from a great height). \u00a0About 6,500 miles of rail was built in Britain between 1830 and 1850, just 20 years, and railroad expansion soon followed suit on the continent. \u00a0The construction of railroads became a massive industry unto itself, fueling both profitable investment and the occasional disastrous financial collapse. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\">Above and beyond their economic impact, railroads had a myriad of social and cultural effects. \u00a0The British developed the system of time zones, based on Greenwich (part of London) Mean Time as the \u201cdefault,\u201d because the railroads had to be coordinated to time departures and arrivals. \u00a0This was the first time when a whole country, and soon a whole continent, had to have a precise shared sense of timing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Likewise, the telegraph was invented in 1830 and used initially to warn train stations when multiple trains were on the track. \u00a0Telegraphs allowed almost instant communication over huge distances &#8211; they sent a series of electrical impulses over a wire as &#8220;long&#8221; and &#8220;short&#8221; signals. \u00a0The inventor of the telegraph, Samuel Morse, invented a code based off of those signals that could be translated into letters and, as a result, be used to send messages. \u00a0Morse Code thus enabled the first modern mass communications device. \u00a0This was the first time when a message could travel faster than a messenger on horseback, vastly increasing the speed by which information could be shared and disseminated.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Simultaneously, steamships were transforming long-distance commerce. \u00a0The first sailed in 1816, going about twice as fast as the fastest sailing ship could. \u00a0This had obvious repercussions for trade, because it became cheaper to transport basic goods via steamship than it was to use locally-produced ones; this had huge impacts on agriculture and forestry, among other industries. \u00a0Soon, it became economically viable to ship grain from the United States or Russia across oceans to reach European markets. \u00a0The first transatlantic crossing was a race between two steamships going from England to New York in 1838; soon, sailing vessels became what they are today: archaic novelties.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Two other advances in transportation are often overlooked when considering industrialization: paved roads and canals. \u00a0A Scottish engineer invented a way to cheaply pave roads in the 1830s, and in the 1850s an overland, pan-European postal service was established that relied on \u201cpost roads\u201d with stations for changing horses. \u00a0Thus, well before the invention of cars, road networks were being built in parallel to railroads. \u00a0Likewise, even though canals had been around since ancient times, there was a major canal-building boom in the second half of the eighteenth century and first half of the nineteenth century. \u00a0Canals linked Manchester to coal fields, the Erie Canal was built in the US to link the Great Lakes to the eastern seaboard, and even Russia built a canal between Moscow and St. Petersburg.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\">The net effect of these innovations was that travel was vastly cheaper, simpler, and faster than it<br \/>\n<span class=\"c4\">had ever been in human history<\/span><span class=\"c3\">. \u00a0In essence, every place on earth was closer together than ever before.<\/span><\/p>\n<h2 id=\"h.41mghml\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Social Effects<\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The most noteworthy transformation that occurred in quotidian life due to the Industrial Revolution was urbanization, which absolutely exploded in the nineteenth century. \u00a0Manchester, in northern England, is the quintessential example of an industrial city. \u00a0It was close to major coal deposits, it had a large textile industry, it was linked to the sea via canal as of 1761, and it had an army of artisans and laborers because of its historic role as a site of wool production. \u00a0In 1750 it had a population of 20,000, by 1775 it was 40,000, by 1831 it was 250,000, and by 1850 it was 400,000 &#8211; a 200% increase in a century.<\/span><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 746px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image65-2.jpg\" alt=\"Black and white depiction of Manchester, with a nature scene in the foreground and the factory city in the distance.\" width=\"746\" height=\"506\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">View of Manchester in 1840. \u00a0While the painting is in the Romantic style, with the nature scene in the foreground, the masses of factory smokestacks are visible in the distance.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The living conditions, however, were abysmal. \u00a0Whole families were crammed into one-room cellars, hovels, and cheap apartments. \u00a0Pollution produced by the new factories streamed unfiltered into the air and water. \u00a0Soot and filth covered every surface &#8211; early evolutionary biologists noted that certain moths that had a mutation that made them soot-brown survived and multiplied while their normal lightly-colored cousins died off. \u00a0To deal with the pollution, factory owners simply started building taller smokestacks, which spread the pollution farther. \u00a0Waste from mining (which was often toxic) was simply left in \u201cslag heaps,\u201d through which rainwater ran and from which toxic runoff reached water supplies. \u00a0A coal miner who entered the mines as a teenager would almost certainly be dead by \u201cmiddle age,\u201d (40 at the oldest) since his or her lungs were ridden with toxic coal dust.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Landlords in the cities took advantage of the influx of laborers and their families by building cheap tenements in which several families often lived in a single room. \u00a0There was no running water and sanitation was utterly inadequate. \u00a0Food was expensive, in part because of an 1815 act in the British Parliament called the Corn Laws that banned the importation of grain and kept prices up (the wealthy, land-owning gentry class had pushed the law through parliament). \u00a0Given the incredible squalor, epidemics were frequent. \u00a0In turn, wages were paid at a near-subsistence level until after (roughly) 1850. \u00a0Whenever there was a market downturn, sometimes lasting for years (e.g. 1839 \u2013 1842), workers were summarily fired to cut costs, and some starved as a result. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\">The English poet William Blake famously referred to the factories as \u201csatanic mills.\u201d \u00a0Likewise, the English novelist Charles Dickens used the grim reality of cities like Manchester as inspiration and setting for his novels like<br \/>\n<span class=\"c4\">Hard Times <\/span>and <span class=\"c4\">Oliver Twist<\/span>. \u00a0Since real wages did not increase among working people until fairly late in the century, the actual living conditions of the majority of the population generally <span class=\"c4\">worsened<\/span><span class=\"c3\"> in industrial regions until the second half of the century. \u00a0In Britain, laws were passed to protect horses before they were passed to protect children working in mines and factories.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The major cause of this misery was simple: the ruthless pursuit of profit by factory owners and manufacturers. \u00a0The aim of the early factory owners and managers was to simplify the stages of the manufacturing process so that they could be executed by cheap, unskilled labor. \u00a0Many skilled workers or artisans experienced the factory system as a disaster, bringing in its wake subjection to harsh work discipline, the degradation of craft skills, long hours, cheap wages, and the abuse of young women and children (who worked under the same conditions as did adult men). \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">While they had little reason to consider it, the industrial workers of northern England lived in a state of misery that was tied to another that was even worse across the Atlantic: the slave-based cotton economy of the American south which provided the raw material. \u00a0Despite the British ban on the trans-Atlantic slave trade in 1807, the existing population of African-American slaves was sustained by natural reproduction and remained locked in a position of complete legal subservience, enforced with brutal violence. \u00a0In a startling parallel, the efficiency of cotton production increased to keep pace with textile manufacturing in Britain despite the absence of major new technologies besides the invention of the cotton gin in 1794. \u00a0That increase was due to the application of ever-increasing degrees of brutality, as slaves were forced to pick and process cotton at unprecedented speed, spurred on by raw violence at the hands of overseers.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Back in Europe, one unforeseen effect of the Industrial Revolution, tied to the misery of working conditions, was the creation of social classes. \u00a0Until the modern era \u201cclass\u201d was usually something one was born into; it was a legally-recognized and enforced \u201cestate.\u201d \u00a0With industrialization, the enormous numbers of dirt-poor industrial workers began to recognize that their social identity was defined by their poverty and their working conditions, just as rich industrialists and tenement-owning slumlords recognized that they were united by their wealth and their common interest in controlling the workers. \u00a0The non-noble rich and middle class came to distinguish themselves both from the working class and the old nobility by taking pride in their morality, sobriety, work ethic, and cleanliness. \u00a0They often regarded the workers as little better than animals, but some also regarded the old nobles as corrupt, immoral, and increasingly archaic.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The middle classes that arose out of industrialization were the ranks of engineers, foremen, accountants, and bureaucrats that were in great demand for building, overseeing, and running new industrial and commercial operations. \u00a0Some were genuine \u201cself-made men\u201d who worked their way up, but most came from families with at least some wealth to begin with. \u00a0The most vulnerable group were the so-called \u201cpetty bourgeoisie,\u201d shop-owners and old-style artisans, whose economic life was precarious and who lived in constant fear of losing everything and being forced to join the working class.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">From this context, socialism, the political belief that government should be deeply invested in the welfare of the common people, emerged. \u00a0Well before mass socialist parties existed, there were struggles and even massacres over working conditions; one notorious event was the Peterloo Massacre of 1819 in which hundreds of protesting workers in Manchester were gunned down by middle-class volunteer cavalry. \u00a0Another famous group, the Luddites, destroyed factory equipment in a vain attempt to turn back the clock on industrialization and go back to hand-work by artisans.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Appalled more by the sexual impropriety of young girls and women being around male workers in mines and factories than by the working conditions per se, the British parliament did pass some laws mandating legal protections. \u00a0The Factory Act of 1833 limited child labor in cotton mills, the Miners Act of 1842 banned the employment of girls and women (and boys under 10) underground, and in 1847 a Ten Hour Law limited the workday for women and children. \u00a0These were exceptional laws; further legal protections for workers took decades and constant struggle by the emerging socialist groups and parties to achieve.<\/span><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 282px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-antiquity-to-1650\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/129\/2023\/03\/image72-2.png\" alt=\"Illustration of a young girl hauling a huge cart full of coal up a mine shaft by means of ropes around her head and shoulders.\" width=\"282\" height=\"171\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Image of a girl hauling a \u201ctub\u201d of coal up a narrow mine shaft. \u00a0The image originates with the British parliament\u2019s investigation of working conditions in mines.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2 id=\"h.8l2b6eiscjgs\" class=\"c31\"><span class=\"c35\">Gender<\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"c28\"><span class=\"c3\">The Industrial Revolution had very different effects on gender roles depending on social class. \u00a0Women in the working class, as noted above, labored alongside or even in lieu of men in factories, in mines, and in mills, almost always doing the same or similar work for lower wages (laws banning wage differentials based solely on sex were not put in place the late nineteenth century at the earliest, and they were rarely enforced even then). \u00a0Women industrial workers were still expected to carry out domestic labor as well, tending to children, cooking, and cleaning, a nearly impossible combination of demands that made life for women in the industrial cities even harder than it was for men.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c2\"><span class=\"c3\">The hardest workers of all, however, were probably the legions of domestic servants that toiled in the houses of others. \u00a0A \u201cmaid of all work\u201d in a middle-class household could expect to rise before dawn to light the home\u2019s hearth and cookfire, cook and clean throughout the day, run errands if necessary, and finally collapse after up to seventeen hours of nearly nonstop work. \u00a0Domestic service was the single largest employment sector in nineteenth-century Britain, yet economic thinkers (even communists like the great theorist Karl Marx) routinely ignored servants &#8211; they were both taken for granted and effectively invisible, replaceable when injured or sick, and paid so little that they were only a minor item in a household budget. \u00a0As late as 1940, more than half of European women who earned an income were domestic servants of one kind or another.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c2\"><span class=\"c3\">These \u201cmaids\u201d were necessary because of the growth of the middle classes and a concomitant shift in gender roles. \u00a0A badge of honor for the middle classes was that the woman of the house did not have to work for wages, nor was she to perform hard work around the house if possible. \u00a0Thus, a servant was believed to be essential. \u00a0\u201cIdleness\u201d was still thought of as dangerous and sinful, however, so middle-class women were increasingly involved with raising their own children, maintaining the social relationships that demonstrated membership in the polite classes, and involving themselves in charity. \u00a0A cult of \u201csentimentality\u201d grew throughout the nineteenth century associated with family life, with middle-class women leading the way in placing greater emphasis on loving bonds between family members. \u00a0That cultural shift was a byproduct of two factors brought about by industrialism: the wealth that allowed middle-class women to \u201coutsource\u201d the drudgery of domestic duties to a poor servant girl, and medical and sanitary advances that saw more children survive infancy.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c28\">Men, meanwhile, often struggled to maintain their own sense of masculine worth in the face of the changes brought about by industrial society. \u00a0For the working classes, it was almost impossible for a family to survive on one man\u2019s wages, so while men stubbornly insisted on their leadership of the family unit, they were codependent on their wives (and, all too often, their children) to work as well. \u00a0Artisanal skills were slowly but surely rendered obsolete, and as noted above it took until the second half of the nineteenth century for socialist movements to grow large and strong enough to effect meaningful improvements in the daily lives of most working people. \u00a0Thus, all too often working class men turned to alcohol as their consolation; it is no coincidence the the first-wave feminist movement (described in a subsequent chapter) was closely tied to the temperance movement that sought legal bans on alcohol. \u00a0Simply put, too many women saw their male family members plummet into alcoholism, leading to even greater financial struggles and horrific scenes of domestic violence.<\/p>\n<h2 id=\"h.2grqrue\" class=\"c24\"><span class=\"c22\">Cultural Effects<\/span><\/h2>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The Industrial Revolution was responsible for enormous changes in how people lived their everyday lives, not just how they made a living or how the things they used were made. \u00a0Many of those changes were due to the spread of the transportation and communication technologies noted above. \u00a0The speed of railway travel made everything &#8220;closer&#8221; together, and in doing so it started a long, slow process of tying together distant regions. \u00a0People could travel to the capital cities of their kingdom or, later, their &#8220;nations,&#8221; and the intense localism of the past started to fade. \u00a0For the first time, members of the middle classes could travel just for fun &#8211; middle-class vacations were an innovation made possible by the railroad, and the first beneficiaries were the English middle class, who &#8220;went on holiday&#8221; to the seashore whenever they could.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">Simultaneously, new, more advanced printing presses and cheaper paper made newspapers and magazines available to a mass reading public. \u00a0That encouraged the spread of not just information and news, but of shared written languages. People had to be able to read the &#8220;default&#8221; language of their nation, which encouraged the rise of certain specific vernaculars at the expense of the numerous dialects of the past. \u00a0For example, &#8220;French&#8221; was originally just the language spoken in the area around the city of Paris, just as &#8220;Spanish&#8221; was just the dialect spoken around Madrid. \u00a0Rulers had long fought, unsuccessfully, to impose their language as the daily vernacular in the regions over which they ruled, but most people continued to speak regional dialects that often had little in common with the language of their monarch. \u00a0With the centers of newspaper production often being in or near capital cities, usually written in the official language of state, more and more people at least acquired a decent working knowledge of those languages over time.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\">Those capital cities grew enormously, especially in the second half of the nineteenth century. \u00a0Industry, finance, government itself, and railroads all converged on capitals. \u00a0Former suburbs were simply swallowed up as the cities grew, and there was often a sense among cultural elites that the only places that <span class=\"c4\">mattered <\/span><span class=\"c3\">were the capitals: London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, St. Petersburg, etc. \u00a0One peculiar phenomenon arising from the importance of capital cities was that political revolutions often began as revolutions of a single city &#8211; if a crowd could take over the streets of Paris, for example, they might well send the king running for the proverbial hills and declare themselves to be a new government (which happened in 1830 and 1848). \u00a0In some cases, the rest of the nation would read about the revolution in their newspapers or via telegraph after the revolution had already succeeded.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">While all of the cultural effects of the Industrial Revolution are too numerous to detail here, one other effect should be noted: the availability of food. \u00a0With cheap and fast railway and steamship transport, not only could food travel hundreds or even thousands of miles from where it was grown or farmed or caught to where it was consumed, but the daily diet itself underwent profound changes. Tea grown in India became cheap enough for even working people to drink it daily; the same was true of South American coffee on the continent. \u00a0Fruit appeared in markets halfway across the world from where it was grown, and the long term effect was a more varied (although not always more nutritious) diet. \u00a0Whole countries sometimes became economic appendages of a European empire, producing a single product: for a time, New Zealand (which became a British colony in 1840) was essentially the British Empire\u2019s sheep ranch.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c6\"><span class=\"c3\">The great symbol of changes in the history of food brought on by the Industrial Revolution is that quintessential English invention: fish and chips. Caught in the Atlantic or Pacific, packed on steamships, and transported to Britain, the more desirable parts of fish were sold at prices the upper and middle classes could afford. \u00a0The other bits &#8211; tails, fins and all &#8211; were fried up with chunks of potato, heavily salted, and wrapped in the now-cheap newspaper. \u00a0The result was the world&#8217;s first greasy, cheap, and wildly popular fast food.<\/span><\/p>\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\n<h3 class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c8 c4\">Image Citations (Creative Commons):<\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\"><a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:MandK_Industrial_Revolution_1900.jpg&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960670000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2hgF2OW809Oo2dK0zMTIDo\">Workers Arriving<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\"> &#8211; Public Domain<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\"><br \/>\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Textile_manufacture_during_the_Industrial_Revolution%23mediaviewer\/File:Powerloom_weaving_in_1835.jpg&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960671000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2XzIv2rtQIGa7PUbF1lWJm\">Power Looms<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\"> &#8211; Public Domain<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\"><br \/>\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/File:Graph_rel_share_world_manuf_1750_1900_01.png&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960671000&amp;usg=AOvVaw1-WoJL6gjzbX98rOhlBvTT\">Output Graph<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\">&#8211; TwoOneTwo<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\"><br \/>\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/File:Cottonopolis1.jpg&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960672000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2ZWnTMllggCGpoZxBpg61g\">Manchester<\/a><\/span><span class=\"c3\"> &#8211; Public Domain<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c10\"><br \/>\n<a class=\"c12\" href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/url?q=https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/File:Coaltub.png&amp;sa=D&amp;ust=1594051960672000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2k5IrlX7mZOL4kCXXiiTrC\">Coal Mine\u00a0 <span class=\"c3\">&#8211; <\/span><\/a><span class=\"c3\">Public Domain<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"c17\"><span class=\"c3\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"c14 c9\">\n","protected":false},"author":14,"menu_order":2,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[48],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-813","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry","chapter-type-numberless"],"part":802,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/813","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/14"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/813\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1001,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/813\/revisions\/1001"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/802"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/813\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=813"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=813"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=813"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ccconline.org\/western-civilization-a-concise-history-cccs\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=813"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}