Industrial Revolution

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The Industrial Revolution is a period of history that is generally considered to cover the latter decades of the 18th century and the first half of the 19th century. The period is imprecise, as is the identification of the Second Industrial Revolution which followed it.

In brief, an industrial revolution (uncapitalised) is the transition from an agrarian economy – where the majority of the population is geared towards subsistence – to an industrial economy with a greater focus on manufacturing. The Industrial Revolution (capitalised) is the name applied to the transition in Britain when the combination of mercantile activity with overseas colonies supported by energetic inventors and entrepreneurs harnessed the natural resources of coal, iron and water power to create a manufacturing industry that was dominant in the western world. The British Industrial Revolution was closely followed by industrial revolutions in continental Europe, and in the newly fledged United States, with the United States and the newly federated Germany being the major players in the Second Industrial Revolution.

Historiography

In the western world, the 18th century saw the revolutionary overthrow of political establishments in America (1775-1783) and France (1789-1799). There were some attempts to foment political revolution in Great Britain following these examples. Thus, with the idea of revolution (both as achievement and threat) hanging in the air, Gareth Stedman Jones[1] traces the origin of 'industrial revolution' to French sources (la révolution industrielle), before Arnold Toynbee's lectures (1881) and subsequent book[2] sealed the phrase in the English language.

Dating of the Industrial Revolution is fraught: the effects were not fully felt until the 1830s or 1840s according to Eric Hobsbawm, who felt that it 'broke out' in the 1780s[3], while T.S. Ashton places it roughly between 1760 and 1830. The case has also been made that the 1769 patent of James Watt's condensing steam engine marks the start, with the patent for the Richard Arkwright water frame falling in the same year.

In the 20th century historians (such as Charles Beard) looking for the social forces they thought controlled history, emphasized industrialization and urbanization. These were forces unleashed by the industrial revolution. By the mid 20th century attention was turning to the broader concept of "modernization," which included industrialization, urbanization, and psychological changes and changes in values. By the late 20th century historians largely stopped looking for deep explanatory forces, and stressed instead complexity and interrelationships.

Precursor events

The establishment of the British Empire, and enclosure and the flowering of the Agricultural Revolution, provided conditions that allowed Britain to support first the establishment of a cotton manufacturing industry and subsequently a workforce to operate the machines that filled the factories.

British establishment of overseas colonies provided both a source of raw materials and a ready market for manufactured goods. The East India Company had established trading bases in India, and the Company's power grew until it effectively provided the government. To generate trade between India and Britain, the Company suppressed manufacturing in India such that goods were transported to Britain for processing and the finished goods were re-exported to the colonies.

During the 18th century the population of Great Britain rose, with a figure of 5.7 million given for England for 1750[4]. Farming practices had been becoming more efficient, with the advent of enclosures, but to support the population at this level – and subsequent growth – improved crops; the four-field crop rotation system using crops like turnips and clover; and the exploitation of land that had previously been pasture (with turnip/clover forming alternative fodder crops) or low-intensity (through drainage and land reclamation) increased productivity. From the middle of the 18th century, selective breeding improved the livestock, and during the 19th century there was increasing mechanisation.

Principal components

The measures of productivity over the period show major transitions in the manufacture of textiles; the consumption of coal; and the production of iron goods. Coupled with these are the movement of the population from rural to urban environments; and the 'manias' for turnpikes, canals and railways.

Bibliography

  • T. S. Ashton. The Industrial Revolution, 1760-1830
  • Phyllis Deane. The First Industrial Revolution (2nd ed 2003)* Hobsbawm, E.J. The Age of Revolution 1988
  • Hudson, Pat. The Industrial Revolution 1992
  • Peter Mathias, ed. The Cambridge Economic History of Europe from the Decline of the Roman Empire, Vol. 7, Pt. 2: The Industrial Economies: Capital, Labour and Enterprise, the United States, Japan and Russia (1982)
  • Peter N. Stearns.The Industrial Revolution in World History (1998)


References

  1. Gareth Stedman Jones, National Bankruptcy and Social Revolution: European Observers on Britain, 1813-1844 Centre for History and Economics, King's College, University of Cambridge, (November 2001)
  2. Arnold Toynbee, Lectures On The Industrial Revolution In England, McMaster University, Archive for the History of Economic Thought
  3. Hobsbawm 1988
  4. Mark Overton, Agricultural Revolution in England 1500–1850, BBC, (September 2002)