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- Chapter Twenty-two
- “Economic Advance and Social Unrest (1830-1850)”
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- The Industrial Revolution began in England because of a combination of favorable
conditions that existed there.
- Economists called these conditions the “Factors of Production.”
- 1) Land: good supply of coal and iron ore
- 2) Labor: changes in agriculture provided a good labor
- supply for factories.
- 3) Capital: due to trade, England had surplus funds to
- invest in new
enterprises.
- 4) Management: English society was not rigid allowing for both
- nobility and commoner to
rise in business.
- 5) Government: favored commercial interests and provided
stability that stimulated expansion.
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- The British textile trade was a major source of revenue for England.
- These revenues along with those from the iron industry and shipbuilding
gave Britain world economic dominance during the 1900s.
- The rest of Europe and eventually the United States will make use of the
resources available in their regions and begin their own industrial
revolutions, modeling the English example.
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- For centuries before 1750, the population of Europe had grown very
little.
- When the Industrial Revolution began, it totaled about 140 million
people.
- But by 1850, it stood at 266 million.
- The greatest population growth took place in such industrialized regions
as England and Western Europe.
- Due primarily to a decreased death rate rather than an increased birth
rate.
- Greater food supply.
- New knowledge of disease prevention and cures.
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- Changes in agriculture, industry, and transportation, with the resulting
increase in trade, produced another striking result – the rapid growth
of cities.
- The greatest spur to city growth was the factory system.
- Many early factories were located in already established cities, which grew
tremendously.
- Manchester, Eng. (1772) 25,000
(1851) 455,000
- When factories were located in rural areas, cities grew up around them.
- Urban living became the typical way of life for increasing numbers of
people.
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- The changes in the Industrial Revolution made better transportation
necessary.
- John McAdam worked a new way of building roads.
- A layer of large stones, covered by smaller stones
- Known as Macadamized roads.
- The period from 1760 to 1850 was a great era of canal building.
- Canals furnished cheaper and slightly faster transportation than roads.
- In 1814, George Stephenson perfected a moving steam engine that
propelled itself on rails.
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- In 1829, Stephenson’s famous engine, the Rocket, pulled a string of cars
from Liverpool to Manchester at a speed of 29 miles per hour.
- Networks of railroads were soon built throughout the Western world.
- Improvements in railways
- Steel rails
- Air brakes
- More comfortable coaches,
- Special cars for various types of freight
- Combined, railroad transportation was fast, safe, and cheap.
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- Many men tried adapting the steam engine to ships.
- Robert Fulton established the first regular inland steamboat service.
- The Clermont was launched on the Hudson River in 1807.
- In 1838, the Great Western, operating by steam alone, crossed the
Atlantic Ocean in fifteen days.
- Regular steamship traffic across the Atlantic developed by Samuel Cunard
of Great Britain.
- The Cunard Lines still operate today.
- Steamships improved over the years being build of steel instead of wood.
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- The Industrial Revolution was successful due to a steady of supply of
cheap labor.
- This increasingly important group made up of factory workers of the
cities, the proletariat.
- Had to sell their labor because they had no property or tools of their
own and received low wages because they had few skills.
- Skilled workers were not needed because the factory system put a premium
on unskilled labor.
- Women and children would accept lower wages than men
- Especially important in the textile industry.
- Over time, even skilled workers were forced to accept factory jobs
because there was no longer a market for their skills.
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- The Industrial Revolution created a unique new category of people who
were dependent on their job alone for income, a job from which they
might be dismissed without cause.
- During the first century of the Industrial Revolution, the factory
worker was completely at the mercy of the law of supply and demand of
labor.
- Ricardo’s “Iron Law of Wages”
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- In the early days of the Industrial Revolution, working conditions were
poor.
- Long hours (14 to 16 hours per day) were considered normal for men,
women, and children.
- Factories were uncomfortable, noisy, dirty, and poorly ventilated.
- Hot in the summer and cold in the winter
- Sanitary facilities were primitive.
- Early machines had no safety devices and serious injuries were
frequent.
- Compensation or accident insurance was unheard of.
- Wages were low
- The average English worker in 1867 received wages from $5 to $9 a
week.
- Wages for women and children were even lower.
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- Perhaps the worst feature of early industrialization was child labor.
- It was common for children of five to be employed in cotton mills and
mines.
- Conditions in coal mines were particularly bad.
- Women and children pulled carts in tunnels where the roof was too low
for a donkey to pass through.
- Women worked on their hands and knees.
- Children were beaten who fell asleep at their tasks were beaten.
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- If life in the mines and factories was hard and monotonous, life in the
workers’ homes was not much better.
- Working people lived in cramped and crowded tenements, with as many as a
dozen people to a room.
- As late as 1840, one out of every eight work-class families in
Manchester lived in a cellar.
- Each family would share a room, also including the attic.
- Food was poor and recreation nonexistent.
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- Urban workers also had to face a condition that had seldom troubled farm
workers.
- At times there would be difficulty in selling all the goods of the
fast-moving machines.
- As sales income decreased, employers would cut production, reduce
wages, and lay off workers.
- The threat of unemployment became a terrible nightmare for the factory
worker.
- There was no unemployment insurance to tide him over a crisis.
- Unless he could find private charity, he faced starvation.
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- Conditions during the early Industrial Revolution were shocking,
compared to living conditions today.
- Compared to conditions in rural areas or nonindustrial cities at the
same time, however, they were not so bad.
- The lower economic classes, whether peasant or artisan, had always
worked long and hard.
- Suffered from periodic famines and epidemics.
- Women and children had always worked hard, especially in rural areas.
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- The factory system tended to depersonalize society and reduced workers
to an impersonal status.
- The statistics with regard to wages, diet, and clothing suggest overall
improvement for the workers.
- Some industries were notorious for social injustices
- Contemporary social critics complained that industrialism brought misery
to the workers,
- Other claimed life was improving.
- During the latter half of the 19th century conditions
improved, as union action combined with general prosperity and a
developing social conscience, to improve working conditions
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- The most important sociological result of industrialism was the
urbanization of the world.
- The new factories acted as a magnet. Pulling people away from their
rural roots and beginning the most massive population transfer in
history.
- Thus the birth of factory towns and cities that grew into large
industrial centers.
- The role of the city changed in the 19th century from
governmental and cultural centers, to industrial centers with all the
problems of urbanization.
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- Workers in cities became aware of their numbers and their common
problems, so cites made the working class a powerful force by raising
their consciousness and enabling them to unite for political action, to
remedy the economic dissatisfaction.
- The “Mobs of Pairs” during the French Revolution
- It is in this urban setting that the century’s great social and
political dilemmas were framed:
- Working class injustices
- Gender exploitation
- Low standard of living.
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- Family structure and gender roles within the family were altered by the
growth of industrialism.
- Families as an economic unit were no longer the chief unit of both
production and consumption, but rather consumption alone.
- The new wage economy meant that families were less closely bound
together than in the past:
- The economic link was broken.
- Production work was taken out of the home and placed elsewhere.
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- As factory wages for skilled adult males rose, women and children were
separated from the workplace.
- A new pattern of family life emerged.
- Gender determined the roles in the home and domestic life emerged
slowly.
- Married women came to be associated with domestic duties, while the male
tended to be the sole wage earner.
- Single women and widows had much work available, but that work commanded
low wages and low skills and provided no way to protect themselves fro
exploitation.
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- Marriage as an institution in the wage economy began to change.
- Women were now expected to create a nurturing environment to which the
family members returned after work.
- Married women worked outside the home only when family needs, illness,
or death of a spouse required them to do so.
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- During the 19th century, governments were concerned with the
growing problems of social deviance.
- Contributed to by rapid industrialization and urbanization.
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- The Revolutionary Tradition
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- The era of reaction that followed the collapse of the Napoleonic regime
and the Congress of Vienna was followed by a wave of liberal and
national agitations which was manifested in the Revolutions of 1820,
1825, and 1830.
- Western Europe dominated by the liberals
- Eastern and Southern Europe dominated by the nationalists.
- In addition, reformers had succeeded in placing the need for social and
economic improvements of the masses on the revolutionary platform.
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- During the 1840s, the movement toward revolutionary change was supported
by four factors:
- The failure of the existing regime to address the economic and social
problems which accompanied the general economic collapse which occurred
during the decade.
- The regularity of significant food shortages in the major urban
centers.
- The increased popularity of the demands of the liberals and the
nationalists.
- The increasingly radical political, economic, and social proposals
advanced by the Utopian Socialists the Anarchists, and the Chartists in
England.
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- The once liberal regime of King Louis Philippe became increasingly
conservative and oppressive under the leadership of Prime Minister
Francois Guizot and the Chamber of Deputies.
- Guizot’s opposition to reforms resulted in the further restrictions of
individual rights in general and the excessive use of censorship to
silence critics of the regime.
- A banquet would however, lead to the demise of Louis Philippe as King of
France.
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- The predominantly liberal opposition scheduled a banquet for the night
of Feb. 22, 1848.
- Guizot failed to grant the a permit
- As a result students and workingmen took to the streets and violence
erupted.
- Louis dismissed Guizot
- On the evening of Feb. 23rd, fighting broke out between
troops and opponents to the regime and fifty people were killed.
- Reports of the “massacre” spread quickly and over a thousand barricades
were erected.
- On Feb. 24th, Louis Philippe abdicated and fled to England.
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- A provisional government was established which represented the entire
spectrum of opposition forces.
- The principal tasks of the provisional government were:
- Serve as an interim authority.
- Arrange for elections to a national Constituent Assembly.
- Two important leaders of the movement were Alphonse Lamartine (a poet)
and Louis Blanc (a socialist leader.).
- During the spring of 1848, national workshops were established to
resolve the problems of unemployment.
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- In April, French citizens voted for representatives to the National
Constituent Assembly.
- The vote indicated that the nation supported the establishment of a
conservative republican government.
- The Assembly met in May and dissolved the National Workshops, the result
was the confrontation known as “The June Days,” during which French
troops led by General Cavaignac suppressed the radicals who wanted to
maintain the workshops.
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- A new constitution was developed and accepted in October 1848.
- It established the Second French Republic which provided for a president
and a single chamber assembly which would be elected on the basis of
universal manhood suffrage.
- The president would serve a four year term.
- Presidential elections were held in December and Louis Napoleon, nephew
of Napoleon I, easily defeated his rivals Cavaignac and Lamartine.
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- Revolutionary activity broke out in Vienna on March 13, 1848.
- Within 48 hours, Prince Metternich, the symbol of reaction throughout
Europe, resigned, and Ferdinand I, granted concessions including a
pledge to support the development of a constitution and the extension of
individual liberties.
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- The nationalist ambitions of the Hungarians were advanced by Louis
Kossuth.
- On March 15, 1848, the Hungarian Diet declared:
- a constitution which established a national assembly based on a limited
franchise.
- specified individual freedoms.
- eliminated the remnants of the feudal order
- And established an autonomous Hungary within the Austrian Empire.
- On March 31, 1848, the Austrian government accepted these substantive changes.
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- Czech nationalistic aspirations were manifested with the establishment
of a Bohemian Diet in March.
- Its initial demands concerned:
- universal manhood suffrage
- guarantees of basic political and religious rights
- and the parity of the Czech and German languages in education and
government.
- On April 8th, Ferdinand I, granted these concessions and
rendered Bohemia an autonomous state.
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- The further development of Czech nationalism was blurred by the
emergence of the Pan-Slavic Congress in June of 1848.
- The leaders of the Pan-Slavic Congress hoped to establish an autonomous
government for Czechs, Slovaks, and other Slavs within the Austrian
Empire.
- The April Decree, which was issued by the Hapsburg government pledged to
eliminate the feudal services and duties which were still imposed on the
peasants.
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- News of the revolt in France resulted in rebellions in Prussia and other
German states such as Baden, Bavaria, Hanover, and Saxony.
- The princes of the lesser states attempted to nullify the more strident
demands of the revolutionaries by promising constitutions and appointing
liberal ministers.
- However, King Frederick William IV of Prussia was adamant in his refusal
to placate the revolutionaries; consequently, a violent revolution
developed in Berlin.
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- On March 17, 1848, Frederick William IV relented and announced that a
Prussian assembly (The Berlin Assembly) would be convened in April,
1848.
- A constitution would also be developed.
- Furthermore, he announced that internal reforms would be instituted, and
that Prussia would assist in the development of a constitutional
revitalization of the German Confederation.
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- The Frankfurt Assembly, which was a Pan-German assembly interested in
the formulation of an integrated union of German states, convened in
May, 1848.
- During the next year, the group of liberals and nationalists developed a
framework for a united Germany along the lines of the Kleindeutsch, or
“Small Germany.”
- This approach to German unification did not incorporate the Austrian
Empire because of the great numbers of non-German people in that states.
- Advocated of the Kleindeutsch plan opposed the Grossdeutsch or Great
Germany approach.
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- In 1849, Frederick William IV received an offer to lead the new Germany.
- While interested in pursuing this opportunity, he declined because of
the shift in the direction of the revolution.
- A reaction against the revolution had set in and most of the radical
leaders had fled the German states.
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- In the Italian peninsula, revolutionary activity broke out in Milan in
March, 1848 and was directed primarily by nationalists who were interested
in expelling the Austrians from Lombardy and Venetia.
- King Charles Albert of Sardinia and Piedmont capitalized on the
revolution by declaring war on Austria.
- In central Italy, Pope Pius IX expressed support for a unified Italian
state.
- In the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, an isolated revolt in Palermo, which
occurred earlier than the rebellion in Paris resulted in the granting of
a liberal constitution by the reactionary King Ferdinand II.
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- Throughout Italy the revolution emphasized the cause of Italian
nationalism and the re-emergence of Italian pride through the
Risorgimento.
- There was no evidence that the revolution was seriously concerned with
the economic and social problems which confronted the Italian peasants.
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- Austrian Field Marshal Josef Graf Radetsky von Raders withdrew the
Austrian forces to the Quadrilateral, a series of fortresses on the
Adige and Mincia.
- There Radetsky regrouped, and in July 1848, launched a counter-offensive
which resulted in the resounding defeat of the Italian forces under
Charles Albert at Custozza.
- In 1849 Charles Albert undertook another military initiative but was
defeated by Radetsky at Novara.
- Charles Albert abdicated in favor of his son, Victor Emmanuel II.
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- By the summer of 1848, the revolutionary effort had been spent and the
earlier gains of the late winter and spring had been reversed or
challenged in many countries.
- The failures of the Revolutions of 1848 was due to several major
factors:
- Armed forces remained loyal to the old leadership
- Revolutionaries appeased by liberal political reforms.
- Most people opposed radical economic and social changes.
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- In Central Europe, revolutions, which had been led by the middle class,
did not express an interest in addressing social and economic problems.
- When students and workers joined the cause, the middle class were
alienated from the revolutionary movement.
- In Eastern and Southern Europe, the nationalist revolutions lacked
organization and, above all, the military capacity to resist the
professional armies of the Austrian Empire.
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- By 1849, the revolutions had been suppressed or redirected.
- Only in France with the Second French Republic (1848-1852) and in
Prussia (the Constitution of 1850) did some of the earlier gains endure.
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