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         Industrial Revolution Workers:     more books (42)
  1. Stalin's Industrial Revolution: Politics and Workers, 1928-1931 (Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies) by Hiroaki Kuromiya, 1990-06-29
  2. Women Workers and the Industrial Revolution 1750-1850 by Ivy Pinchbeck, 1981
  3. Women workers and the industrial revolution, 1750-1850 (Reprints of economic classics) by Ivy Pinchbeck, 1969
  4. Young Workers in the Industrial Revolution (Exploring History) by A.D. Cameron, 1981-08-03
  5. Workers in the Industrial Revolution: Recent Studies of Labor in the United States and Europe
  6. Women workers and the industrial revolution, 1750-1850,: By Ivy Pinchbeck (London school of economics. Studies in economic and social history) by Ivy Pinchbeck, 1930
  7. Stalin's Industrial Revolution : Politics and Workers, 1928-1931 (Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies) by Hiroaki Kuromiya, 1980
  8. Urban Workers in the Early Industrial Revolution by Robert Glen, 1984-04
  9. Urban Workers in the Early Industrial Revolution by Robert Glen, 1984
  10. What automation means to you: A summary of the effects of the second industrial revolution on the American worker by Abraham Weiss, 1955
  11. Let us further promote the building of socialism by vigorously carrying out the three revolutions: Speech at the Meeting of Active Industrial Workers, March 3, 1975 by Il-sŏng Kim, 1975
  12. The industrial revolution, 1750-1850;: An introductory essay, (Workers' educational association outlines) by H. L Beales, 1928
  13. The Skilled Metalworkers of Nuremberg: Craft and Class in the Industrial Revolution (Class and Culture) by Michael J. Neufeld, 1989-08
  14. The industrial worker,: The reaction of American industrial society to the advance of the industrial revolution (Quadrangle paperbacks) by Norman J Ware, 1964

81. The Industrial Revolution And The Plight Of Men
A more objective view of the plight of workers during the industrial revolution would have been the following sent to me by a friend
http://www.fathersforlife.org/hist/indrev.htm
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The Industrial Revolution and the Plight of Men
The goals and details of that struggle are documented in the book How Business, Government, and Our Obsession with Work Have Driven Parents From Home, by Brian C. Robertson ( see the review It boggles the mind that today's feminists want so badly to undo all of what their grandmothers and great-grandmothers worked so very hard to achieve. However, the explanation is not difficult. The controlling faction of feminism during the Victorian age was conservative, pro-family feminism, while today's controlling faction is Marxist- or socialist feminism , a brand of feminism that is considered by many to be nothing other than communism in drag Just like pure and unadulterated communism has as its primary goal the planned destruction of the family How is it possible for radical feminists to achieve their sinister aims? The answer to that question is not hard to come by: indoctrination through time-proven communist propaganda tactics. Here is an example from a feminist Web site that purports to be an aid in the education of children Quotes from Classroom Lesson Series The Plight of Women's Work in the Early Industrial Revolution in England and Wales
© 2001 Women In World History Curriculum My Comments Interactive site full of information and resources about women's experiences in world history. For teachers, teenagers, parents, and history buffs.

82. Chapter 25 Outline - The Industrial Revolution
26. What hardships did factory workers face during the industrial revolution? 27. How did city life change during the industrial revolution? 28.
http://www.smhs.org/remmell/ch25.htm
Chapter 25 - The Industrial Revolution
Please e-mail me if links don't work or to suggest a link. MrRemm@aol.com
I. The Industrial Revolution A. Great Britain's advantages - made rapid growth 1. labor supply 2. natural resources 3. investment capital 4. entrepreneurs - people who organize and manage businesses 5. transportation 6. markets 7. governmental support B. The Agricultural Revolution 1. new farming methods a. 1701 Jethro Tull - mechanical drill for planting b. 1700s Charles Townshed - fertilizer 2. enclosure movement a. farmers were made to put up fences b. parliament - Enclosure Act (1760) C. Revolution in the Textile Industry 1. new inventions a. domestic system - workers did work in their own home b. John Kay (1733) - invented flying shutle - weave cloth c. James Hargreaves (1760s) - spinning jenny d. Richard Arkwright (1769) - water frame e. Edmund Cartwright (1785) - loom ran by water f. Eli Whitney (1793) - cotton gin 2. factory system - workers do work at a central location (factory), built near rivers that could supply water power D. New Iron-making processes 1.

83. The Industrial Revolution In Rjukan
This industrial revolution in such a small place brought great change and social upheaval. A new class of industrial workers emerged in Rjukan, with their own
http://www.touristmagazine.com/SEN/rjukan.html
The industrial revolution in Rjukan This industrial revolution in such a small place brought great change and social upheaval. A new class of industrial workers emerged in Rjukan, with their own culture and ways. Many of these Norwegian workers were growing increasingly aware of political issues and formed or joined workers' unions. The Norwegian Museum of the Industrial Worker at Vemork uses exciting exhibitions to portray the history of the industrial revolution in Rjukan. You can also learn of the events in Rjukan during the Second World War, taking home with you a new world of knowledge and interesting documentation. Heavy water and the atom bomb The process of electrolysis is used on water to isolate hydrogen. In 1928, a separate hydrogen factory was built. The hydrogen was used to produce artificial fertiliser. A biproduct of this production process was heavy water, a rather common water molecule where the core of the hydrogen atom has an extra neutron. So this common water molecule has, in fact, very special qualities. The Norwegian company, Hydro, produced heavy water at Vemork from 1934. In time, both German and allied scientists discovered that heavy water could be utilised to produce an atom bomb.

84. Beyond The Information Revolution - 99.10
The industrial revolution also had a great impact on the family. leaving family members behind whether spouses of adult factory workers or, especially in
http://www.theatlantic.com/cgi-bin/o/issues/99oct/9910drucker.htm
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Return to this issue's Table of Contents. O C T O B E R 1 9 9 9
The author uses history to gauge the significance of e-commerce "a totally unexpected development" and to throw light on the future of "the knowledge worker," his own coinage by Peter F. Drucker The online version of this article appears in three parts. Click here to go to parts two and three.
HE truly revolutionary impact of the Information Revolution is just beginning to be felt. But it is not "information" that fuels this impact. It is not "artificial intelligence." It is not the effect of computers and data processing on decision-making, policymaking, or strategy. It is something that practically no one foresaw or, indeed, even talked about ten or fifteen years ago: e-commerce that is, the explosive emergence of the Internet as a major, perhaps eventually the major, worldwide distribution channel for goods, for services, and, surprisingly, for managerial and professional jobs. This is profoundly changing economies, markets, and industry structures; products and services and their flow; consumer segmentation, consumer values, and consumer behavior; jobs and labor markets. But the impact may be even greater on societies and politics and, above all, on the way we see the world and ourselves in it. Discuss this article in More on in The Atlantic Monthly and Atlantic Unbound.

85. From The Enlightnement To The Industrial Revolution
of industrial machinery and precipitated the development of the industrial revolution in other secrets, making the voyage of exfactory workers very difficult.
http://www.translucency.com/frede/hod.html
Frederique Krupa
Fall 1996 History of Design from the Enlightenment to the Industrial Revolution
The Enlightenment (1689-1789)
The Enlightenment sought to systematicaly categorize, organize, explore, understand everything. With the scientific method from Newton 17th Century, free-thinker sought to break religious and metaphysical dogmas of the past through examination. Diderot started the Encyclopedia, Rousseau and Kant sought to understand the human conscience and the nature of knowledge and developed social and political systems. Adam Smyth published the Wealth of Nations in 1789 and ushered in the world Laissez-Faire economics, capitalism, believing that the benefits of the individual would in turn benefit or trickle down to the rest of society, a concept held dearly by Republicans, this being called "the invisible hand"....
So what other values were held dear by this large, varied, but close-knit international movement? Christianity was wrong and that science, withits dependable results and principled modesty was the way to truth (In so far as it was possible) and to happiness. They believed in the Critical Method. They also believed in Decency, humanitarianism, freedom from censorship, loosening the moral code. Others include: Knowledge, Universality, Objectivity, Reason, Logic, Science, Individualism (Law), Progress, Perfectibility of Man, Capitalism, even socialism...

86. A Short History Of Machine Tools. No Two Countries Were More Responsible For The
No two countries were more responsible for the industrial revolution than America Rather than replacing English workers, their machines made work more precise.
http://www.darex.com/indurevo.htm
Return to Darex home page.
The Two Countries That Invented The Industrial Revolution
by Curt Anderson Why do the British and American approaches to machinery differ? A short history of machine tools explains why. No two countries were more responsible for the Industrial Revolution than America and England. In England, during the 18th and 19th centuries there was no shortage of skilled labor. Rather than replacing English workers, their machines made work more precise. Meanwhile, in sparsely populated America, the needs of a new nation required rapid and simple means of production. Machines augmented the scant work force. In England, machines served to make talented artisans better. In America, machines served to make entrepreneurs more productive. ENGLISH CONTRIBUTIONS
In 1769, Englishman James Watt sparked the Industrial Revolution. His steam engine's large cylinders posed a vexing problem. They had to be precise in interior size so that steam could not leak between cylinder and piston. Another Englishman, John Wilkinson invented a precision horizontal-boring machine in 1775. Wilkinson's machine made efficient steam engines possible. The steam engine cylinder could not be manufactured until machine tools had been devised that were capable of producing accurate parts.

87. Industrial Revolution
America (PBS) Labor History Illinois Labor History Society A Short History of American Labor Haymarket Massacre workers industrial revolution Labor Timeline
http://pw2.netcom.com/~wandaron/ind.html

Forward to the Oregon Trail
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Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution to 1877
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Industrial Revolution, 1877-1900 Required Reading:
A Short History of American Labor

Kearneyism, the Chinese, and Labor Unrest in California - 1877

PBS - America in the Gilded Age

Introduction: The Centennial Exposition of 1876
The Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition (1876)
Philadelphia Exhibition
1876 Centennial Exposition

Transcontinental Railroad
... The Jungle by Upton Sinclair Immigration: The Chinese Exclusion Act - Fact Sheet The 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act - Document Kearneyism, the Chinese, and Labor Unrest in California - 1877 Irish in America (PBS) Labor History: Illinois Labor History Society A Short History of American Labor Haymarket Massacre Labor Timeline - 1800s ... the Socialist Labor Party of America Other Gilded Age Resources: NM's Creative Impulse: Age of Industry America in the Gilded Age - 1877-1901 The Gilded Age America in the Gilded Age (PBS) ... Frances Willard Where to Learn More (p. 379-80) Edison National Historic Site Japanese American National Museum Museum of Chinese in the Americas (formerly the Chinatown History Museum) Staue of Liberty National Monument and Ellis Island ... Lower East Side Tenement Museum Instructor: Wanda Jones E-Mail: wej5475@dcccd.edu

88. Industrial Revolution
handwork, and factories developed as the best way of bringing together the machines and the workers to operate them. As the industrial revolution grew, private
http://www.puhsd.k12.ca.us/chana/staffpages/eichman/Adult_School/us/fall/industr
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution. During the 1700s and early 1800s, great changes took place in the lives and work of people in several parts of the world. These changes resulted from the development of industrialization. The term Industrial Revolution refers both to the changes that occurred and to the period itself.
The Industrial Revolution began in Great Britain during the 1700s. It started spreading to other parts of Europe and to North America in the early 1800s. By the mid-1800s, industrialization had become widespread in western Europe and the northeastern United States.
The Industrial Revolution created an enormous increase in the production of many kinds of goods. Some of this increase in production resulted from the introduction of power-driven machinery and the development of factory organization. Before the revolution, manufacturing was done by hand or simple machines. Most people worked at home in rural areas. A few worked in shops in towns as part of associations called guilds. The Industrial Revolution eventually took manufacturing out of the home and workshop. Power-driven machines replaced handwork, and factories developed as the best way of bringing together the machines and the workers to operate them.
As the Industrial Revolution grew, private investors and financial institutions were needed to provide money for the further expansion of industrialization. Financiers and banks thus became as important as industrialists and factories in the growth of the revolution. For the first time in European history, wealthy business leaders called capitalists took over the control and organization of manufacturing.

89. SOCIAL DEMOCRATS, USA
overseas employ legions of foreign workers. These corporations are increasingly free to locate wherever they wish. This new industrial revolution is also
http://www.socialdemocrats.org/ii.html
SOCIAL DEMOCRATS, USA
WHY AMERICA NEEDS A SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT
(Table of Contents)
II. The New Industrial Revolution
In this new industrial revolution, no single country has taken the leading role, the way England did in the first industrial revolution. The United States, while inventing much of the technology of this revolution, has often fallen behind in the decisive area of production. Production has become international. The car you purchased last month in Pittsburgh may well have been financed in Japan, designed in Detroit, manufactured in ten countries as far apart as Malaysia and Germany and assembled in Mexico. Goods, capital, information and services, even whole factories, whisk around the globe at breathtaking speed, in a market increasingly dominated by vast multinational enterprises, international financial institutions and speculators. Today multinational corporations, the driving force of globalization, employ some 10% of American manufacturing workers. US- owned multinationals overseas employ legions of foreign workers. These corporations are increasingly free to locate wherever they wish. This new industrial revolution is also transforming the shop floor. Assisted by robots, computers and high-speed telecommunications, teams of well-trained workers adapt versatile machinery to rapidly changing product specifications. Similar transformations are increasingly evident in the commercial and service sectors. The most important aspect of this process is not new technology, but the new social relations that develop in the workplace. Rote, physical labor is being replied by labor which is more mental, flexible and cooperative. The 21st Century worker will not need physical strength and "factory discipline" as much as the capacity for analysis, judgment and cooperation. In effect, the new workers are becoming managers in a much more sophisticated production system.

90. Malcolm Bull's Trivia Trail : Page I
Irish workers Many Irish workers came into the district in the 19th century. Great changes were made to the production of iron during the industrial revolution.
http://www.halifax-today.co.uk/specialfeatures/triviatrail/i.html
I
A B C D ... Z
I
The j was often used for the final i in handwritten numbers The capital I was often used instead of J in names such as Iohn Ioseph , and Ioshua . This form appears on many datestones Sowerby Hall See Roman numerals
Ibbetson, Jane
[1?-1?] Aka Jenny . Daughter of John Caygill , she inherited the Shay estate. When she married Sir James Ibbetson , Baronet of Leeds and Denton in 1768, the estate was sold
Ibbetson, John
[1744-1?] Wool-dealer of Ovenden . One of the coiners
Identity cards
Abolished 21st February 1952
IGI
See International Genealogical Index
ign
Abbreviation for ignorant which may be found in documents
Ilkley Moor
A part of Bradford. See On Ilkley moor baht 'at
Illegitimate child
A child begotten and born out of lawful wedlock. The birth record usually omits the name of the child's father. Some illegitimate children had two surnames. The English terms base, bastard byblow chanceling , chance begotten, imputed, merrybegot , misbegotten, spurious filius nullius filius populi B Between the 16th and 19th century the Overseer of the Poor kept the parish records of illegitimate births and attempted to issue bastardy bonds to obtain support from the child's father.

91. Science, Technology, And The Industrial Revolution
Science, Technology, and the industrial revolution A Select Bibliography. Transport in the industrial revolution. Manchester, Dover, NH Manchester UP 1983.
http://www.victorianweb.org/technology/ir/5.html
Science, Technology, and the Industrial Revolution: A Select Bibliography
George P. Landow , Shaw Professor of English and Digital Culture, National University of Singapore
This bibliography was created with the assistance of Victorian Database on a CD-ROM, 1970-1995 , which was produced at the University of Alberta. Albert, William, et al. Transport in the Industrial Revolution . Manchester, Dover, NH: Manchester UP 1983. Benson, Ian, and John Lloyd. New Technology and Industrial Change: The Impact of the Scientific-Technical Revolution on Labour and Industry . London: Kogan Page/ New York: Nichols Pub 1983. Inkster, Ian. Science and Technology in History: An Approach to Industrial Development . New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1991. McPherson, Natalie. Machines and Economic Growth: The Implications for Growth Theory of the History of the Industrial Revolution . Westport, CT: Greenwood P 1994. Mokyr, Joel. "Technological Inertia in Economic History." Journal of Economic History Musson, A.E. "Industrial Motive Power in the United Kingdom, 1800-70."

92. A Trip To The Past
A trip to the past. s. The industrial revolution was a time of dramatic change, from hand tools and handmade items, to products which were msass produced by mawhjfhk;lasjgvk;jlsavj;h;sav;savchines.
http://members.aol.com/mhirotsu/kevin/trip2.html
A trip to the past s
The Industrial Revolution was a time of dramatic change, from hand tools and handmade items, to products which were msass produced by mawhjfhk;lasjgvk;jlsavj;h;sav;savchines. Workers became more productive, and since more items were manufactured, prices dropped, making exclusive and hard to make items available to the poor and not only the rich and elite. Life generally improved, but the industrial revolution also proved harmful. Pollution increased, working conditions were harmful, and capitalists employed women and young children, making them work long and hard hours. The industrial revolution was a time for change. For the better, or for the worse. This web page is dedicated to the industrial revolution, the changes that occurred and how it effected modern life. This web page demonstrates the transition from hand tools to machines, and shows the pros and cons of the revolution.

93. Children In The Industrial Revolution
THERE is no more shameful stain on British history than the sickening treatment of the nation s poor workerchildren during the industrial revolution.
http://www.cottontimes.co.uk/childreno1.htm
CHILDREN'S STORY: The stain on British history
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SLUM children in Manchester's Angel Fields district ... they seem gaunt and haggard before their time
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"THE spinning-room overseer had the task of maintaining production. He did it by instilling fear and inflicting pain - children were beaten simply to keep them awake towards the end of their 14 or 15-hour day." THERE is no more shameful stain on British history than the sickening treatment of the nation's poor worker-children during the Industrial Revolution. Entire generations of youngsters lost their precious childhood as they were sacrificed to the Moloch of the Mills - suffering and often dying because of the indifference of Government, the greed of mill-owners, the sadistic cruelty of factory overseers and the acquiesence of parents. The long quotation later in this section, by a mill worker turned journalist and novelist, encapsulates the horror of it all. He was writing nearly a century after some of the worst excesses. We, another century down the line, in an age which practically deifies children,find it almost impossible to comprehend such a cynical conspiracy against that section of society least able to defend itself.

94. Industrial Revolution - Reference Library
The industrial revolution was a period of the 18th century marked by social and who made complete products to factories in which each worker completed a single
http://www.campusprogram.com/reference/en/wikipedia/i/in/industrial_revolution_1
Reference Library: Encyclopedia
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Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution was a period of the 18th century marked by social and technological change in which manufacturing began to rely on steam power , fueled primarily by coal , rather than on animal labor, or on water or wind power; and by a shift from artisans who made complete products to factories in which each worker completed a single stage in the manufacturing process. Improvements in transportation encouraged the rapid pace of change. The causes of the Industrial Revolution remain a topic for debate with some historians seeing it as an outgrowth from the social changes of the Enlightenment and the colonial expansion of the 17th century The Industrial Revolution began in the English Midlands and spread throughout England and into continental Europe and the northern United States in the 19th century . Before the improvements made to the pre-existing steam engine by James Watt and others, all manufacturing had to rely for power on wind or water mills or muscle power produced by animals or humans. But with the ability to translate the potential energy of steam into mechanical force , a factory could be built away from streams and rivers, and many tasks that had been done by hand in the past could be mechanized. If, for example, a lumber mill had been limited in the number of logs it could cut in a day due to the amount of water and

95. Industrial Revolution
The industrial revolution was a period of the 18th century marked by social and who made complete products to factories in which each worker completed a single
http://www.fact-index.com/i/in/industrial_revolution_1.html
Main Page See live article Alphabetical index
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution was a period of the 18th century marked by social and technological change in which manufacturing began to rely on steam power , fueled primarily by coal , rather than on animal labor, or on water or wind power; and by a shift from artisans who made complete products to factories in which each worker completed a single stage in the manufacturing process. Improvements in transportation encouraged the rapid pace of change. The causes of the Industrial Revolution remain a topic for debate with some historians seeing it as an outgrowth from the social changes of the Enlightenment and the colonial expansion of the 17th century The Industrial Revolution began in the English Midlands and spread throughout England and into continental Europe and the northern United States in the 19th century . Before the improvements made to the pre-existing steam engine by James Watt and others, all manufacturing had to rely for power on wind or water mills or muscle power produced by animals or humans. But with the ability to translate the potential energy of steam into mechanical force , a factory could be built away from streams and rivers, and many tasks that had been done by hand in the past could be mechanized. If, for example, a lumber mill had been limited in the number of logs it could cut in a day due to the amount of water and

96. BBC - History - Scottish History
and grew to form the backbone of a commercial revolution. Further transformations in the industry came through a The most common workers were often women and
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/scottishhistory/enlightenment/features_enlightenmen
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Like this page? Send it to a friend! The Industrial Revolution The Chemical Revolution The Commercial Revolution Rapidly the knowledge of the chemical revolution was adapted to commercial use. Black and his fellow professor, William Cullen, went on to develop an alkali using the newly discovered element, Chlorine, which made the process of linen bleaching far more efficient. New Lanark The Factory System capitalism but it was profitable. Within a few years six mills were operating at New Lanark. Oddities Media Museum The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Web sites. Privacy

97. Industrial Revolution Definition Of Industrial Revolution. What Is Industrial Re
industrial revolution. Word Noun, 1. industrial revolution the transformation from an agricultural to an industrial nation technological
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Industrial revolution
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Noun industrial revolution - the transformation from an agricultural to an industrial nation technological revolution age historic period - an era of history having some distinctive feature; "we live in a litigious age" Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms Examples from classic literature: More With the invention of steam and the Industrial Revolution there came into existence the Capitalist Class, in the modern sense of the word.
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98. The Christian Science Monitor | Csmonitor.com
inventions have come along that have dramatically boosted worker output from electricity that helped advance the industrial revolution to automobiles that
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USA from the June 21, 2000 edition Editor's note The Christian Science Monitor archive includes stories dating back to 1980. Some early articles lack sufficient formatting, and will appear as one long column without paragraph breaks. We apologize for the aesthetics and hope that the information will still be of value to you. Internet Age vs. Industrial Revolution David R. Francis, Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor - The cartoon is a pointed one. It shows several office workers seated before their computers. One is downloading a new version of the videogame Space Kombat. Another is e-mailing a boyfriend. The third is browsing fall fashions. The headline says simply: "Economists wonder why computers haven't boosted productivity." The cartoon, accompanying an article in the normally unadventurous Journal of Economic Perspectives, hints at a debate that lies at the heart of the New Economy.

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