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The Industrial Revolution
During certain periods in history, innovations in
technology have grown at such a rapid pace that they have
produced what have become known as industrial revolutions.
The term INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION originally referred to
the developments that transformed Great Britain, between
1750 and 1830, from a largely rural population making a
living almost entirely from agriculture to a
town-centered society engaged increasingly in factory
manufacture.
Other European nations underwent the same process soon
thereafter, followed by others during the 19th century,
and still others (such as Russia and Japan) in the the
first half of the 20th century. In some countries this
transformation is only now taking place or still lies in
the future.
The Indutrial Revolution started in England, because
that nation had the technological means, government
encouragement, and a large and varied trade network. The
first factories appeared in 1740, concentrating on
textile production.
In 1740 the majority of English people wore woolen
garments, but within the next 100 years the scratchy,
often soggy and fungus-filled woolens were replaced by
cotton especially after the invention of the cotton gin
by Eli Whitney, an American, in 1793.
Such English inventions as the flying shuttle and
carding machines of John Kay, the water frame of Richard
Arkwright, the spinning jenny of James Hargreaves, and
the improvements in weaving made by Samuel Crompton were
all integrated with a new source of power, the steam
engine, developed in England by Thomas Newcomen, James
Watt, Richard Trevithick, and in the U.S. by Oliver
Evans.
Within a 35 year period, from the 1790s to the 1830s,
more than 100,000 power looms with 9,330,000 spindles
were put into service in England and Scotland. |