Industrial Revolution Outline | Teen Ink

Industrial Revolution Outline

June 18, 2013
By Confused_scheherazade ELITE, Brooklyn, New York, New York
Confused_scheherazade ELITE, Brooklyn, New York, New York
132 articles 0 photos 24 comments

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Thesis: The 1800s had not only ushered in a new era of enhanced transportation and technology, but also the Industrial Revolution which urbanized America’s social working structure and mechanical employment. Due to the Industrial Revolution, the US’s financial system changed dramatically, transforming from a revenue dependent on the work of farmers and artisans to that based on fast, reliant, and cheap mass production of factories, which were able to employ several non-skilled workers. However, the industrialized era also had its consequences(though not all negative), in which the precedent social order was destroyed, featuring the decline of America’s stringent patriarchy and the uprising of female employment and strikes.

Paragraph 1:

Putting-out system disintegrated artisanship and apprenticeship

More mills and factories= More opportunities for unskilled employment= Lower wages

Industrialized machines threatened independence of skilled male work force

Transformation of a large barter system into a cash economy

Free labor/ debility of community hire- workers able to work at whatever factory or company they want, at whatever wages available

Industrial capitalism is boosted due to the improved conveyance system, cheap labor, and fast production

Paragraph 2:

Child and women’s labor

Decline of absolute patriarchal dependency for women

Free labor- preindustrial ideal of “community of interest” between employer and employee did not exist anymore

Strikes- workers protested for more human conditions- better wages and shorter hours

Conclusion: The Industrial Revolution provided a series of benefits and consequences for which changed the face of American economics and lives of common American workers forever. The industrialization of US capitalization caused the cheaper and more extensive employment, non-experienced workers, like women, children, and immigrants found job openings. Artisans and apprentices began losing their place in society; as specialization and standardization became the new concepts of employee condition, while also diminishing the stable economic power of male workers.


The author's comments:
H.W. # 25: “Transition pains’
Read pages 338 -342 (from “From Artisan...” to “A New...)
Outline: Evaluate how the Industrial Revolution affected lives of workers.

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