The Industrial Revolution: Crash Course European History #24 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

[0]
Hi I’m John Green and this is Crash Course European History.
[2]
So we’re going to turn our attention now to the Industrial Revolution, one of the most
[7]
significant developments in human history.
[10]
Like, imagine with me that it’s 1820.
[13]
I got this idea from the economist Robert Gordon by the way.
[16]
You live in, say, England.
[18]
You probably work in agriculture.
[20]
When you walk to town, you’re either pulling your own cart, or if you’re lucky you have
[25]
a horse.
[26]
You have no running water or electricity.
[28]
When you wash your few items of clothing, you do so by hand.
[32]
You cook over a fire.
[34]
You think of time not primarily in minutes and hours, but mostly in relationship to solar
[40]
cycles--how close it is to night, or to morning, or to midwinter.
[44]
And in all these respects, your life in 1820 is basically identical to the lives of people
[50]
in 1720, or 1520, or for that matter 1220.
[55]
That’s not to say life hasn’t changed in those hundreds of years--as we’ve explored
[60]
in this series, lots has changed--but as Gregory Clark observed, in terms of standard of living,
[67]
Europeans in 1800 basically led lives similar to those of Neandrathals.
[72]
Now imagine that you close your eyes in 1820 and wake up in 1920.
[78]
By now, most people in England do not work in agriculture.
[81]
They may work in shops, or transportation, or mining, oe workshops, or in factories.
[87]
They measure time in minutes.
[89]
Cars exist.
[90]
Some people have radios, which transmitted information through thin air.
[95]
A few people even have refrigerators, which dramatically decrease food spoilage and the
[100]
risk of foodborne illness.
[102]
Occasionally you might even see an airplane flying in the sky.
[107]
Oh, and also, your country has just emerged from an astonishingly deadly war fought with
[112]
highly lethal weapons such as chlorine gas, weapons that people of 1820 could not possibly
[118]
have imagined.
[120]
Welcome to the Industrial Revolution.
[126]
[Intro] In this series, we’ve already talked about
[133]
revolutions in agriculture that increased European productivity and revolutions in trade
[138]
that increasingly distributed goods among people in towns and cities instead of having
[143]
each individual family produce everything it needed.
[147]
And these forces combined to help create more division of labor: like, farmers could focus
[152]
on farming, and textile workers could focus on textile creation, which was more efficient
[158]
than having each family do every kind of work.
[161]
So let’s begin in the eighteenth century, when European industrial production is said
[165]
to have begun.
[167]
Europe’s population was growing after centuries of non-stop wars, plagues, and the worst of
[172]
the little ice age.
[174]
Meanwhile, products such as coffee, tea, and chocolate made with heated water killed bacteria,
[180]
while products from abroad expanded and varied the pool of nutrients, with corn and potatoes,
[186]
for instance, generally more calorie-dense per acre than wheat.
[190]
In short, lives were getting longer and populations rising.
[194]
This meant that on average people had a little more time to learn, tinker, and experiment.
[201]
Many different artisans invented small improvements to existing mechanical devices.
[206]
Perhaps most famously, John Kay’s flying shuttle increased the pace and productivity
[211]
of weaving.
[212]
Weavers then needed a greater amount of thread.
[215]
So tinkerers made that happen by producing inventions such as the spinning jenny, created
[220]
around 1764 by craftsman James Hargreaves.
[223]
The spinning jenny was a machine used by individual women working at home.
[228]
And it allowed a person, using just the power of their hand, to spin not one bobbin of thread,
[233]
but up to 120 at once.
[236]
In England, Ellen Hacking and her husband John were among those devising carding machines
[241]
to straighten cotton and wool fibers for spinning.
[244]
And at about the same time, Richard Arkwright and his partners invented the water frame,
[248]
another kind of spinning machine that used water power.
[251]
And when spinning machines could be linked to a central power source such as water, many
[256]
could be placed in a single building.
[258]
So, the world’s first factories arose in part from the pressure to increase production
[263]
of English cloth for global and domestic markets.
[266]
Did the center of the world just open?
[268]
Is one of my Polo shirts in there?
[270]
This cost like $41.
[272]
Twice a year I go to a Polo outlet in Southern Indiana and just buy as many of these things
[276]
as they’ll sell to me.
[277]
And look, I’m not here to advertise Polo shirts, but this thing is incredibly comfortable,
[281]
and also, it’s like dyed a specific color.
[285]
Everything about this was completely unimaginable in the early nineteenth century.
[289]
In fact, you know what?
[290]
It’s so soft to the touch, I think I’m going to put it on.
[291]
Is that weird.
[292]
Oh yeah!
[293]
I feel like I’m the bad guy in an 80s movie.
[294]
How do I look, Stan?
[295]
Oh, Stan says I look like Steve Bannon.
[299]
OK.
[300]
Thus ends that experiment, now back to the show.
[301]
Let’s talk about porcelain.
[303]
Another tinkerer was the alchemist Johann Friedrich Böttger who promised the king of
[307]
Saxony that he could figure out how to make porcelain.
[310]
Porcelain was such an obsession that wealthy people collected it and even those with far
[314]
less would try to buy a piece or two—a cup or plate—as we see in many Dutch, French,
[320]
and other paintings.
[321]
Two things you see a lot in European paintings of the affluent or those who aspired to affluence:
[328]
porcelain and pineapples, which were also quite rare and expensive and difficult to
[332]
produce domestically.
[334]
Porcelain was also practical, because Europeans did not know other ways to make heat resistant
[339]
dishware for their hot drinks.
[341]
So Böttger was virtually imprisoned until around 1708 when he figured out how to make
[347]
porcelain, although not as beautifully as the Chinese or Japanese did.
[351]
What we’re trying to get at here is that while people love a great story of an inventor
[355]
and their invention, the Industrial Revolution was the story of lots and lots of people working
[362]
together, making a series of incremental improvements, rather than, like, geniuses from on high creating
[369]
amazing things.
[371]
The real genius of humans is collaboration, and also spying.
[375]
Like for instance, Industrial spies helped with every development because other regions
[381]
were far more advanced than Europe in manufacturing, for instance, color fast dyes and heat-resistant
[387]
dishware, fine weaving and spinning, or even metallurgy.
[390]
Arkwright, for example, mostly copied designs from imported textiles.
[395]
And it was those cotton textiles that caught the imagination of consumers and filled pockets,
[401]
first of the people who imported textiles from India and China, and then of the daring
[406]
manufacturers who were successful at copying the lightweight, and colorful, and washable
[411]
cotton clothing.
[412]
But industrial production of cotton was really risky—the rate of business failure during
[417]
the Industrial Revolution was over 50 percent.
[420]
Because of that, experimenting manufacturers worked to keep labor costs as low as they
[426]
could.
[427]
One way was to use unpaid orphans from government, religious or charitable institutions as labour.
[433]
At a time when people didn’t know a lot about steam powered machinery and its dangers,
[439]
industrial accidents happened all the time, and children were often the victims.
[444]
Children worked incredibly long hours and deaths were common.
[448]
Little Mary Richards was caught up in a machine and six- and seven- year old orphans working
[453]
alongside her witnessed the quote “bones of her arms, legs, thighs, etc successively
[460]
snap... her head appeared dashed to pieces... her blood thrown about like water from a twirled
[466]
mop.”2 Now I know that’s very graphic, but I think
[468]
it’s important to understand the extent of industrial oppression, including the industrial
[474]
oppression of children.
[476]
Workers lost arms, eyes, breasts, and fingers or were otherwise disfigured.
[481]
Production and profits came first to avoid financial ruin.
[486]
And industry had other repercussions.
[488]
It initially increased the demand for slaves even more.
[493]
Slaves produced food for workers who had left farms for factories.
[497]
Slaves also produced tropical crops such as sugar, and tobacco, and coffee that boosted
[502]
the energy of many types of workers.
[505]
And slaves provided the palm and other tropical oils to keep machinery running as well as
[509]
the raw materials for industry, especially cotton.
[513]
It’s important to understand that industry thrived due to slave labor and inexpensive
[518]
child labor, and also through the labor of women, who were paid less than men.
[523]
Over time, more and more people began working in industrialized settings, or in economic
[527]
sectors that supported industry due in part to the development of the steam engine.
[534]
In 1776, English inventor James Watt launched a steam engine that improved earlier models.
[540]
Now as far back as Roman Egypt and then Ottoman Egypt and China, people had known about steam
[545]
engines, But Watt’s engine was more efficient, which made it useful in replacing animal and
[551]
water power, not just in mines but also powering textile factories, and then other machinery.
[557]
For millennia, almost all human power came from our muscles.
[562]
Then we harnessed some animal power, and eventually some wind and water power.
[567]
But steam power completely revolutionized how much work could be done on behalf of humans,
[574]
and also of course changed transportation when it was attached to covered and uncovered
[579]
wagons and ships to make trains and steamships and eventually automobiles.
[584]
And the train created another kind of demand: as urbanization soared around railway hubs,
[591]
small and grand train stations were built along with all the other buildings to house
[596]
the railway’s primary and secondary employees.
[600]
By secondary employees I mean, it wasn’t just station-masters, ticket-sellers, and
[605]
conductors, there was a need for shopkeepers, and pharmacists, and construction workers,
[610]
and teachers, and doctors, and and drivers of coaches, not to mention sanitation workers,
[615]
police, and urban administrators.
[618]
Industrialization had a snowball effect and it wasn’t gonna be turned back.
[622]
And all this mean that everyday life also transformed.
[626]
Two classes became prominent alongside the aristocracy and peasants in the social structure:
[632]
the bourgeoisie and proletariat or working class.
[636]
The bourgeoisie initially referred to people who lived in towns and cities or burgs/bourgs.
[643]
But the term came to refer to those who owned factories, banks, transportation networks,
[649]
and large tracts of land for raising livestock and crops.
[653]
The proletariat comprise the many factory and other workers who lacked tools or land
[659]
to support themselves but instead rather labored for factory owners and others who had the
[664]
means to produce.
[665]
In between were the rising professional groups, called the middle class in Europe: the doctors,
[671]
lawyers, teachers, and others with special skills that serviced society as a whole.
[676]
We will see this configuration change over the next two centuries and watch tensions
[681]
unfold among these groups, and at times boil over.
[685]
Women also experienced a transformation of everyday life.
[689]
In the preceding centuries, they had generally worked on farms or in workshops alongside
[694]
their artisan husbands or on their own as hatmakers, and seamstresses, and weavers,
[699]
and spinners.
[700]
During the early days of industrialization, women who had been spinning or weaving at
[704]
home often switched to factories.
[707]
And they did many other kinds of work; for example, eighteen-year-old Ann Eggly with
[711]
her younger sister worked twelve-hour days in the coal mines pushing carriages filled
[717]
with 800 pounds of coal (which was then used to make steam power).
[721]
She had done this kind of work since she was seven.
[725]
I don’t know if you know any seven year olds, but they should not be working in coal
[728]
mines.
[729]
Now you’ll recall that the French and American revolutions, with their emphasis on motherhood
[734]
and laws stripping women of their property, led to women being discouraged from work.
[739]
But many continued to do so even when their wages belonged to their husbands.
[745]
Factories also created (and still create) outwork done by women at home: polishing knives
[750]
or painting porcelain buttons for example.
[753]
But, ideology simultaneously shifted to say that women were to be “angels in the household,”
[760]
providing comfort from the horrors of industrial life, a cultural norm that discouraged work
[767]
outside the home.
[768]
In the meantime, the classes became aware of their individual identities.
[772]
The French had outlawed guilds during the revolution.
[776]
Industrial and other workers formed their own clubs to protect their interests.
[780]
They created singing, gymnastic, and sports clubs--this is why early English football
[785]
teams had names like Royal Engineers AFC and Civil Service FC.
[792]
These groups often had a lively cafe culture, where they discussed politics and read newspapers,
[797]
often allowed to their comrades because each cafe usually only had one newspaper.
[803]
Manufacturers and wealthy individuals in cities likewise formed groups based on their common
[807]
class position; they founded chambers of commerce to protect their financial interests and museums
[813]
to show off their city’s achievements and good taste.
[817]
Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
[818]
1.
[819]
Initially, the rise of factories saw those left out of industrial work life,
[822]
2.
[823]
such as artisans and small farmers,
[824]
3.
[825]
protest by breaking machinery or threatening to do so.
[828]
4.
[829]
The “Swing riots” in Britain are one example of what has been called “primitive” rebellion.
[833]
5.
[834]
Instead of dealing with change by organizing to benefit from and shape the change,
[838]
6.
[839]
so-called primitive rebels went about breaking things.
[842]
7.
[843]
Wreckers of machinery were called Luddites
[844]
8. (as they still are today)
[845]
9. because menacing notes found alongside sabotage were often signed Ned Ludd.
[850]
10.
[851]
Ludd was an inspirational figure -- a weaver who allegedly smashed a textile machine in
[856]
the 18th century.
[858]
11.
[859]
But gradually, workers inside the factories formed mutual aid societies
[862]
12. and eventually unions that negotiated for better terms with owners.
[866]
And when negotiations failed,
[868]
13.
[869]
they went on strike as a group instead of wrecking the machines with which they earned
[873]
their living.
[874]
14.
[875]
All in all, industrialization wreaked havoc on people’s lives even as it provided many
[879]
with livelihoods.
[880]
15.
[881]
Towns grew astronomically: like textile center Manchester England went from 20,000 people
[885]
in the 1750s to 400,000 a century later.
[889]
16.
[890]
Conditions in Manchester were abominable, including the development of slums, and the
[894]
spread of disease.
[895]
17.
[896]
They came to lack fresh and safe supplies of water.
[898]
18.
[899]
Garbage and sewage, not to mention animal excrement, filled muddy streets,
[903]
19.
[904]
creating, in the words of one commentator, “a universal atmosphere of filth and stink.”[1]
[909]
20. and Conditions in other industrial cities hardly differed.
[913]
Thanks Thought Bubble.
[914]
So, Industrialization spread from England and the low countries where it began thanks
[918]
to the capital raised by worldwide trade, and because that trade made possible successful
[924]
imitation of foreign products.
[926]
But industrialization then spread.
[928]
It traveled the continent through the 19th century, although industrialization was less
[932]
dense in eastern Europe.
[933]
There, many peasants continued to live hand-to-mouth, but as we’ve seen, so did the poor in industrial
[940]
cities.
[941]
So was the Industrial Revolution a revolution?
[944]
Well, if a revolution is an event full of impact on people’s lives, it certainly was.
[950]
But often historians look at revolutions as, like, ending, which the Industrial Revolution
[957]
really hasn’t.
[958]
Unlike the comparatively brief English Revolution or American Revolution, many see the Industrial
[964]
Revolution as continuing to make dramatic changes in our way of life today.
[969]
Today, we expect technologies to change dramatically in our lifetimes.
[974]
We expect to use different tools to communicate and work than our parents used.
[981]
But that expectation is only a couple hundred years old.
[984]
It makes you wonder.
[985]
If you closed your eyes in 2020, and woke up in 2120, how weird is the world gonna be.
[991]
Ugh.
[992]
Thinking about that is stressing me out.Next time, we’ll look further at the cultural
[995]
and political aspects of industrialization.
[998]
I’ll see you then.
[999]
Thanks for watching.
[1000]
________________ [1] Quoted in Lynn Hunt et al., The Making
[1002]
of the West: Peoples and Cultures, 6th ed.
[1008]
(Boston: Bedford St. Martin’s, 2019) 21.