The Industrial Revolution Flashcards
When did the Industrial Revolution start?
Around 1760
What did the Industrial Revolution lead to?
Many of the biggest changes of the Victorian era.
What was the Industrial Revolution?
A time of great change in industry, technology and science.
How did energy change?
Rather than people or animals, some industries began using water and wind as sources of energy.
Coal also bagan to be used for fuel instead of wood or peat as it gave out more heat and allowed better quality iron and steel to be made. It was also used to heat water to make steam for the newly invented steam engine.
Oil and natural gas were used for heating and lighting.
How did technology change?
New machines were invented that could work much faster and on a bigger scale than human hands. For example the spinning jenny and power loom allowed the textile industries to grow.
The steam engine could provide more energy for large factories.
The steam locomotive and railways meant that travel was quicker and people, raw materials and goods could be transported more easily.
How did work change?
Before the Industrial Revolution craftspeople made things in their own homes or in small workshops. The new factory system meant people had to go to a place of work where they would work for a shift.
Instead of making something from end-to-end, factory workers would each work specific machines that carried out different stages of a manufacturing process.
How did transport change?
Factories and industries needed more raw materials and made more products which all needed to be transported.
Horse-drawn transport was not fast enough and could not cope with the amount of freight.
Canals were introduced to deal with this issue as they could move large volumes of goods.
Roads were improved with the introduction of macadamised road surfaces that were stronger and smoother.
Later, the invention of the steam train and railway made travel and transport much quicker, more reliable and able to carry heavy loads.
How did engineering change?
Engineering improved through a mix of new materials and better scientific understanding.
Stronger stone buildings like the Bell Rock lighthouse, giant concrete bridges like the Glenfinnan Viaduct, and iron and steel structures like the Tay Bridge and Forth Rail Bridge all became possible.
Big civil engineering projects like the Caledonian Canal and the Loch Katrine scheme that provides Glasgow with its drinking water would not have been possible without the Industrial Revolution.