📚

 > 

🌍 

 > 

📝

AMSCO 5.9 Society and the Industrial Age Notes

1 min readjune 18, 2024

Topic 5.9

📍Topic 5.9 Society and the Industrial Age

📖 AMSCO p.343 - p.350

Main Idea

Key Timeline

5.9 AP World Timeline.png

Image Courtesy of Riya

Things to Know

Effects on Urban Areas

  • Tenements
    • Working families had to live in crowded conditions
      • Diseases spread quickly
    • These buildings were owned by factory owners
    • Located in low-income areas called slums
      • Crime rates increased
  • Conditions Led To:
    • Development of sewage and drainage systems
    • Improved sanitation
    • More clean water

Effects on Class Structure

  • Classes of Society in Britain
    • Bottom: Working Class
      • Worked in factories and coal mines
      • Received low wages
    • Middle Class
      • Factory and office managers (white-collar workers)
      • Literate and educated
    • Top: Industrialists
      • Owners of big companies
      • “Captains of Industry” - overshadowed others

Farm Work vs. Factory Work

  • Farm Work
    • Before industrialization, women could work from home
    • People used to work near each other
    • Relaxed work schedules
  • Factory Work
    • Industrialized machines made everyone go into factories
    • Long-hour shifts - 14 hours a day, 6 days a week
    • Injuries and deaths increased

Effects on Children

  • Children as young as 5 worked in textile mills and coal mines
  • Exposed to dangerous conditions:
    • Heated conditions
    • Carried heavy materials
    • Breathed in coal/factory dust
    • Collapsing mines and flooding

Effects on Women’s Lives

  • Working-class women worked in coal mines
  • Primary laborers in textile factories
  • Paid women 1/2 of what they paid men
  • Becoming a housewife = status symbol
    • This meant that the husband was capable of being the only provider
    • “Cult of domesticity” - idealized female homemaker
  • Feminism also rose
    • 1848 - Seneca Falls, New York
      • Equality for women

Effects on the Environment

  • Pollution
    • Air
      • Fossil fuels - coal, petroleum, and natural gas
      • Burning wood
      • Smog led to respiratory problems
    • Water
      • Industries dumped waste into bodies of water nearby
      • Led to cholera, typhoid, and other diseases

Legacy of the Industrial Revolution

  • Mass production made goods cheaper, available, and easily produced
  • Factory growth inspired movement from rural areas to the city
    • Urban shift for work
  • Led to pollution of air and water
  • Relationship between workers and owners
    • Pay and inequality
      • Bad living conditions led to diseases and deaths

Terms to Remember

TermDefinition + Significance
TenementsPoorly maintained apartment buildings in urban areas, which symbolized unsanitary and inadequate living conditions for the working class.
SlumsImpoverished urban neighborhoods, which were often overcrowded and highlighted socio-economic disparities during industrialization
White-Collar WorkersThe middle-class population who worked in office-based jobs. This highlighted the diversity of jobs amongst the middle class during industrialization.
Working ClassPeople who worked in manual and industrial labor industries. They faced various challenges like unsafe working and living conditions.
IndustrializationShift from farming-based economy to factories. More mechanized technologies brought about various economic and societal changes.
HierarchySocial structure during the Industrial Age. Middle-class and factory owners rose in status, while the urban poor faced hardship.

<< Hide Menu

📚

 > 

🌍 

 > 

📝

AMSCO 5.9 Society and the Industrial Age Notes

1 min readjune 18, 2024

Topic 5.9

📍Topic 5.9 Society and the Industrial Age

📖 AMSCO p.343 - p.350

Main Idea

Key Timeline

5.9 AP World Timeline.png

Image Courtesy of Riya

Things to Know

Effects on Urban Areas

  • Tenements
    • Working families had to live in crowded conditions
      • Diseases spread quickly
    • These buildings were owned by factory owners
    • Located in low-income areas called slums
      • Crime rates increased
  • Conditions Led To:
    • Development of sewage and drainage systems
    • Improved sanitation
    • More clean water

Effects on Class Structure

  • Classes of Society in Britain
    • Bottom: Working Class
      • Worked in factories and coal mines
      • Received low wages
    • Middle Class
      • Factory and office managers (white-collar workers)
      • Literate and educated
    • Top: Industrialists
      • Owners of big companies
      • “Captains of Industry” - overshadowed others

Farm Work vs. Factory Work

  • Farm Work
    • Before industrialization, women could work from home
    • People used to work near each other
    • Relaxed work schedules
  • Factory Work
    • Industrialized machines made everyone go into factories
    • Long-hour shifts - 14 hours a day, 6 days a week
    • Injuries and deaths increased

Effects on Children

  • Children as young as 5 worked in textile mills and coal mines
  • Exposed to dangerous conditions:
    • Heated conditions
    • Carried heavy materials
    • Breathed in coal/factory dust
    • Collapsing mines and flooding

Effects on Women’s Lives

  • Working-class women worked in coal mines
  • Primary laborers in textile factories
  • Paid women 1/2 of what they paid men
  • Becoming a housewife = status symbol
    • This meant that the husband was capable of being the only provider
    • “Cult of domesticity” - idealized female homemaker
  • Feminism also rose
    • 1848 - Seneca Falls, New York
      • Equality for women

Effects on the Environment

  • Pollution
    • Air
      • Fossil fuels - coal, petroleum, and natural gas
      • Burning wood
      • Smog led to respiratory problems
    • Water
      • Industries dumped waste into bodies of water nearby
      • Led to cholera, typhoid, and other diseases

Legacy of the Industrial Revolution

  • Mass production made goods cheaper, available, and easily produced
  • Factory growth inspired movement from rural areas to the city
    • Urban shift for work
  • Led to pollution of air and water
  • Relationship between workers and owners
    • Pay and inequality
      • Bad living conditions led to diseases and deaths

Terms to Remember

TermDefinition + Significance
TenementsPoorly maintained apartment buildings in urban areas, which symbolized unsanitary and inadequate living conditions for the working class.
SlumsImpoverished urban neighborhoods, which were often overcrowded and highlighted socio-economic disparities during industrialization
White-Collar WorkersThe middle-class population who worked in office-based jobs. This highlighted the diversity of jobs amongst the middle class during industrialization.
Working ClassPeople who worked in manual and industrial labor industries. They faced various challenges like unsafe working and living conditions.
IndustrializationShift from farming-based economy to factories. More mechanized technologies brought about various economic and societal changes.
HierarchySocial structure during the Industrial Age. Middle-class and factory owners rose in status, while the urban poor faced hardship.