Industrialization
Industrialization has changed the world into a more modern and advance society in an expanse of a hundred years. Industrialization took place from the 18th to 19th centuries. During this time period, massive things changed. Instead of manufacturing in homes and using hand tools or basic machines, they shifted to powered, special-purpose machinery factories, and mass production. Items being produced by hand, the owners of the facilities created ways to have machines produce the items. This economic change transformed a human population from an agrarian society into an industrial society.
The Industrial Revolution entailed many different aspects. The society was advancing into a new way of life-transforming the productive
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The film Industrial Revolution keys together all the main factors to why it all began in Britain. Society was growing every day, making handmade products that could not keep up with demand. There were too many people and not enough products to continue a substantial lifestyle. They needed change and fast. Britain was the first place for the Industrial Revolution to start. They set the bar for all around the world. Britain's main source of energy was wood. Wood provided fuel for homes and industries. However, as the population grew the wood resource become scarce. Transporting the wood became expensive because of the long traveling cost and handling. Britain needed a new source of fuel and coal was it. This would give them three times more energy than wood. Britain had an abundant amount of coal and it was easily mined. This caused new ideas in innovators wanting to explore other opportunities they could use with coal (T. de …show more content…
Men, women, and children were affected by the changes taking place all around them. Society was changing into a more modernized civilization with new contributions to everyone's life. The effects on people of this time were varied. One of the main places the Industrial Revolution affected was work life. Since the Industrial Revolution was so new, there were initially no laws to regulate new industries. Not having laws created an uproar in the work industries. There were no laws to prevent businesses from hiring seven-year-old children to work full time in the coal mines or factories. No laws regulated what factories could do with their biohazard waste or safety regulations to prevent injuries. No laws that regulated hours and a decent amount of earnings either. This affected the way workers did their job. Soon they started to protest, hoping to get better hours, safety regulations, and child labor laws