2. Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution was a time from the 18th
century to the 19th century where there was
agriculture and many other changes.
Britain was the first and then Germany, USA,
Japan and France went through this stage.
3. Industrial Revolution
Urbanization is to became an urban
character.
A industry in were household wives
would sew and other household things.
There was a migration of people from
rural to urban during the Industrial
Revolution.
Because almost everyone had a farm
and they thought they would make
more money.
4. Agricultural Revolution
• Increased migration to cites and
freed people from Ag labor.
• Crop rotation is the practice of
growing a series of kind of the same
types of crops in the same area.
5. Textiles
Textiles were the first commodity to boom in the
Revolution.
Textiles are the branch of an industry that makes
clothes
Inventions that got the Textile industry booming were
the cotton gin, the loom, and the steam engine.
The inventor of the steam engine was Thomas Savery.
6. Steam Engine
Although Thomas Savory may
have made the steam engine,
James Watt made some
improvements to it.
Was invented in 1775
It was important then because
it provided a well source of
power to deliver the goods to
factories.
7. Bessemer Process
Was a steelmaking process in which silicon, carbon
and other impurities are removed from melted pig-iron
by oxidation from a blast of air in a metal tilting object.
Henry Bessemer came up with this idea.
It made steel making cheaper.
8. Pasteurization
Louis Paster was a French men who was a
microbiologist an a chemist.
Louis invented pasteurization which killed bad bacteria
in milk and made it safer to sell milk.
9. Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison invented the light bulb, the
kinetoscope, and the phonograph.
He had 1,093 patents.
“Discontent is the first necessity of progress.”
-Thomas Edison
10. Romanticism
Was a movement in the
literature and arts the
was originated around
the late 18th century.
The Romantic
movement started out
as a bad reaction to the
French export of
Enlightenment theories.
Mary Shelly and
Charles Dickens.