Transcript Romanticism

CHY4U Unit 3
Late-1700s to mid-1800s
Machinery
• http://inventors.about.com/od/indrevol
ution/ss/Industrial_Revo.htm
Industrialization
Crystal Palace, 1851
Quarry Bank Mill
Victoria Station, The Great Exhibition at the Crystal Palace, 2001, http://www.victorianstation.com/palace.html (August
15, 2005); Quarry Bank Mill and Styal Estate, 2001, http://www.quarrybankmill.org.uk/ (August 15, 2005);
www.bbc.co.uk/ images/ind_boysloom.jpg
Coal Output
Elisabeth Gaynor Ellis and Anthony Esler, World History:
Connections to Today – Teachers Edition (Upper Saddle River,
New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001), 520.
Factory Work
Cotton Mill
Oxford Archaeology, Cotton Spinning, 2004, www.oxfordarch.co.uk/.../ industrial/carding.jpg (August 15, 2005)
Railroad
Elisabeth Gaynor Ellis
and Anthony Esler,
World History:
Connections to Today –
Teachers Edition (Upper
Saddle River, New
Jersey: Prentice Hall,
2001), 503.
Railway
Stephenson’s
Locomotive, “The
Rocket”
BBC History Trail, Victorian Britain, Industry and Invention, 2001,
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/lj/victorian_britainlj/industry_invention_6.shtml?site=history_victorianlj_
industry (August 15, 2005)
No School
• “Up until the end of the 19th Century there was
no law that meant you had to be educated at all.
• In early Victorian Britain many children never
went to school.
• Parents had to pay for their children to go to
school, but many families were too poor to afford
this. They sent their children to work in the factories
instead.”
National Archives, Learning Curve, Snapshots, How We Were Taught, 2000, http://www.learningcurve.gov.uk/snapshots/snapshot15/snapshot15.htm
(October 15, 2005)
Child Labour
Child Coal Miners
National Archives Learning Curve, Victorian Britain, Industrial Nation, Source 4, n.d.,
http://www.learningcurve.gov.uk/victorianbritain/industrial/source4.htm (October 15, 2005)
Women Miners
Mr. Sadler’s witness statement in Lord
Ashley’s Report, 1842
National Archives Learning Curve, Victorian Britain, Divided Nation, Source 3,
http://www.learningcurve.gov.uk/victorianbritain/divided/source3.htm (October 15, 2005)
Cities
“At the start of the
19th century about
20% of Britain’s
population lived
there, but by 1851
half the population of
the country had set up
home in London.”
George Cruikshank, London Going
Out of Town, 1829
Spartacus Educational, British History 1700-1900, n.d., http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/ITlondon.htm (October 15, 2005); National Archives,
Learning Curve, Snapshots, Victorian Homes, n.d., http://www.learningcurve.gov.uk/snapshots/snapshot14/snapshot14.htm (October 15, 2005)
City Life
Elisabeth Gaynor Ellis and Anthony Esler,
World History: Connections to Today –
Teachers Edition (Upper Saddle River,
New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001), 511.
Imperialism
Elisabeth Gaynor Ellis and Anthony Esler, World History:
Connections to Today – Teachers Edition (Upper Saddle River,
New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001), 502.