1st Edition

Living Through the Industrial Revolution

By Stella Davies Copyright 2006
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    268 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1966, this revealing study looks closely into the lives of the men, women and children working in mines, workshops, factories and farms during the industrial revolution. It investigates the inventors whose new machines made the industrial revolution possible, and reflects on the new type of employer whose enterprise and energy in linking machine and labour power formed a new society.

    Where possible, contemporary accounts, letters, diaries and reports have been used so that the words of those living through this remarkable time can be heard - the words and thoughts of masters, workpeople, apprentice children, 'improving landlords' and farm labourers illuminate the prevailing attitudes of the period. An introductory chapter outlines previous methods of living and working and shows the first movements towards the industrial revolution.

    Describing successes and failures, lives of impoverishment and hardship, fortunes made and, sometimes, lost, and the effects of the new society, this enlightening study investigates how early struggles to cope with almost overwhelming problems are now seen as the beginnings of the comparatively comfortable conditions we benefit from today.

    1. Making, buying and selling

    2. The domestic industries

    3. A new method of transport

    4. The new machines

    Children in factories, the Apprentice system

    Model Employers

    New Communities

    The Struggle for Legal Protection

    Harsh Employers and Bad Conditions

    Free-Labour Children

    5. The giant, steam

    6. Men of iron

    7. Farms and farmworkers

    8. The fight for reform

    9. An end and a beginning

    Biography

    Davies, Stella