It's incorrect to think that child labor was a new thing when the textile mills came about. Children had always worked long hours at dangerous jobs on farms and also down mines. Until the late 19th century at the earliest children were economic assets first and children second.
helo madum i want job in lowell i am power loom drive an i have experience this my big honor but need the job i already job since back 15 years have experience
In notts we had dozens of textile factories the majority of which are closed .lwas in one doing knitwear for m and s .now they have foreign second hand muck
It started with the enclosure movement, In England, appropriation of common land which took the land from the commoners and forced them into the city where the factories were. Then came Ned Ludd, In 1779, Ludd broke two stocking frames in a fit of rage. When the "Luddites" emerged in the 1810s, destroying 1,000's of frames, his identity was appropriated to become the folkloric character of Captain Ludd, also known as King Lud or General Ludd, the Luddites' alleged leader and founder. That was the start of the first industrial revolution against the factories and machines..
May the music please be less scary? I need to watch your videos to answer questions for my homework, but I don't want to because the music creeps me out too much. Thanks!
I used to work the spinning machines that spun the bobbins. Then I went to do looping, and then cheese winding. After that I worked on fly spinning, and wool winding from hanks to balls of wool. Takes me back that does. Hard work from 7am to 5pm for £5 a week. Up at 5am and back home by 6pm.
In Britain from 1800 to 1900. 20,000 Waterwheels decreased in number. Windmills decreased in number. Englishman Thomas Newcomen's 1,500 Atmospheric Pumps disappeared. Scotsman James Watt's 500 Steam Engines and their descendants increased in number to 10,000,000 !!! For every SINGLE Waterwheel in 1800 we now had 500 Steam Engines in 1900 !!! An increase in Power availability for the whole country of 500 times !!! And consequently in productive capacity. All in one human lifetime! This WAS the Industrial Revolution! It had nothing to do with Spinning and Weaving, or Waterwheels.
I'm trying to write a story set in a factual country in the early 1800's where the government has ordered people who can't read or write to work as slaves in the factories making weapons for army. But I need to find about weapon factories in early 1800's can anyone help me
We've had Factories, Iron, Canals, and Big Business for Millennia, but they were all multiplied one hundredfold by Steam Power. While the rare Water-wheels were replaced one thousandfold by Steam Engines. The only thing that hadn't existed before was James Watt's High Pressure Steam Powered Engine. That WAS the Industrial Revolution. It was a Power Revolution. Somehow, I don't think it was a thread Revolution. The Industrial Revolution was the dumping of Newcomen's Atmospheric Power and Arkwright's Water-Power for James Watt's Steam Power! Take away Steam Power, and what do you get? No Industrial Revolution!
The industrial revolution was a blessing for the generations after the edwardian, victorian and georgian times but not for the people who were in it at te time. In Europe the normal citizens were very, very poor and we're exploited by the mills and they lived in extemely bad, unhealthy housing and poor food. In the UK it was the worst (especially England). I read Robert Blincoes story.........I just can't believe those mill owners were so harsh on their employees, poor kids as scavengers under dangerous spinning machines.......thank God, times have changed for better for us now (circumstances) but the ones who fought of it died in poverty! I musn't think of what would have happened to me if no one had fought for our working class rights!! People; never take your rights for granted......you still have to fight for your rights, at least for to keep them........be aware of that or it will happen again!
No matter how bad life was before the factory system was introduced by Britain , it was ten times better than before with no constant work , so no food or clothing , constant grinding poverty , its why the Chinese girls sit assembling I phones all-day In China because if they weren't they would be in the paddy fields sweating their arses off in the sun or cold just to survive just like the Brits before the industrial revolution , but the bleeding heart Socialist have painted anybody in Britain that is successful as an exploiter of the great unwashed and holds them back as a nation where as the Hun just moves ahead knowing productivity creates greater wealth .
So you think working in cotton mills with no protection was good ?awfull lung diseases were created that way and don't get me started on the coal mines . My Grandad who is 93 can tell you some awfull stories and that was back in the 40s and 50s. They were just numbers ? If you couldn't work or afford to pay your way it was to the work house with you .
By lack of anything better; yes. But don't talk slavery and exploitation right.........the generation of Europeans in 2022 are reasonable okay now but don't forget your very far ancestors paid the price for you
Anyone else here because their history teacher assigned them a worksheet that goes to this video?😂
yep
me
Yeeep lmao
Yep, for home schooling
yes
Beautiful
I am here for my general interest in the english Textiles Industry.
Anyone here feel like doing my history homework for me?
4:16
All the history teachers reading the comments like: 👁👄👁
Are you sure
@@sajidanadeem977 wdym
I mean Why would history teachers look at comments
Duh
@@sajidanadeem977 r u clapped it’s a joke dUhHh
I'm just gonna guess everyone is watching this for textiles or history class
I'm not.
Online class stinks. I wanna go to school for once in my life.
Big Boy Creams me too
my euro teacher linked this video so yeah
Yup.
History Class anyone?
*slowly raises hand
Moood
Go. 2 bed
Yes
✋
Why do teachers like giving us 2002 documentaries in 360p?
I swear
Probably cuz now no one makes these vids now
Ikr
idk but I think that the teachers are gonna put it to 240p
I don't know
5:37-5:46 Bruh rip them children 👶🏻 .
WHOS HERE BECAUSE Of THEIR HISTORY TEACHERS 👨🏫????
Everyone is saying they were sent by their history teachers
Who the fuck wasn’t
@@cveti3889 i wasnt lol i was sent by my math teacher for extra credit
@@cveti3889 ikr
who would watch this in their freetime?
I was lol😅
yep history class is..... (teacher looks over your shoulder and laughs knowing you bout to say some nutty shit) fun as hell ;)
“We take the idea of going to work for granted”
That aged well
History class anyone
I don’t wanna do my homework here •-•
Sup
Lmao
I’m glad it’s not just me who is watching this for my online history class
Me rn
Saairah Hussain HI SAARIAH ITS ME NABEELAH
Melaine Bebe BAHAHAHAHA HI
BAHAHAH SAME
Watches this for in-person history class too.
R.I.P the 173,222 souls who had to watch this for there history lesson
Make that over 190000
I just enjoyed watching it for fun
Guys stop roasting our teachers
I cant stop liking all. Of them
Anyone else here from remote learning?
Me 😔
History anyone
I went there for a school trip I’m pretty sure..
?
Anyone in my class here
fortnite kid
anyone else from my history class with mrs simpson ;)
How do ppl know that ppl are watching this for history homework😂😂😂
Bc everyone is saying it duh
what the hell is with these drawings
7 mins of my life I’m never getting back
Many different types of machines, and factories with machines in them.
so they can make a lot of products R E A L F A S T
2020 anyone??? Coronavirus? And for history work ??
Yep
For every goon that gets nostalgic about the British empire I'll point out it's likely their ancestors were slaving away in a workhouse
So true!
It's incorrect to think that child labor was a new thing when the textile mills came about. Children had always worked long hours at dangerous jobs on farms and also down mines. Until the late 19th century at the earliest children were economic assets first and children second.
Did the early textile technology produce more textile waste than today?
Textiles class anyone?
*putes hand down Very fast*
helo madum i want job in lowell i am power loom drive an i have experience this my big honor but need the job i already job since back 15 years have experience
In notts we had dozens of textile factories the majority of which are closed .lwas in one doing knitwear for m and s .now they have foreign second hand muck
Anyone else is here cause there history teacher assigned this on show my homework 😂
Exactly why I’m here lmao
damn we all here for history lessons
POV: you have a history assignment
Recorded on the Logitech Z623 THX 2.1 Speaker System.
It started with the enclosure movement, In England, appropriation of common land which took the land from the commoners and forced them into the city where the factories were. Then came Ned Ludd, In 1779, Ludd broke two stocking frames in a fit of rage. When the "Luddites" emerged in the 1810s, destroying 1,000's of frames, his identity was appropriated to become the folkloric character of Captain Ludd, also known as King Lud or General Ludd, the Luddites' alleged leader and founder. That was the start of the first industrial revolution against the factories and machines..
May the music please be less scary? I need to watch your videos to answer questions for my homework, but I don't want to because the music creeps me out too much. Thanks!
Same here I dunno why this can’t be class work instead of homework
🤦♀️😂
bruh
Guys it was 4 am please understand 😭
So we’re all just watching this for history?
Bruh, intense film, epic
th-cam.com/video/5t53TcKIlMc/w-d-xo.html
I used to work the spinning machines that spun the bobbins. Then I went to do looping, and then cheese winding. After that I worked on fly spinning, and wool winding from hanks to balls of wool. Takes me back that does. Hard work from 7am to 5pm for £5 a week. Up at 5am and back home by 6pm.
So everyone is here from history homework?🤣
In Britain from 1800 to 1900.
20,000 Waterwheels decreased in number.
Windmills decreased in number.
Englishman Thomas Newcomen's 1,500 Atmospheric Pumps disappeared.
Scotsman James Watt's 500 Steam Engines and their descendants increased in number to 10,000,000 !!!
For every SINGLE Waterwheel in 1800 we now had 500 Steam Engines in 1900 !!!
An increase in Power availability for the whole country of 500 times !!! And consequently in productive capacity.
All in one human lifetime!
This WAS the Industrial Revolution!
It had nothing to do with Spinning and Weaving, or Waterwheels.
I'm trying to write a story set in a factual country in the early 1800's where the government has ordered people who can't read or write to work as slaves in the factories making weapons for army. But I need to find about weapon factories in early 1800's can anyone help me
Is this link any help?
gender.stanford.edu/news/2013/gun-making-and-origins-industrial-revolution
Bizarre Is The New Black. Thanks
Well no one was a slave in a factory.. You were paid (slaves aren't paid) and paid much better than if you did cottage industry work at home.
We've had Factories, Iron, Canals, and Big Business for Millennia, but they were all multiplied one hundredfold by Steam Power.
While the rare Water-wheels were replaced one thousandfold by Steam Engines.
The only thing that hadn't existed before was James Watt's High Pressure Steam Powered Engine.
That WAS the Industrial Revolution.
It was a Power Revolution.
Somehow, I don't think it was a thread Revolution.
The Industrial Revolution was the dumping of Newcomen's Atmospheric Power and Arkwright's Water-Power for James Watt's Steam Power!
Take away Steam Power, and what do you get? No Industrial Revolution!
If ur here coz of history class
👇
So done with my history homework. I really DO NOT care about the Industrial Revolution. This video is not going to help.
3 years later its happening again we watching this for History Class
fr
History class
Im gouessing your here because of your history teacher
Hello sir i m work looms
Wasn't farm labouring as arduous as factory work? I don't think you can compare it to modern working life, and after all, a lot of us don't.
anyone else from 7.5 with Mr Tuck?
5:17 no one gonna talk ‘bout how BRUTAL THAT SHIT WAS💀
History class anyone?
moo im a donkey
i hate school
This is quarry bank mill bois
who else is here for history class?
The industrial revolution was a blessing for the generations after the edwardian, victorian and georgian times but not for the people who were in it at te time. In Europe the normal citizens were very, very poor and we're exploited by the mills and they lived in extemely bad, unhealthy housing and poor food. In the UK it was the worst (especially England). I read Robert Blincoes story.........I just can't believe those mill owners were so harsh on their employees, poor kids as scavengers under dangerous spinning machines.......thank God, times have changed for better for us now (circumstances) but the ones who fought of it died in poverty! I musn't think of what would have happened to me if no one had fought for our working class rights!! People; never take your rights for granted......you still have to fight for your rights, at least for to keep them........be aware of that or it will happen again!
Bean
Here for some dumbass homework assignment
I came here for an assignment lol😅
History Class
This how some dudes learned piano 😂
This seems to be part of a longer documentary. Can the full documentary be uploaded? I'd love to watch it in full.
This is really intrasting video to industrial revolution
Yup
Good ol vid
why they sending me links to videos from 1788 stoopid i don’t understand nothing.
Imma just say that I hate history 😃✋ and now I have a whole hour of it...school is sad 😪
this is for school
No matter how bad life was before the factory system was introduced by Britain , it was ten times better than before with no constant work , so no food or clothing , constant grinding poverty , its why the Chinese girls sit assembling I phones all-day In China because if they weren't they would be in the paddy fields sweating their arses off in the sun or cold just to survive just like the Brits before the industrial revolution , but the bleeding heart Socialist have painted anybody in Britain that is successful as an exploiter of the great unwashed and holds them back as a nation where as the Hun just moves ahead knowing productivity creates greater wealth .
So you think working in cotton mills with no protection was good ?awfull lung diseases were created that way and don't get me started on the coal mines . My Grandad who is 93 can tell you some awfull stories and that was back in the 40s and 50s.
They were just numbers ? If you couldn't work or afford to pay your way it was to the work house with you .
By lack of anything better; yes. But don't talk slavery and exploitation right.........the generation of Europeans in 2022 are reasonable okay now but don't forget your very far ancestors paid the price for you
Hi Mr history teacher
history worksheets...
Considering how loud a textile mill was, how did anybody inside hear the bell?
This was interesting but I didn't enjoy the emotive tone of the voiceover. I found it to be overly dramatised.
It is evocative of the jarring effects of industrialization on the poor little folk. I think it fits the story. We ARE COGS
At this point, all of these documentaries have narrators like this lol.
Hi
Rip the 174,085 people who watched this
Yh
thanks Im making research for my game and this helped a lot
Treated more like 'slave labourers'...
It’s just so horrible and wrong
Bar Stools & Bus Stops
The Revolution is on...
Anyone from my class is here ✨ rn?
source for the artwork?
mr devereux brought me
I’m here willingly.
Anyone from AGGS...?
History class loll
howya Mr Mannion
bingus bungus
ive been there
Interesting !
Ich wurde gezwungen das zu schauen
I was set this video for part of my homework
same like industrial revolution or something
Sir iant job where coton mill what u help me
Anyone wanna dumb this down for me or I’m gonna fail history