Beginnings of the Industrial Revolution
Inventions
Working Conditions
Environmental Issues
Reform Movements
100

the movement of population into cities and away from rural areas. A rural area is similar to a small farm community.

Urbanization


100

Invented in 1764, this wheel allowed for a spinner to work 8 threads at one time.

Spinning Jenny

100

The wealthy business owners who became wealthy off the work of others

Ownership Class

100

The act of clearing forest land for the purpose of building factories

Deforestation

100

A statement or action expressing disapproval of something

Protest


200

The Industrial Revolution begain in this country

Great Britain


200

 the process of making products, or goods, from raw materials by the use of manual labor or machinery.

Manufacturing

200

 Individuals who must work for a wage to survive

Working Class

200

the presence in or introduction into the environment of a substance or thing that has harmful or poisonous effects.

Pollution


200

The movement to give women the right to vote in national or local elections

Women's Suffrage Movement

300

Great Britain was able to acquire natural resources due to contolling a large amount _______________

Colonies

300

a black or brownish-black sedimentary rock. It is extracted from the Earth by underground mining or by digging large pits.

coal

300

The employment of children in factories, especially when considered inhumane

child labor


300

long-term shifts in temperatures and weather patterns.

Climate Change


300

An organization of workers with the goals of ending child labor, increasing pay and giving better working conditions to the working class

The Labor Reform movement

400

seeks to bring about change within one aspect of society, culture, or technology.

non-political revolution
400

 a machine that quickly and easily separates cotton fibers from their seeds, enabling much greater productivity than manual cotton separation.

cotton gin

400

the action or fact of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their work.

Exploitation


400

an annual event on April 22 to demonstrate support for environmental protection.

Earth Day


400

Limited the workday to ten hours for women and children who worked in factories.

The Ten Hours Act
500
  • societies want change within their societies, specifically with their governments (for ex: French Rev); usually involves overthrowing the govt

political revolution 


500

 an economic practice by which governments used their economies to augment state power at the expense of other countries.

mercantilism

500

He believed workers would unite and overthrow their owners

Karl Marx

500

The leading cause of pollution in the modern world

Motor vehicles

500

Granted compensation (money) to workers for on-the job injuries not their own fault.

The first Employers’ Liability Act


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