Industrial Revolution
   The Textile Industry

   The Iron Industry

   The Coal Industry
The Textile Industry ‘‘the
Cottage Industry’’
 The main material used in the textile industry was
  Wool. The process of cloth making passed by three
  main steps:
1. Carding: separating the short staples of wool from
   the raw mass.

1. Spinning: joining these staples into a continious
   thread
2. Weaving: the continious thread was woven into
   clothes, this step entiled the hand loom.
What was wrong with the
Cottage industry before the
revolution?
 Though textile under this system allowed work to be
 done in the free atmosphere of home, and helped
 families making earning, its main weakness was that
 spinning was a very much slower process than
 weaving.
Spinning Wheal
Hand Loom
Revolutionazing the Textile
Industry
Flying Shuttle by John Kay:
His invention made weaving faster, thus increasing the
  disparity in speed between weaving and spinninig.
Spinning Jenny by Hargreaves:
This was an attempt to speed up spinning to the level
  required for the Flying Shuttle, but it has one main
  defect: the resultant thread was fine, but weak
The Water-Frame by Arkwright:
This was another attempt to speed the spinning process;
  this time the thread produced was strong but not fine
  (coarse or rough).
 The Mule by Samual Crompton:


 It was a combination of the Spinning Jenny and the
 Water-Frame. The Spinning Jenny produced fine
 but weak thread, and the Water-Frame produced
 strong but coarce thread. The result was the
 invention of the Mule: Strong and fine thread.
Iron Industry
 The iron industry has two stages:


1. Smelting: metal extraction process in which an ore
   is heated at high temperature in an enclosed
   furnace.
2_Forging:
forming a shape for the metal through heating or
   hammering
What was wrong with iron
industry before the revolution?
Lack of fuel in the smelting process, for
 generations, the charcoal was used, but now the
 British forests became exhausted. Britain had to
 depend on other countries for iron because charcoal
 was both scarce and expensive.
The solution to this problem was to find another fuel
 rather than charcoal. The coal was suggested, but
 when it was employed in the smelting process
 releases sulphur which made the iron too brittle to be
 forged.
Darby’s Coke Smelting
Process:

 Darby worked hard to employ coal in the smelting
 process instead of charcoal. He focused on making
 coal loses its sulphur. He could achieve this through
 turning coal into coke, so that the coal loses most of
 its sulphur as sulphurous gases. But the resulting
 iron was unworkable for the process of forging.
The Puddling Process:

 Cort invented the Puddling Furnace. A method of
 converting pig iron (impure iron) into wrought iron
 (iron ready to be forged, purer that the pig iron) by
 subjecting it to heat with the presence of oxidizing
 substances
The Puddling Furnace
Coal Industry
 The revolution in the coal industry can be
 summarized in overcoming the following handicaps:
1. Flooding:
As miners got deeper, they were more likely to face
   flooding problems. In the begining they used the
   steam pump, but it was not effective. In
   1979, James Watt introduced the most important
   innovation in the industrial revolution: it is the
   steam engine which allowed digging deeper and
   solved the danger of floods.
 The Danger of Explosion:


In coal mines, there exist poisonous or explosive gases
  and if one candle is lit the whole mine goes ablaze.
  To solve this problem, children were hired as
  ‘trappers’ to open and shut trap doors.
The trapper of the Industrial
Revolution
 Using trappers was not effective for it caused
  problems of ventilation.
 The problem of explosion was solved with the
  introduction of the Safety Lamp by Davy



In addition to the Exhaust Fan
Results of the Industrial
Revolution:
                            Imperialism
                           (Mercantilist
                              theory)




      Bad working                           The Emergence of
    Conditions whci            The
                            Industrial         Britain as a
    led to the rise of                       leading political
      trade unions          Revolution
                                                  power



                         Disfiguration of
                         nature and the
                          emergence of
                           some of the
                          literary mvts
All praise be to Allah. I hope that other
 people benifit from this presentation.

Industrial revolution in britain

  • 1.
    Industrial Revolution  The Textile Industry  The Iron Industry  The Coal Industry
  • 2.
    The Textile Industry‘‘the Cottage Industry’’  The main material used in the textile industry was Wool. The process of cloth making passed by three main steps: 1. Carding: separating the short staples of wool from the raw mass. 1. Spinning: joining these staples into a continious thread 2. Weaving: the continious thread was woven into clothes, this step entiled the hand loom.
  • 3.
    What was wrongwith the Cottage industry before the revolution?  Though textile under this system allowed work to be done in the free atmosphere of home, and helped families making earning, its main weakness was that spinning was a very much slower process than weaving.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
    Revolutionazing the Textile Industry FlyingShuttle by John Kay: His invention made weaving faster, thus increasing the disparity in speed between weaving and spinninig. Spinning Jenny by Hargreaves: This was an attempt to speed up spinning to the level required for the Flying Shuttle, but it has one main defect: the resultant thread was fine, but weak The Water-Frame by Arkwright: This was another attempt to speed the spinning process; this time the thread produced was strong but not fine (coarse or rough).
  • 7.
     The Muleby Samual Crompton:  It was a combination of the Spinning Jenny and the Water-Frame. The Spinning Jenny produced fine but weak thread, and the Water-Frame produced strong but coarce thread. The result was the invention of the Mule: Strong and fine thread.
  • 8.
    Iron Industry  Theiron industry has two stages: 1. Smelting: metal extraction process in which an ore is heated at high temperature in an enclosed furnace.
  • 9.
    2_Forging: forming a shapefor the metal through heating or hammering
  • 10.
    What was wrongwith iron industry before the revolution? Lack of fuel in the smelting process, for generations, the charcoal was used, but now the British forests became exhausted. Britain had to depend on other countries for iron because charcoal was both scarce and expensive. The solution to this problem was to find another fuel rather than charcoal. The coal was suggested, but when it was employed in the smelting process releases sulphur which made the iron too brittle to be forged.
  • 11.
    Darby’s Coke Smelting Process: Darby worked hard to employ coal in the smelting process instead of charcoal. He focused on making coal loses its sulphur. He could achieve this through turning coal into coke, so that the coal loses most of its sulphur as sulphurous gases. But the resulting iron was unworkable for the process of forging.
  • 12.
    The Puddling Process: Cort invented the Puddling Furnace. A method of converting pig iron (impure iron) into wrought iron (iron ready to be forged, purer that the pig iron) by subjecting it to heat with the presence of oxidizing substances
  • 13.
  • 14.
    Coal Industry  Therevolution in the coal industry can be summarized in overcoming the following handicaps:
  • 15.
    1. Flooding: As minersgot deeper, they were more likely to face flooding problems. In the begining they used the steam pump, but it was not effective. In 1979, James Watt introduced the most important innovation in the industrial revolution: it is the steam engine which allowed digging deeper and solved the danger of floods.
  • 16.
     The Dangerof Explosion: In coal mines, there exist poisonous or explosive gases and if one candle is lit the whole mine goes ablaze. To solve this problem, children were hired as ‘trappers’ to open and shut trap doors.
  • 17.
    The trapper ofthe Industrial Revolution
  • 18.
     Using trapperswas not effective for it caused problems of ventilation.  The problem of explosion was solved with the introduction of the Safety Lamp by Davy In addition to the Exhaust Fan
  • 19.
    Results of theIndustrial Revolution: Imperialism (Mercantilist theory) Bad working The Emergence of Conditions whci The Industrial Britain as a led to the rise of leading political trade unions Revolution power Disfiguration of nature and the emergence of some of the literary mvts
  • 20.
    All praise beto Allah. I hope that other people benifit from this presentation.