The Factory |
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Page 13
... vast production ; and the steam engine , first applied to manufacture , later became the means of distributing the com- modities . The Industrial Revolution , thus spring- ing from the sudden growth in the use of machinery , occasioned ...
... vast production ; and the steam engine , first applied to manufacture , later became the means of distributing the com- modities . The Industrial Revolution , thus spring- ing from the sudden growth in the use of machinery , occasioned ...
Page 14
... so much to its influence , be- comes of vast importance . The first chap- ter relates to brilliant achievements in the field of mechanical invention . Then fol- lows the dismal story of how a multitude of craftsmen THE FACTORY.
... so much to its influence , be- comes of vast importance . The first chap- ter relates to brilliant achievements in the field of mechanical invention . Then fol- lows the dismal story of how a multitude of craftsmen THE FACTORY.
Page 44
... vast extension of manu- factures would have been impossible and the manufacturing towns , which we are about to consider , would never have at- tained the size and importance which en- abled them to become factors in the polit- ical ...
... vast extension of manu- factures would have been impossible and the manufacturing towns , which we are about to consider , would never have at- tained the size and importance which en- abled them to become factors in the polit- ical ...
Page 51
... vast so- cial discontent which , in the end , aided powerfully in revolutionizing the structure of British society . To the consideration of this event we shall soon return . For the moment we must consider briefly the most ...
... vast so- cial discontent which , in the end , aided powerfully in revolutionizing the structure of British society . To the consideration of this event we shall soon return . For the moment we must consider briefly the most ...
Page 58
... under the domestic system . Hand workers sought employment in the fac- tories . Vast numbers of purely agricultural laborers left the rural districts for the man- ufacturing towns . And , augmenting this great supply of 58 THE FACTORY.
... under the domestic system . Hand workers sought employment in the fac- tories . Vast numbers of purely agricultural laborers left the rural districts for the man- ufacturing towns . And , augmenting this great supply of 58 THE FACTORY.
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Common terms and phrases
apprentices Arkwright built Chartism class consciousness cloth clothier common containing two hundred cottage cotton factories cotton industry cotton manufacture craftsmen Crompton demand dition domestic employed English establishment event factory system facture feudal gave giving employment hand hand-loom weaver Hargreaves human important increased Industrial Revolution inventor jenny John Kay Josiah Bounderby Kennington Common laboring poor laboring population Lancashire land later London Lord Lord Grenfell machine Manchester mand manu manufac manufacturing towns master manufacturer means ment mill ning Nottingham operatives Parliament patent penny barber persons political population of England power loom Preston barber produced progress of mankind reform Richard Arkwright riots risen workingmen SIR RICHARD ARKWRIGHT Sir Robert Peel social conditions social discontent social progress spindles spinners spinning machinery spinning-frame spinning-machinery spun steam engine thousand tion to-day toil toilers tory towering factories wealth weaving weft wheel women Wyatt yarn
Popular passages
Page 80 - An Act for the Preservation of the Health and Morals of Apprentices and others employed in Cotton and other Mills and Cotton and other Factories...
Page 94 - MEN of England, wherefore plough For the lords who lay ye low? Wherefore weave with toil and care The rich robes your tyrants wear...
Page 94 - Sow seed — but let no tyrant reap; Find wealth — let no impostor heap; Weave robes — let not the idle wear; Forge arms — in your defence to bear.
Page 35 - It was no uncommon thing for a weaver to walk three or four miles in a morning, and call on five or six spinners, before he could collect weft to serve him for the remainder of the day ; and when he wished to weave a piece in a shorter time than usual, a new ribbon, or gown, was necessary to quicken the exertions of the spinner.
Page 31 - Within one room being large and long, There stood two hundred looms full strong: Two hundred men the truth is so, Wrought in these looms all in a row.
Page 53 - This great increase of the quantity of work, which, in consequence of the division of labour, the same number of people are capable of performing, is owing to three different circumstances; first, to the increase of dexterity in every particular workman; secondly, to the saving of the time which is commonly lost in passing from one species of work to another; and lastly, to the invention of a great number of machines which facilitate and abridge labour, and enable one man to do the work of many.
Page 94 - Rise like Lions after slumber In unvanquishable number, Shake your chains to earth like dew Which in sleep had fallen on you Ye are many - they are few.
Page 79 - ... boys, apprenticed by a parish in London to one manufacturer, had been transferred to another, and had been found by some benevolent persons in a state of absolute famine. Another case more horrible had come to his knowledge while on a Committee...
Page 68 - Meanwhile, at social Industry's command, How quick, how vast an increase! From the germ Of some poor hamlet, rapidly produced Here a huge town, continuous and compact, Hiding the face of earth for leagues — and there, Where not a habitation stood before, Abodes of men irregularly massed Like trees in forests, — spread through spacious tracts, O'er which the smoke of unremitting fires Hangs permanent, and plentiful as wreaths Of vapour glittering in the morning sun.
Page 21 - July in that year, he stated that he "had by great study and long application invented a new piece of machinery, never before found out, practised, or used, for the making of weft or yarn from conon, flax, and wool; which would be of great utility to a great many manufacturers, as well as to his Majesty's subjects in general, by employing a great number of poor people in working the said machinery, and by making the said weft or yarn much superior in quality to any ever heretofore manufactured or...