Maria Bailey
A01281278
Mario Castillo
A1281602
Melissa Soto
A01281707
Ma. Luisa Rodríguez
A01281692
Sergio Tijerina
A01281680
History II
Eduardo Hinojosa
lunes, 22 de abril de 2013
Conclusion
Conclusion
For conclusion we can say in that time of the Imperialism was a lot of
disease because a lot of fabrics don’t have a lot of health, and that makes a
lot of problems in the population in the fabrics gets diseases because pass a
lot of time in the fabric and also cause that the people of the fabrics become
infect others person outside.
Diseases in the Industrial Revolution
Cholera
Cholera is
caused by bacteria called “Vibrio Cholerae”. It affects the intestines. You
would get cholera if you drink water or eat food with Vibrio Cholarae. Living
conditions during the Industrial Revolution were unsanitary so people were
probably infected with cholera when they drank the dirty water from the water
pumps.
Symptoms of
cholera include diarrhea,vomiting, and dehydration, and they appear from a few hours to five days
after the person is infected. You would have to be treated with oral rehydration
therapy if you got the disease. If cholera is not treated, infected people
would die in several days.
"Typhoid
Fever." WHO. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Apr. 2013.
<http://www.who.int/topics/typhoid_fever/en/>.
Typhoid
Typhoid
fever is a bacterial disease, caused by Salmonella typhi. It is transmitted
through the ingestion of food or drink contaminated by the faeces or urine of
infected people.
Symptoms
usually develop 1–3 weeks after exposure, and may be mild or severe. They
include high fever, malaise, headache, constipation or diarrhoea, rose-coloured
spots on the chest, and enlarged spleen and liver. Healthy carrier state may
follow acute illness.
Typhoid
fever can be treated with antibiotics. However, resistance to common
antimicrobials is widespread. Healthy carriers should be excluded from
handling food.
"The
Industrial Revolution." The Industrial Revolution. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Apr.
2013. <http://industrialrevolution.wordpress.com/category/cholera/>.
Timeline
Industrial Revolution Timeline
1740 - Britain had produced 17000 tons of iron.
1760 - James Watt improved the steam engine; the
cotton industry became more productive.
1760 - Britain had imported 2.5 million pounds of
raw cotton, which was used to produce cloth in cottage industries.
1764 - James Hargreaves had invented a machine
called the spinning jenny, which made the spinning process much faster. In
fact, spinners produced thread faster than weavers could use it.
1780 - Harry Cort developed a process called
puddling.
1780 - The industrial revolution began in Great
Britain.
1782 - Watt made changes that enabled the engine
to drive machinery. Steam power could now be used to spin and weave cotton.
1787 - Invention of water-powered loom by Edmund Cartwright
made it possible for the weaving of cloth to catch up with the spinning of
thread.
1800 - More than 5 million people lived in the
United State, and nearly 6 out of 7 American workers were farmers.
1804 - Trevithick’s locomotive ran on an
industrial rail line in Britain.
1807 - Robert Fulton built the first paddle-wheel
steamboat, the Clermont.
1830 - Women and children made up two-thirds of
the cotton industry’s workforce.
1830 - The Rocket was used on the first public
railway line.
1840 - 366 million pounds of cotton were imported
each year. By this time, cotton cloth was Britain’s most valuable product.
1850 - A network of iron rails spread across
Europe.
1852 - Britain produced almost 3 million tons of
iron, more iron that was produced by the rest of the world combined.
1860 - Population had grown to more than 30
million people.
1860 - About 30,000 miles of railroad track
covered the continental USA.
lunes, 15 de abril de 2013
Introduction
Introduction
This blog is
about the Industrial Revolution and how it started to develop in Great Britain.
During this time period new inventions were created, such as machines that lead
to a complete new environment inside industries. The creation of machines made
easier the production of goods and also way faster than human labor. But these
changes also brought consequences, people started to get tired because they
didn’t have a great job, meaning that they didn’t receive a fair treatment;
they worked for more than 8 hours and weren’t paid well. Later, because of the
industrial growth, children where needed to work, this made them leave school
for good. As a consequence, diseases started to appear, many of them related
with the respiratory system. All of these events and many others were the ones
that made the revolution start.
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