Wednesday, 12 August 2015

How did technology aid the Industrial Revolution in the 1800's?

It is really
anto talk about how technology was an aid to the Industrial Revolution.  Instead, it is
probably more appropriate to say that technology made the Industrial Revolution.  Let us look at
how this is so, using the Industrial Revolution of the middle-to-late 1800s in the United
States.

In this time period, the Industrial Revolution was driven by the
production of steel.  The production of steel was improved greatly by a technological
breakthrough known as the Bessemer Process.  This process made steel much more quickly, and
therefore more cheaply, than had ever been possible before.  The greater availability of steel,
combined with advances in railroad technology, spurred the building of thousands of miles of
railroads across the United States.  These railroads helped drive the Industrial Revolution by
connecting mines to factories and by connecting factories to markets.  Now, the whole US was one
large market, connected by railroad technology and the cheap steel made possible by the Bessemer
Process.

In addition, other technologies helped railroads spread, driving the
Industrial Revolution still more.  One of these technologies was the telegraph.  This technology
made instantaneous long-distance communication possible.  This allowed railroads to coordinate
their activities across long distances.  It also allowed businesses to communicate with one
another.  Still other technologies, like the electric light, the typewriter, and the telephone
helped make it possible for big, industrial firms to come into being. 

All of
these technological advances drove the Industrial Revolution, making it appropriate for us to
say that the technology actually made the Industrial Revolution, rather than just aiding it.
 

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