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Chapter 18

The years of revolution

Industrial revolution

Several influences came together at the same time to revolutionise Britain's

industry: money, labour, a greater demand for goods, new power, and better transport.

By the end of the eighteenth century, some families had made huge private fortunes.

Growing merchant banks helped put this money to use.

By the early eighteenth century simple machines had already been invented for basic

jobs. They could make large quantities of simple goods quickly and cheaply so that

"mass production" became possible for the first time. Each machine carried out one

simple process, which introduced the idea of "division of labour" among workers. This

was to become an important part of the industrial revolution.

Increased iron production made it possible to manufacture new machinery for

other industries. No one saw this more clearly than John Wilkinson, a man with a total

belief in iron. He built the largest ironworks in the country. He built the world's first

iron bridge, over the River Severn, in 1779. He saw the first iron boats made. He built

an iron chapel for the new Methodist religious sect, and was himself buried in an iron

coffin. Wilkinson was also quick to see the value of new inventions. When James Watt

made a greatly improved steam engine in 1769, Wilkinson improved it further by

making parts of the engine more accurately with his special skills in ironworking. But

in 1781 Watt produced an engine with a turning motion, made of iron and steel. It was

a vital development because people were now no longer dependent on natural power.

One invention led to another, and increased production in one area led to increased

production in others. Other basic materials of the industrial revolution were cotton and

woollen cloth, which were popular abroad. In the middle of the century other countries

were buying British uniforms, equipment and weapons for their armies. To meet this

increased demand, better methods of production had to be found, and new machinery

was invented which replaced handwork.

Soon Britain was not only exporting cloth to Europe. It was also importing raw

cotton from its colonies and exporting finished cotton cloth to sell to those same

colonies,

The social effects of the industrial revolution were enormous. Workers tried to

join together to protect themselves against powerful employers. They wanted fair

wages and reasonable conditions in which to work. But the government quickly

banned these "combinations", as the workers' societies were known. Riots occurred,

led by the unemployed who had been replaced in factories by machines. In 1799 some

of these rioters, known as Luddites, started to break up the machinery which had put

them out of work. The government supported the factory owners, and made the

breaking of machinery punishable by death. The government was afraid of a revolution

like the one in France.

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Society and religion

Britain avoided revolution partly because of a new religious movement. The

new movement which met the needs of the growing industrial working class was led

by a remarkable man called John Wesley. He was an Anglican priest who travelled

around the country preaching and teaching.

For fifty-three years John Wesley travelled 224,000 miles on horseback,

preaching at every village he came to. Sometimes he preached in three different

villages in one day. Very soon others joined in his work. John Wesley visited the new

villages and industrial towns which had no parish church.

John Wesley's "Methodism" was above all a personal and emotional form of

religion. It was organised in small groups, or "chapels", all over the country. At a time

when the Church of England itself showed little interest in the social and spiritual

needs of the growing population, Methodism was able to give ordinary people a sense

of purpose and dignity. The Church was nervous of this powerful new movement

which it could not control, and in the end Wesley was forced to leave the Church of

England and start a new Methodist Church.

He carefully avoided politics, and taught people to be hardworking and honest.

As a result of his teaching, people accepted many of the injustices of the times without

complaint. Some became wealthy through working hard and saving their money. As an

old man, Wesley sadly noted how hard work led to wealth, and wealth to pride and

that this threatened to destroy his work. "Although the form of religion remains," he

wrote, "the spirit is swiftly vanishing away." However, Wesley probably saved Britain

from revolution. He certainly brought many people back to Christianity.

The Methodists were not alone. Other Christians also joined what became

known as "the evangelical revival", which was a return to a simple faith based on the

Bible. Some, especially the Quakers, became well known for social concern. One of

the best known was Elizabeth Fry, who made public the terrible conditions in the

prisons, and starred to work for reform.

It was also a small group of Christians who were the first to act against the evils

of the slave trade, from which Britain was making huge sums of money. Slaves did not

expect to live long. Almost 20 per cent died on the voyage. Most of the others died

young from cruel treatment in the West Indies.

The first success against slavery came when a judge ruled that "no man could be

a slave in Britain", and freed a slave who had landed in Bristol. This victory gave a

new and unexpected meaning to the words of the national song, "Britons never shall be

slaves." In fact, just as Britain had taken a lead in slavery and the slave trade, it also

took the lead internationally in ending them. The slave trade was abolished by law in

1807. But it took until 1833 for slavery itself to be abolished in all British colonies.

Others, also mainly Christians, tried to limit the cruelty of employers who forced

children to work long hours. In 1802, as a result of their efforts, Parliament passed the

first Factory Act, limiting child labour to twelve hours each day. In 1819 a new law

forbade the employment of children under the age of nine. Neither of these two Acts

were obeyed everywhere, but they were the early examples of government action to

protect the weak against the powerful.

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Revolution in France and the Napoleonic Wars

France's neighbours only slowly realised that its revolution in 1789 could be

dangerous for them. Military power and the authority of kingship were almost useless

against revolutionary ideas.

In France the revolution had been made by the "bourgeoisie", or middle class,

leading the peasants and urban working classes.

Several radicals sympathised with the cause of the French revolutionaries, and

called for reforms in Britain.

The French Revolution had created fear all over Europe. The British government

was so afraid that revolution would spread to Britain that it imprisoned radical leaders.

As an island, Britain was in less danger, and as a result was slower than other

European states to make war on the French Republic. But in 1793 Britain went to war

after France had invaded the Low Countries (today, Belgium and Holland). One by

one the European countries were defeated by Napoleon, and forced to ally themselves

with him. Most of Europe fell under Napoleon's control.

Britain decided to fight France at sea because it had a stronger navy, and

because its own survival depended on control of its trade routes. British policy was to

damage French trade by preventing French ships, including their navy, from moving

freely in and out of French seaports. The commander of the British fleet, Admiral

Horatio Nelson, won brilliant victories over the French navy, near the coast of Egypt,

at Copenhagen, and finally near Spain, at Trafalgar in 1805, where he destroyed the

French—Spanish fleet. Nelson was himself killed at Trafalgar, but became one of

Britain's greatest national heroes. His words to the fleet before the battle of Trafalgar,

"England expects that every man will do his duty," have remained a reminder of

patriotic duty in time of national danger.

In the same year as Trafalgar, in 1805, a British army landed in Portugal to fight

the French. This army, with its Portuguese and Spanish allies, was eventually

commanded by Wellington, a man who had fought in India. Like Nelson he quickly

proved to be a great commander. After several victories against the French in Spain he

invaded France. Napoleon, weakened by his disastrous invasion of Russia, surrendered

in 1814. But the following year he escaped and quickly assembled an army in France.

Wellington, with the timely help of the Prussian army, finally defeated Napoleon at

Waterloo in Belgium in June 1815.

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The nineteenth century