Every time you buy a nice cheap new Tshirt, pair of trainers, a fluffy toy or a hand tied carpet the chances are that you are benefiting from child labour..............but of course so long as they are 'foreign' children it's all right. Come on people, don't stop buying the goods but do argue and protest for better conditions and pay for these children. Boycott those stores, and they are many, which use cheap child labour............You can better the lives of so many.
I agree with andra that boycotting is not the solution, and that you are projecting western ideals as "the best" onto a different culture. Child labour has been very important in setting up our economy so that we are even able to sustain our modern kids, and it has been very important for us to look at childhood and change our systems to a modern schooling one. This was achieved over a long period of time and lots of policy changes done by our own culture and governments. We cannot force our ideals onto another culture and we cannot ignore that these children play a big role in sustaining their families. I would also like to see child labour banned, but not by driving these children and families out of work, but by creating a social structure that supports families. It is very unrealistic to want to change children from an economical asset to their families, to costing families hundreds of thousands as they do in western culture
So many things are made with in sweatshops, and or with child labor. Phones, computers, clothes, sooo many things unfortunately. Do your research into companies making things around you, and make informed choices.
Vegan Pizza --- You have absolutely no compassion for what kids like these, your great-great-grandparents had to deal with? How disgustingly entitled you are.
The steam-engine converted heat by burning fuel into mechanical work, one conducive to the system of cylinders in motion, working as an energy conversion device, releasing heat and extracting work through the combustion of fuel. Engineers of the time were confounded by the rather low efficiency of the steam-engines, because most of the heat dissipated uselessly into the environment. The second law of thermodynamics helped engineers understand the underlying principle that deals with the constraints upon the direction of heat transfer.
Wikipedia says: A Royal Commission of 1905 reported that workhouses were unsuited to deal with the different categories of resident they had traditionally housed, and recommended that specialised institutions for each class of pauper should be established, in which they could be treated appropriately by properly trained staff. The "deterrent" workhouses were in future to be reserved for "incorrigibles such as drunkards, idlers and tramps".[89] The Local Government Act of 1929 gave local authorities the power to take over workhouse infirmaries as municipal hospitals, although outside London few did so.[90] The workhouse system was abolished in the UK by the same Act on 1 April 1930, but many workhouses, renamed Public Assistance Institutions, continued under the control of local county councils.[91] Even as late as the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 there were still almost 100,000 people accommodated in the former workhouses, 5,629 of whom were children.[92] It was not until the National Assistance Act of 1948 that the last vestiges of the Poor Law disappeared, and with them the workhouses.[91] Many of the buildings were converted into old folks' homes run by local authorities;[93] slightly more than 50 per cent of local authority accommodation for the elderly was provided in former workhouses in 1960.[94] Camberwell workhouse (in Peckham, South London) continued until 1985 as a shelter for more than 1000 homeless men, operated by the Department of Health and Social Security and renamed a resettlement centre.[95] Southwell workhouse, now a museum, was used to provide temporary accommodation for mothers and children until the early 1990s.
Workhouses were still in existence well into the 20th century, they just weren't called that Gods you people frighten me. Dry academics with no knowledge and little brain.
Does anyone know if you can purchase this show on DVD? I would love to show my students this video, but would need it with close captions (UA-cam versions are a joke and are always incorrect or contain foul language).
It is somewhat inaccurate to state that the "early industrial revolution child labourers" that were "parish apprentices and alike" could have had any other option (or any options) rather than slavery "for reasons of poverty and avoiding the gallows" (to avoid disposition to learning crime to supplement income) though more likely long imprisonment as a child, "than the later half industrial era child labourers" of the slums of the cities that developed factory industries in the very late 1700s onward. To be alive in any way, that is all there is, every corner of a country is owned as property! 1. There were no regulations concerning age and work (and many other laws with regard to children), the noun "children" while definite, "does not truly have" either an ethical or legal definition before 1900 (In Britain perhaps until 1921). 2. There were no schools or deliberate compulsory full time schooling before the 1800s leaving the early industrial child slavery of Britain coupled with its schooling of Parish apprenticeships. A huge enigma of production(training) of workers that can/could/potentially prosper. 3. Useful employment record is a requirement to be "associate by name and known for" (rather than crime and gangs) if a person is ever arrested or taken in by the Authorities and particularly in a court of criminal law(pardon the pun). 4. In retrospect of age of the population of Britain (or other countries) around 40 percent were children, this because the average death age was 40 - 50 years or below roughly meaning only 20 adult productive years at best, a very powerful factor always underplayed of importance, or downright disregarded in deciding why flighty, ignorant irresponsible persons be used at "work"! There is neither longevity nor reliability of health until "canning food" , "ice making" and better sanitary urban design systems particularly inside the individual home! 5. Jackassery of the employers at understanding the requirements of the living human ergonomically and psychologically - AS GOOD MEASURE many logical disorders (non hereditary and non pathological problem psychological only) of children and particularly one called "attachment disorder" that can be said to have caused deaths of many orphans by peer violence or leaved them in "mad houses" (lunatic asylum) for life because of uncontrollable bizarre behaviour was not properly understood to be classifiable until the 1980s little over 30 years previous to present! NOTE: While there are many different references to "Attachment Disorder" and "many reasons of occurrence of which are for most outright abuse", the seeds of it in Industrial Revolution children would be the version called "Institutionalised Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD)" involving bizarre behaviour and criminal like behavioural activity. Unfortunately the lettered classifications diagnosis are able to be result either from outright abuse or Institutionalised suffering and headed toward over time and contain more "severe symptoms". So "use the children" coming from the top of the government , well... everything else is dead or in use for expansion of workforce and its replenishment Population growth and GDP will re-cause effect. ***** Of Industrial revolution and machinery , Steam Engine IS NOT the main form of power, factories were located on rivers and water-wheels powered the machinery , for collieries between 1700 to 1775 steam and beam engines were used only as water and slurry pumps. When Watt and Boulton produced actual factory powering stationary engines with rotary(axle-shaft and wheel) drive, that was not until 1783 these engines produced rotary drive from steam pistons. (Note Also James Watts' only claim to fame is basically proper piston adaption of steam power , although that was near complete by Newcomen and Pickard in 1780 on Newcomens' steam/beam engine conversion) One more feature oddly, on point of "change of labour laws and ethics because of age of the worker" is that "pictures" have an effect in journalism and while the first journalists only had drawings, it is interesting to note the first considered photograph of a human (although blurry) was a man having his shoes shined on a street. ...."image of the Boulevard du Temple in Paris was taken in 1838 by Louis Daguerre. If you look closely on the bottom left, you can see a man polishing the boot of another individual."... www.quora.com/What-is-the-first-ever-photograph-of-a-human-being www.livescience.com/60387-oldest-photographs.html The biggest irony is the action of child labour in the Industrial Revolution era is because of poverty, but the result from the non legislated hours and non regulated suitability of ability to commit a task successfully for safety itself, ably matches the gallows it sought to prevent as the result in the first instance !!!!! During that period in Britain the judiciary were on a campaign drive to stamp out criminals and for around a century by policy were handing out the death penalties immensely of number ** ( "The Hanging Tree" : Execution and the English People 1770-1868 By V. A. C. Gatrell ) ** So of viability of placing industrial sites and factories where there is no water and powering them allowing economic expansion and the need for many more workers as occurred with the addition of the steam engine rotary drive, along with legislation for pay and working hours and enforced coinciding education to produce a worker (that incidentally was far more effective after 1840 with cameras and photographic and printing technology from Daguerreotype and calotype), the Industrial revolution was actually built on TWO advances in technology not properly credited by most if any, THOSE, RAIL LINES and the other ROTATIONAL SHAFT SLIPPER(SLIDE) BEARINGS or BUSH of which both are related to lowering friction and giving good throughput to output of energy from a kinetic power source whether person,horse or mechanical engine. The rail line system also integrated massively well to the industrial revolution because factories not built on rivers required water delivered in cargo tanks. Whether water for the steam engine or some other process in a factory , rail tracks lowering friction solved the efficiency of motive for heavy cargo weights of mass production. To this day in many countries remnant rail lines exist that suddenly branch from main lines or remnant main lines of the 18th and 19th century to nowhere that once had a building that housed a factory requiring water for steam or process. Before steam railway locomotives, RAIL TRACKS were used to lower the number of horses required to pull immensely heavy cargo over routes inside cities much like a tram, weights far of excess to that a standard horse and cart that had twice the number of horses could pull, Rails mean less horses, more carrying capacity weight (and more secure ride for cargo or people because they cannot deviate route). Many internal rail systems on steep inclines in mine shafts are basically a "Funicular" rail system, However the horse drawn rail system is referred to as a "Waggonway" NOT Railway and not Tramway. The first British "Waggonway" was in Middleton Colliery Britain in 1755 and an extension to Leeds was built in 1758 and used wooden tracks as was usual practice, HOWEVER, in 1799 the rails were replaced with iron rails. So low friction systems capable of low maintenance to move heavy weights as cargo transportation is one of the most important features of the start of industrialisation, whereas weaving and mechanical improvements were MERE COMPETITION WITH RIVAL SUPPLIERS of any nation BY IMPORT EXPORT or locality. A good example of "this point" is the British East India Company and "Robert Clive" a military overseer to India that dealt with the Mughal Empire. At that time in the Early to late 18th century - 1700s apart spices, much fabric was traded for in Bengal and other parts of India and South East Asia of which alike child labour of Britain the Indian countries main export that gave the Mughal Empire wealth was "fabric" and was by the end of "Robert Clive's" (Clive of India) management of the British trade regions done by forced labour including cropping spices. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middleton_Railway en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mughal_Empire en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Clive ROTATIONAL SHAFT SLIPPER(SLIDE) BEARINGS or BUSH preceded steam engines on spinning machinery axle shafts and lubricated with fat or oil, This is alike the rail line efficiency by low friction for throughput of energy to output from an engine, persons on a treadmill, or harnessed horses that all ran factories' power during the industrial revolution. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Vaughan (note: METAL ball-bearing , centuries previous ball-bearings to lower friction were made of wood) ..."Philip Vaughan was a Welsh inventor and ironmaster who patented the first design for a ball bearing in 1794"... The actual start of the industrial revolution was lubricated low maintenance rotary metal parts with a SLIPPER BEARING BUSH allowing low friction for horses operating vertical mine shaft lifts or warehouse winches and RAIL LINES to allow horses or people more efficient energy output moving e.g. humans or horses pulling coal mine shaft wagons. * From this, if anything put the children to work, it was short life expectancy (usually less than 50 years), so extremely short "able bodied working-life expectancy"(less than 20 years - as a labourer) and high proportion of population being children not adults and because of a short life NO TIME TO WASTE !
'm French and I'm really interested in these videos. But some part of the comments are difficult to understant. Is there somewhere a translation or subtitles ? Thank you very much
@@maryammotaz7440 Thank you, but the transcript doesn't work for me. I'm condemned to read and read again, which would have a good effect in my level of English.
sorry for being kinda irrelevant but who plays the song at the beginning of the vid I've heard it before and it's driving me insane not knowing the name
* Temperance in the mid 19th century in Britain can easily have been "part of child labours' continuation into the 20th century because of medieval "Small Beer" tradition (and idle delinquency), approximately 20 percent of drink flavour recipes for children from medieval times are alcoholic in some way but "Smal Beer" or light beer is as the name suggests. Alcohol was not banned to children to purchase or consume until after the temperance movement of the 19th century. Too, Narcotics such as Opium and Cocaine when it finally was distributed was not illegal or regulated from Children in the 19th century.
Peace be to you all! This is REALLY fascinating! I appreciate the animation incorporated in this production. As the progeny of African slaves in America, I think the suffering of other groups of people is often discarded. This is a part of history that continues to be prevalent in poor, developing countries today. Child labor was a horrible experience for MANY (of ALL races) in the early American Industrial Revolution; although, I don't know that it rivaled the horrors experienced by Black slave children as described in "The Autobiography of Frederick Douglass". I wonder concepts like "kindess" and "compassion" seem to be luxuries only of societies which have advanced technologies and surpluses (i.e. in food, shelter, etc.). 🤔 My kids don't like when I them watch videos like this. However, I think it's important to put things in perspective (especially when they don't feel like to helping around the house😅).
I was a mule overlooker at the age of 21 incharge of a big muleroom. I set the mule up at Quarry Bank mill when it first opened. I've seen a lot of wrong information about cotton mills on youtube.Most of the comments are from people who have never worked in a real cotton mill.
Peter Clarke You should do a video about it. I'd actually be interested in hearing about your experiences. I don't think too many people today would truly understand what hardships a person had to endure to perform your task.
exactly beause the ceo wouldnt be a billionaire if we didnt buy the products.. your post is spot on.. ppl love to shift blame but still.. you buy you make it happe.. then the people who make ethical products make them expensive and unreachable for the average person.. i can afford but many cannot..
Britain ;p because there was at least chance of improvement in life standard and not just settling a dry hot dusty place. I live in the Canadian prairies and i hate it with a passion, it would have been a million times worse in the older days
Lucien LaChance Poor you! Which province if you don't mind me asking. My nephew has a great job in Saskatchewan. He loves the pay but the Saskatoon leaves little to be desired. He keeps saying come on here we would have fun. Heck no! Anyhow have a good one.
If the current government of the United Kingdom had half its way, everybody would be living like this right now. In fact, similar things like this are happening right now, minus the child labour. There are people who are working overtime and many of them are not getting paid for it. And, people are being expected to work when they are seriously ill.
Such a fascinating subject but I find this video unwatchable with the weird graphics, sudden bursts of loud rock music and this woman, who is trying way too hard to be cool and edgy. But perhaps this is a program meant for schoolchildren, in which case I understand.
Whose watching this because they got it for their history homework during quarantine 😋
Me
Jarrod Brooke Lol 😂😂
Nope mines English but I am in quarantine 😡🤮
Rihanna’s World146 same
Yep doing my history and i cba
Who’s scrolling down the comments instead of watching this for school work 😑
me
me
Me LOL 🤣😂
Not me I am just interested after playing Assassin's Creed Brotherhood
Me
who else is watching this as classwork?
+Luis Romero Lol me
+Luis Romero yep
Ugh mr Syme
+Jong Min Moon R.I.P us
Me lol
the starting music is so awkward with the actual topic its focusing on.
Exactly it’s like happy music
Who is watching for their school history assignment
Me
I am
me :(
Me
✋
if there’s anyone from history here i’m gonna laugh
XD
Lol
me in online class
Xd i am
Me.
11:45 those looking for the importance children had (for their history class)
Every time you buy a nice cheap new Tshirt, pair of trainers, a fluffy toy or a hand tied carpet the chances are that you are benefiting from child labour..............but of course so long as they are 'foreign' children it's all right.
Come on people, don't stop buying the goods but do argue and protest for better conditions and pay for these children. Boycott those stores, and they are many, which use cheap child labour............You can better the lives of so many.
@@augustus413 wtf why are you so obsessed with the economy
@@ceryzb16777 Its quite literally the foundation of modern society, that's why.
I agree with andra that boycotting is not the solution, and that you are projecting western ideals as "the best" onto a different culture. Child labour has been very important in setting up our economy so that we are even able to sustain our modern kids, and it has been very important for us to look at childhood and change our systems to a modern schooling one. This was achieved over a long period of time and lots of policy changes done by our own culture and governments. We cannot force our ideals onto another culture and we cannot ignore that these children play a big role in sustaining their families. I would also like to see child labour banned, but not by driving these children and families out of work, but by creating a social structure that supports families. It is very unrealistic to want to change children from an economical asset to their families, to costing families hundreds of thousands as they do in western culture
So many things are made with in sweatshops, and or with child labor. Phones, computers, clothes, sooo many things unfortunately. Do your research into companies making things around you, and make informed choices.
Wow..can you imagine 13 years old working now..we are blessed nowadays.
Unfortunately children are still being exploited in many countries today :(
@@nekroneschwartz2013 boo hoo
You are lucky I was working at 10
hey english class how are you doing (if youre watching this and you see this that would actually be funny)
IRISSSSSSSSSSSS HEYYYY
IRISSSS YESSSS I FOUND UUUUU
HIIIIII OMGGGG
Dude this is world history
Young Walrus
well youre obviously not in her english class
Who’s watching this for English?
meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
Me
feels when you have to watch an hour of this full part video for homework. Who doesn't love being a student? ughhhh
Vegan Pizza --- You have absolutely no compassion for what kids like these, your great-great-grandparents had to deal with? How disgustingly entitled you are.
@@Liofa73 whos joe?
@@trcjaxuntrc3697 Joe momma
Horrific. Shocking to hear the Church's involvement.
"..happiness don't grow on trees, you got to pick a pocket or two." --Oliver 1968
Omg 😂😂😂😂
Whose watching in history class
defo me
Hey, You! Get back to the assignment!
Lol that’s what my dad says
This is my assignment
Highkey super badass when they introduce the children with a backdrop of metallica
Can anyone do a small resume of the video pls I don’t have 15 minutes to loose
Sous côté
Assassin creed syndicate made me want to learn this. I had no idea how kids were treated back then in london.
Its wasnt just its the whole of the uk
I wonder if children were treated better in other parts of the world back then, or if it's just the U.K. that's bad?
I recently went to the black country museum and I went in the mines it was horrible.
Whose here for history in 2021?
lord help us all
😂💀😭 me
Me
The steam-engine converted heat by burning fuel into mechanical work, one conducive to the system of cylinders in motion, working as an energy conversion device, releasing heat and extracting work through the combustion of fuel. Engineers of the time were confounded by the rather low efficiency of the steam-engines, because most of the heat dissipated uselessly into the environment. The second law of thermodynamics helped engineers understand the underlying principle that deals with the constraints upon the direction of heat transfer.
how you doing mr pregnant , I love your vi ds,Its nice to know you love history,and you are my compatriot, sending love and light,your way.
yall rockin with 360p⁉️
Class work...
who else has to do this for their history work in lockdown !!
Me it suks
@@SHIV-ge5wb lol
THANK YOU FOR UPLOADING THIS..IT IS JUST ABOUT THE BEST HISTORY DOCUMENTARY I HAVE SEEN...REALLY EXCELLENT.
Est ce que y’a des seconde 7??
Ouiiiiiii hehe
wsh mglllll
On est là hein
On est là 😌
coucou justine
Don't mind me. Professor is making us watch this for a school assignment.
This is the worlds biggest history assignment
One question? What year did Victorian Workhouses end/close. I've looked on the internet and can't find any answer, so does anyone know?
Wikipedia says: A Royal Commission of 1905 reported that workhouses were unsuited to deal with the different categories of resident they had traditionally housed, and recommended that specialised institutions for each class of pauper should be established, in which they could be treated appropriately by properly trained staff. The "deterrent" workhouses were in future to be reserved for "incorrigibles such as drunkards, idlers and tramps".[89] The Local Government Act of 1929 gave local authorities the power to take over workhouse infirmaries as municipal hospitals, although outside London few did so.[90] The workhouse system was abolished in the UK by the same Act on 1 April 1930, but many workhouses, renamed Public Assistance Institutions, continued under the control of local county councils.[91] Even as late as the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 there were still almost 100,000 people accommodated in the former workhouses, 5,629 of whom were children.[92] It was not until the National Assistance Act of 1948 that the last vestiges of the Poor Law disappeared, and with them the workhouses.[91] Many of the buildings were converted into old folks' homes run by local authorities;[93] slightly more than 50 per cent of local authority accommodation for the elderly was provided in former workhouses in 1960.[94] Camberwell workhouse (in Peckham, South London) continued until 1985 as a shelter for more than 1000 homeless men, operated by the Department of Health and Social Security and renamed a resettlement centre.[95] Southwell workhouse, now a museum, was used to provide temporary accommodation for mothers and children until the early 1990s.
Gorgon still lives!
in 1862 it was illegal and you would get fined
that may be so ..but not all closed till some time in the 1920's
Workhouses were still in existence well into the 20th century, they just weren't called that Gods you people frighten me. Dry academics with no knowledge and little brain.
Could anyone tell me how could I include subtitles to this documentary?
the ads are more entertaining then the video
I audibly chuckled in english class when metalica started playing lol
who else is watching this for history
Meeee
Me
"Only those evil enough live to see their own likeness in stone" From some song I forget.
Does anyone know if you can purchase this show on DVD? I would love to show my students this video, but would need it with close captions (UA-cam versions are a joke and are always incorrect or contain foul language).
I’m watching this for school work but I chose to
who's here cause they have to watch it for history?
who’s watching this for their english homework? just me ... ok
bruh got this for school work CRINGE
Video mark: 7:13
Hi, I am watching this as school work during the 2020 Coronavirus Lockdown. Anyone else?
do you have the answers?
It is somewhat inaccurate to state that the "early industrial revolution child labourers" that were "parish apprentices and alike" could have had any other option (or any options) rather than slavery "for reasons of poverty and avoiding the gallows" (to avoid disposition to learning crime to supplement income) though more likely long imprisonment as a child, "than the later half industrial era child labourers" of the slums of the cities that developed factory industries in the very late 1700s onward. To be alive in any way, that is all there is, every corner of a country is owned as property!
1. There were no regulations concerning age and work (and many other laws with regard to children), the noun "children" while definite, "does not truly have" either an ethical or legal definition before 1900 (In Britain perhaps until 1921).
2. There were no schools or deliberate compulsory full time schooling before the 1800s leaving the early industrial child slavery of Britain coupled with its schooling of Parish apprenticeships.
A huge enigma of production(training) of workers that can/could/potentially prosper.
3. Useful employment record is a requirement to be "associate by name and known for" (rather than crime and gangs) if a person is ever arrested or taken in by the Authorities and particularly in a court of criminal law(pardon the pun).
4. In retrospect of age of the population of Britain (or other countries) around 40 percent were children, this because the average death age was 40 - 50 years or below roughly meaning only 20 adult productive years at best, a very powerful factor always underplayed of importance, or downright disregarded in deciding why flighty, ignorant irresponsible persons be used at "work"! There is neither longevity nor reliability of health until "canning food" , "ice making" and better sanitary urban design systems particularly inside the individual home!
5. Jackassery of the employers at understanding the requirements of the living human ergonomically and psychologically - AS GOOD MEASURE many logical disorders (non hereditary and non pathological problem psychological only) of children and particularly one called "attachment disorder" that can be said to have caused deaths of many orphans by peer violence or leaved them in "mad houses" (lunatic asylum) for life because of uncontrollable bizarre behaviour was not properly understood to be classifiable until the 1980s little over 30 years previous to present! NOTE: While there are many different references to "Attachment Disorder" and "many reasons of occurrence of which are for most outright abuse", the seeds of it in Industrial Revolution children would be the version called "Institutionalised Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD)" involving bizarre behaviour and criminal like behavioural activity. Unfortunately the lettered classifications diagnosis are able to be result either from outright abuse or Institutionalised suffering and headed toward over time and contain more "severe symptoms".
So "use the children" coming from the top of the government , well... everything else is dead or in use for expansion of workforce and its replenishment Population growth and GDP will re-cause effect.
*****
Of Industrial revolution and machinery , Steam Engine IS NOT the main form of power, factories were located on rivers and water-wheels powered the machinery , for collieries between 1700 to 1775 steam and beam engines were used only as water and slurry pumps.
When Watt and Boulton produced actual factory powering stationary engines with rotary(axle-shaft and wheel) drive, that was not until 1783 these engines produced rotary drive from steam pistons. (Note Also James Watts' only claim to fame is basically proper piston adaption of steam power , although that was near complete by Newcomen and Pickard in 1780 on Newcomens' steam/beam engine conversion)
One more feature oddly, on point of "change of labour laws and ethics because of age of the worker" is that "pictures" have an effect in journalism and while the first journalists only had drawings, it is interesting to note the first considered photograph of a human (although blurry) was a man having his shoes shined on a street.
...."image of the Boulevard du Temple in Paris was taken in 1838 by Louis Daguerre. If you look closely on the bottom left, you can see a man polishing the boot of another individual."...
www.quora.com/What-is-the-first-ever-photograph-of-a-human-being
www.livescience.com/60387-oldest-photographs.html
The biggest irony is the action of child labour in the Industrial Revolution era is because of poverty, but the result from the non legislated hours and non regulated suitability of ability to commit a task successfully for safety itself, ably matches the gallows it sought to prevent as the result in the first instance !!!!!
During that period in Britain the judiciary were on a campaign drive to stamp out criminals and for around a century by policy were handing out the death penalties immensely of number ** ( "The Hanging Tree" : Execution and the English People 1770-1868 By V. A. C. Gatrell ) **
So of viability of placing industrial sites and factories where there is no water and powering them allowing economic expansion and the need for many more workers as occurred with the addition of the steam engine rotary drive, along with legislation for pay and working hours and enforced coinciding education to produce a worker (that incidentally was far more effective after 1840 with cameras and photographic and printing technology from Daguerreotype and calotype), the Industrial revolution was actually built on TWO advances in technology not properly credited by most if any, THOSE, RAIL LINES and the other ROTATIONAL SHAFT SLIPPER(SLIDE) BEARINGS or BUSH of which both are related to lowering friction and giving good throughput to output of energy from a kinetic power source whether person,horse or mechanical engine.
The rail line system also integrated massively well to the industrial revolution because factories not built on rivers required water delivered in cargo tanks. Whether water for the steam engine or some other process in a factory , rail tracks lowering friction solved the efficiency of motive for heavy cargo weights of mass production. To this day in many countries remnant rail lines exist that suddenly branch from main lines or remnant main lines of the 18th and 19th century to nowhere that once had a building that housed a factory requiring water for steam or process.
Before steam railway locomotives, RAIL TRACKS were used to lower the number of horses required to pull immensely heavy cargo over routes inside cities much like a tram, weights far of excess to that a standard horse and cart that had twice the number of horses could pull, Rails mean less horses, more carrying capacity weight (and more secure ride for cargo or people because they cannot deviate route). Many internal rail systems on steep inclines in mine shafts are basically a "Funicular" rail system, However the horse drawn rail system is referred to as a "Waggonway" NOT Railway and not Tramway.
The first British "Waggonway" was in Middleton Colliery Britain in 1755 and an extension to Leeds was built in 1758 and used wooden tracks as was usual practice, HOWEVER, in 1799 the rails were replaced with iron rails.
So low friction systems capable of low maintenance to move heavy weights as cargo transportation is one of the most important features of the start of industrialisation, whereas weaving and mechanical improvements were MERE COMPETITION WITH RIVAL SUPPLIERS of any nation BY IMPORT EXPORT or locality. A good example of "this point" is the British East India Company and "Robert Clive" a military overseer to India that dealt with the Mughal Empire. At that time in the Early to late 18th century - 1700s apart spices, much fabric was traded for in Bengal and other parts of India and South East Asia of which alike child labour of Britain the Indian countries main export that gave the Mughal Empire wealth was "fabric" and was by the end of "Robert Clive's" (Clive of India) management of the British trade regions done by forced labour including cropping spices.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middleton_Railway
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mughal_Empire
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Clive
ROTATIONAL SHAFT SLIPPER(SLIDE) BEARINGS or BUSH preceded steam engines on spinning machinery axle shafts and lubricated with fat or oil, This is alike the rail line efficiency by low friction for throughput of energy to output from an engine, persons on a treadmill, or harnessed horses that all ran factories' power during the industrial revolution.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Vaughan
(note: METAL ball-bearing , centuries previous ball-bearings to lower friction were made of wood)
..."Philip Vaughan was a Welsh inventor and ironmaster who patented the first design for a ball bearing in 1794"...
The actual start of the industrial revolution was lubricated low maintenance rotary metal parts with a SLIPPER BEARING BUSH allowing low friction for horses operating vertical mine shaft lifts or warehouse winches and RAIL LINES to allow horses or people more efficient energy output moving e.g. humans or horses pulling coal mine shaft wagons.
* From this, if anything put the children to work, it was short life expectancy (usually less than 50 years), so extremely short "able bodied working-life expectancy"(less than 20 years - as a labourer) and high proportion of population being children not adults and because of a short life NO TIME TO WASTE !
Very nice video!!
'm French and I'm really interested in these videos. But some part of the comments are difficult to understant. Is there somewhere a translation or subtitles ? Thank you very much
You can open the transcript everything for this video is written their
@@maryammotaz7440 Thank you, but the transcript doesn't work for me. I'm condemned to read and read again, which would have a good effect in my level of English.
Who's here for yr 8 history work. Yet has only been told to watch until 12 minutes
When your forced to watch this for your history work 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄✋
Can you put subtitles for these videos? I cant understand all words :(
if its taking too long: speed it up. youll thank me later
?
hey everyone watching this for schoolwork :))
HELLO IT ME FUNNI MUNKY MAN
@@mafusally who said you were funny
@@jessicamarshall7189 i did, tell miss im sorry I had to leave early
@@mafusally hmmm
Helloooo
Nice Good Presentation.
Fascinating.
It's dramatically ironic thinking that today children labour in India, China and Africa is like in victorian age.
Who else would rather be working a job earning money vs doing this school assingment?
I SWEAR
Hey Dan I wonder if you will get this when we are in class Friday November 30, 2012
Who is watching this during Coronavirus for English? BORING!!!😒
sorry for being kinda irrelevant but who plays the song at the beginning of the vid I've heard it before and it's driving me insane not knowing the name
....do you mean "Children of The Revolution" ?......
it's sung by Marc Bolan with band T.Rex.
I stay in a victorian lodge on a shooting estate and it still has the outside toilet and laundery room, Unused now of course.
I love how the first kid's last name is bacon. XD 🤣🤣
If only his first name was chris and his middle name started with a P " chris P bacon"
@@iranoutofnamesv2685 LMFAOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
very good
Tip: Watch it at 0.25x speed. It helps. Also, is it sad the Wix ad was more interesting?
do you have the answers for this video?
fair use or re-upload??? at least re-upload with the same resolution not 360p
The start is unsettling
Sound track slaps
Has anybody done a summary of this video?😅
wow cool vid ill leave a like
Rip. Watching as class work. Bored outta my mind
Fucking Same.
same dude
same hate this vid
Luke thewarm --- Just goes to show how brain dead you kids are these days.
Watching I'm class also but unlike y'all I find it interesting
Robert Blincoe - 5:25
poor poor poor children :( heartbreaking , bless them :(
Yes, those little third world hands sewing and making flowers are to be pitied...right now, today!!
shut up
now we are here as poor children being forced to watch boring ass youtube videos
skill issue😘😇😂😁🥰
Hahahaha I'm watching this for English and we are reading Jane Eyre.
* Temperance in the mid 19th century in Britain can easily have been "part of child labours' continuation into the 20th century because of medieval "Small Beer" tradition (and idle delinquency), approximately 20 percent of drink flavour recipes for children from medieval times are alcoholic in some way but "Smal Beer" or light beer is as the name suggests. Alcohol was not banned to children to purchase or consume until after the temperance movement of the 19th century.
Too, Narcotics such as Opium and Cocaine when it finally was distributed was not illegal or regulated from Children in the 19th century.
at 4:19 the song is neighbor #3 power out - arcade fire
its a hella good song
Peace be to you all! This is REALLY fascinating! I appreciate the animation incorporated in this production. As the progeny of African slaves in America, I think the suffering of other groups of people is often discarded. This is a part of history that continues to be prevalent in poor, developing countries today. Child labor was a horrible experience for MANY (of ALL races) in the early American Industrial Revolution; although, I don't know that it rivaled the horrors experienced by Black slave children as described in "The Autobiography of Frederick Douglass". I wonder concepts like "kindess" and "compassion" seem to be luxuries only of societies which have advanced technologies and surpluses (i.e. in food, shelter, etc.). 🤔 My kids don't like when I them watch videos like this. However, I think it's important to put things in perspective (especially when they don't feel like to helping around the house😅).
who cant be asked to watch this and is on there phone for the whole thing
2021 history class?
Comment if you are watching this as school work during quarantine 😷🤮
do you have the answers?
75% weren't even orphans, 75% had one living parent...kidnapped.
The flashback art looks like something straight out of a Madoka Magica horror sequence
Children exist, factory owners....
"its free real estate!"
"estate"
@@TheAvalanchilator Thnx
Your a Good Fellow , I Like that you tell the Truth about the Reset . :\ QC
I was a mule overlooker at the age of 21 incharge of a big muleroom. I set the mule up at Quarry Bank mill when it first opened. I've seen a lot of wrong information about cotton mills on youtube.Most of the comments are from people who have never worked in a real cotton mill.
Peter Clarke You should do a video about it. I'd actually be interested in hearing about your experiences. I don't think too many people today would truly understand what hardships a person had to endure to perform your task.
interesting doc! btw anyone know the music being played at 04:22 ?
neighbor #3 power out
@@anpoxy thanks! that's very nice of you to tell me, awesome! :)
@@anpoxy holy shit its arcade fire?
exactly beause the ceo wouldnt be a billionaire if we didnt buy the products.. your post is spot on.. ppl love to shift blame but still.. you buy you make it happe.. then the people who make ethical products make them expensive and unreachable for the average person.. i can afford but many cannot..
what are the names?
I have a 4K monitor and this vid is isn’t even 144p
At the beginning he says “colliers.” Does anyone know what he means by this?
Miners
whos here from st josephs?
Who isn’t watching this for a school assignment
All empires are built with slavery of some form
This is the kind of thing im forced to watch because of history :(
Yup
Same
In the 19th century, would you of rather lived in Victorian Britain or the American Old West?
Britain ;p because there was at least chance of improvement in life standard and not just settling a dry hot dusty place. I live in the Canadian prairies and i hate it with a passion, it would have been a million times worse in the older days
Lucien LaChance Poor you! Which province if you don't mind me asking. My nephew has a great job in Saskatchewan. He loves the pay but the Saskatoon leaves little to be desired. He keeps saying come on here we would have fun. Heck no! Anyhow have a good one.
Jak
Kiefer X_10 jack
Kiefer X_10 haha
This whole video is from the business mans perspective not the kids.
Who’s watching this in corona virus
What is reaction paper
whos watching this bc of covid 👁👄👁
What are the answers then
If the current government of the United Kingdom had half its way, everybody would be living like this right now. In fact, similar things like this are happening right now, minus the child labour. There are people who are working overtime and many of them are not getting paid for it. And, people are being expected to work when they are seriously ill.
Such a fascinating subject but I find this video unwatchable with the weird graphics, sudden bursts of loud rock music and this woman, who is trying way too hard to be cool and edgy. But perhaps this is a program meant for schoolchildren, in which case I understand.
School work lmao
Bowlegged people should never wear leather pants. Ever.