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Description:
Death by fire. Death by machinery. Death by collapsed coal mine. The workers of the Industrial Revolution couldn't catch a break.
Transcript
- 00:04
Inventors produced all kinds of marvelous
- 00:07
machines during the Industrial Revolution.
- 00:09
But these machines didn't come into existence through magic.
- 00:12
Every phonograph and camera and steamship had to be put together piece by piece,
- 00:17
by people.
Full Transcript
- 00:18
And the faster and more efficiently
- 00:19
those people worked, the better.
- 00:21
Enter the assembly line. The bosses of the Industrial Revolution
- 00:25
would put a bunch of workers in a row, and these workers
- 00:28
would perform a single task, over and over and over, and over, again.
- 00:33
So kind of like a bunch of real life Sisyphuses.
- 00:36
Was this horrifically boring for your average factory worker? Sure.
- 00:41
However, with every worker in the assembly line focused on doing his or her specific task,
- 00:45
products could be built much, much faster, which ultimately meant much, much more money for manufacturers.
- 00:51
Of course, it didn't take long for companies to start to view their assembly-line workers as easily replaceable parts rather than people.
- 00:58
The specialized nature of factory work, where
- 01:00
one person was assigned to one repetitive task,
- 01:03
meant a worker could get the boot without the boss-man having to worry much about finding
- 01:07
someone else to learn the gig and take over the job.
- 01:10
The same reasoning applied when a worker got hurt on the factory floor. And hoo boy, did people get hurt often.
- 01:16
A laborer could lose a finger, a hand, or an entire limb to a machine.
- 01:19
Because workers stood on their feet for hours without a break,
- 01:23
foot, ankle, and knee injuries were really common.
- 01:26
People also got sick from breathing in pollution and dust on the factory floor.
- 01:30
And then there were the industrial accidents.
- 01:32
New York City's worst was the Triangle Shirtwaist fire of 1911,
- 01:37
when nearly 150 people, many of them teenaged girls,
- 01:40
got caught on the upper floors of the Asch Building.
- 01:43
Those who didn't die jumping from the windows to the street below, died of smoke inhalation or burned to death.
- 01:50
Factories weren't the only bane of working-class existence.
- 01:53
The Industrial Revolution ran on coal,
- 01:55
which could only be pulled out of mines by—you guessed it—lots of poor people.
- 01:59
Many of the mines were unstable and full of lung-clogging coal dust.
- 02:04
There were also a bunch of weird singing dwarves who liked to whistle while they worked. All in all, lots of dangers.
- 02:11
At least factory workers had the option of ditching their jobs for, well, something other than getting shredded by a machine.
- 02:17
Slaves weren't so fortunate, and as we discussed in an earlier lesson,
- 02:21
the invention of the cotton gin actually
- 02:22
reinforced slavery in the American South.
- 02:25
However, on the tea-drinking, scone-eating side of the Atlantic, change was afoot.
- 02:30
The British decided that slavery was totally uncool and
- 02:33
inefficient, and they got rid of the institution in 1833.
- 02:37
The laborers used by the British were all free men and women.
- 02:40
However, they were so dependent on their wages to survive that many critics believed the
- 02:44
Industrial Revolution in England had banished
- 02:47
one kind of slavery simply to replace it with another.
- 02:50
Death by machinery. Death by fire. Death by collapsed coal mine. Death by irritating, whistling dwarves.
- 02:57
The workers of the Industrial Revolution just couldn't catch a break.
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