What the Industrial Revolution Did for Us
by Dan Cruickshank, Gavin Weightman
| Format: | Hardback 224 pages |
|---|
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Synopsis
"What the Industrial Revolution Did For Us" is a journey back in time, giving the reader an insight into how British life was transformed between 1750 and 1830, and how it shaped the world we live in today. So what did the Industrial Revolution do for us? Without the huge advances in science, engineering and medicine and the cast of extraordinarily colourful inventors and scientists who revolutionised the way we think, our modern world would be very different. We would be without vaccinations against contagious diseases and have no anaesthetics for surgery. The industrial revolution also gave birth to our national obsession with tea drinking, the mass production of crockery for the house-proud newly emerging Middle Classes and the transformation of clothing worn by the ordinary man and woman. As well as huge leaps in the evolution of machinery and manufacturing, our transport system was completely overhauled as the first ever steam trains emerged, roads were drastically improved, and canal mania took over Britain. The great industrial cities burgeoned and London became the international power it still is today. From the quacks advertising their potions to the new Middle Classes to the great innovators and entrepreneurs such as Robert Stephenson, James Watt and Josiah Wedgwood, "What the Industrial Revolution Did For Us" takes us right to the heart of the excitement of this revolutionary age.
Book details
Published
16/10/2003
Publisher
BBC Books
ISBN
9780563487944
Publisher and industry reviews
UK Kirkus review
Imagine what an 18th-century Mr and Mrs Everyman must have made of the changing world that we know as the Industrial Revolution. Instead of villages and fields they were seeing factories springing up, canals slicing across the landscape, and the first experiments with steam power. The lavishly-illustrated book, which accompanies a BBC TV series, takes us into the bewildered but enthralled minds of those 18th-century people - and then brings us forwardto the birth of railways and the powerhouse architects and inventors who turned Britain into the world's number one commercial nation. It is an exhilarating tale skilfully woven into the social history of the times so that we learn how the Industrial Revolution did far more than create dark, satanic mills. Without that period of bustling activity between 1750 and 1830, not only would there have been no railways and workshops but also no vaccinations, no fabrics such as cotton that we take for granted - even a lack of cutlery and electric toasters! This is history in all its exciting, colourful and quirky glory. (Kirkus UK)
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