The Economic Impacts Of The Agricultural Revolution And The Industrial Revolution

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On the heels of the Scientific Agricultural Revolution, families were displaced from their tenant farms. The advances in fertilizer, irrigation and crop rotations, created efficiencies in farming that meant less farmers were needed to tend the crops and land owners no longer needed tenants to work them. Tenant farmers, after generations of farming land for the land owners, flocked to the cities to look for work. Some were exported to the North American colonies to farm land, but that would not solve the unemployment problem for all. Luckily, the Industrial Revolution arrived and these farmers found work in the emerging factories (Pavlic, P. 238). England’s financial innovations, the development of energy, transportation improvements, and the invention of machinery all helped to spark the Industrial Revolution (Pavlic, p. 239). As families began to urbanize, society was forced to make many changes to respond to the conditions. All of these changes because of the Industrial Revolution, created the modern society we live in today. The innovations in British banking, made investing in factories and manufacturing less risky for investors. Lloyd’s of London insured those …show more content…

The modern conveniences, such as, plumbing, police protection, lighting, heating, and motorized transportation, were made possible by the Industrial Revolution. Perhaps, one of the most significant changes to come out of the Industrial Revolution is the urbanization of people and the structure of family. The Industrial Revolution is a perfect example of how when society is faced with obstacles, it is forced to develop solutions to overcome. Without the progress of the Industrial Revolution, and some of the struggles and challenges it created, many of the conveniences, rights, and opportunities we have today might not have come to

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