CH:5
AGE OF INDUSTRIALISATION
CLASS NOTES
A. Before the Industrial Revolution
Proto-industrialisation: There was
large-scale industrial production for an international market not based on
factories. It was controlled by merchants and the goods were produced by a vast
number of producers working within their family farms, not in factories.
17th and 18th century: Merchants
from the towns of Europe began moving to the countryside, supplying money to
peasants and artisans, persuading them to produce for an international market.
Merchants offered advances for producing clothes for them at a time when open fields
were disappearing and commons were being enclosed. Income from proto-industrial
production supplemented their shrinking income from cultivation.
B. The Coming Up of the Factory
1730s: The earliest factories in
England came up.
First symbol of the new era was
cotton.
Inventions in the 18th century
increased the efficacy of each step of production (carding, twisting, spinning
and rolling). The output per worker also rose.
Richard Arkwright invented the cotton mill.
Mill production of cotton started, which allowed a more careful supervision
over the production process.
Cotton became the leading sector
in the first phase of industrialization.
C. The Pace of Industrial Change
The expansion of railways in
England and its colonies rapidly increased the demand for iron and steel.
The new, technologically advanced
industrial sectors could not easily displace the traditional industries.
Textiles were still produced within domestic units and not in factories.
The high cost of machines and the
uncertainty of their performance made technological changes slow. Merchants and
industrialists were cautious about accepting and using the new technology.
1781: James Watt improved the
steam engine produced by Newcomen and patented the new engine.
D. Importance of Hand Labour
Introduction of machines required large
capital investment. Hence, cheap labour was preferred over the use of machines.
Manual labour was also preferred
in the industries where production fluctuated with seasons.
Goods with intricate designs and
specific shapes were in great demand in the European markets. This was possible
only with hand labour and not machine outputs.
The aristocrats and the
bourgeoisie in Victorian Britain preferred the refined and carefully handmade
products; machine made goods were for the colonies.
E. Life of the Workers
Large scale migrations to towns
and cities from countryside in search of jobs.
Many job-seekers had to wait
weeks, spending nights under bridges or in night shelters.
Workers became jobless after the
busy season of work got over.
Some returned to the countryside
when the demand for labour in the rural areas opened up.
Most people looked for odd-jobs,
which till the mid-19th century were difficult to find.
The fear of unemployment made
workers hostile to the introduction of new technology. Women who survived on
hand-spinning began protesting when the Spinning Jenny was introduced.
F. The Age of Indian Textiles
Before the age of machines, silk
and cotton goods from India dominated the international textile market.
Armenian and Persian merchants
took goods from Punjab to Afghanistan, Eastern Persia and Central Asia.
Surat on Gujarat coast connected
India to the Gulf and the Red Sea ports.
Masulipatam on the Coromandel
Coast and Hooghly in Bengal had trade links with Southeast Asian ports.
A variety of Indian merchants and
traders were involved in this network of export trade, financing production,
carrying goods and supplying exporters. They gave advances to the weavers,
procured the woven cloth from weaving villages and carried the supply to the
ports.
The European companies gradually gained
power and monopoly rights.
Trade through the new ports of Calcutta and
Mumbai came to be controlled by the European companies.
G. Plight of Weavers
The East India Company gained monopoly
rights over the Indian textile trade. It tried to eliminate the existing traders
and brokers connected with the cloth trade and established direct control over
the weavers.
A paid servant called the gomastha
was appointed for supervising weavers, collecting supply and examining the
quality of cloth.
The Company prevented the weavers
from dealing with other buyers.
Once the order was placed, the
weavers were given loans for purchasing raw material for production. The
produced cloth was to be handed over to the gomastha.
The new gomasthas had no social
link with the village. They acted arrogantly, marched into villages with sepoys
and peons and punished weavers for delays in supply.
The price received by weavers from
the Company was miserably low and the loans that they had accepted tied them to
the Company.
In Carnatic and Bengal weavers
deserted villages and migrated, setting up looms in other villages where they
had some family relation. Elsewhere, the weavers along with the village traders
revolted, opposing the Company and its officials.
Weavers began refusing loans,
closing down their workshops and taking to agricultural labour.
H. British Textiles in India
The British industrialists
pressurized the government to impose duties on cotton textiles so that
Manchester goods could sell in Britain without any outside competition.
The industrialists also persuaded
the East India Company for selling the British manufactures in the Indian
markets.
Exports of British cotton goods
increased dramatically in the early 19th century.
The export market of the Indian
cotton weavers collapsed and the local market shrank, being glutted with cheap
Manchester imports.
The weavers could not get
sufficient supply of good quality raw cotton. Weavers in India were starved of
supplies and forced to buy raw cotton at exorbitant prices.
By the end of the 19th century,
factories in India began production, flooding the markets with machine-made
goods. Consequently, the weaving industry decayed and died.
I.Factories in India
1854: First cotton mill came up in Bombay
1855: The first jute mill came up;
and another one in 1862
1860s: The Elgin mill was started
in Kanpur
1861: The first cotton mill of
Ahmadabad was set up
1874: The first spinning and
weaving mill of Madras began production
J. The Early Entrepreneurs
The British in India began
exporting opium to China and took tea from China to England. Many Indians
participated in this trade by providing finance, procuring supplies and
shipping consignments.
In Bengal, Dwarkanath Tagore made
his fortune in the China trade and established six joint-stock companies in the
1830s and 1840s.
In Bombay, Dinshaw Petit and
Jamsetjee Nusserwanjee Tata built huge industrial empires in India. They
accumulated their initial wealth partly from exports to China and partly from
raw cotton shipments to England.
Merchants from Madras traded with
Burma, Middle East and East Africa.
Other trading activities included
carrying goods from one place to another, banking, transferring funds between
cities and financing traders.
However, Indian traders were
barred from trading with Europe in manufactured goods and had to export raw
materials and food grains required by the British. They were also gradually
edged out of the shipping business.
K. Workers
In most industrial regions,
workers came from the nearby districts
The job-seekers were always more
than the jobs available.
Industrialists employed a jobber
for getting new recruits. He got people from his village, ensured them jobs,
helped them settle in the city and provided them money in times of crisis.
L. The Peculiarities of Industrial
Growth
The European Managing Agencies
established tea and coffee plantations, acquiring land at cheap rates from the
colonial governments. They also invested in mining, indigo and jute.
Since yarn was not an important
part of British imports into India, the early cotton mills in India produced
coarse cotton yarn rather than fabric. The yarn produced in Indian spinning
mills was used by handloom weavers in India or exported to China.
Nationalists during the Swadeshi
movement mobilized people to boycott foreign cloth.
Industrial groups organized
themselves to protect their collective interests, pressurizing the government
to increase tariff protection and grant other concessions.
From 1906, the export of Indian
yarn to China declined since produce from Chinese and Japanese mills flooded
the Chinese market.
1900 and 1912: Cotton piece goods
production in India doubled
With British mills busy with war
production to meet the needs of the army, Manchester imports into India
declined. As the war prolonged, Indian factories were called upon to supply war
needs including jute bags, cloth for army uniforms, tents and leather boots,
horse and mule saddles and a host of other items.
Industrial production boomed owing
to the increase in the working hours and the establishment of new factories.
Unable to modernize and compete with the US,
Germany and Japan, the British economy crumbled after the war. Cotton
production collapsed and exports of cotton cloth from Britain fell
dramatically.
Within the colonies, local
industries substituted the foreign manufactures and captured the home market.
M. Small-scale Industries
Large industries formed only a
small segment of the economy. Most of them were located in Bombay and Bengal.
Most of the workers worked in
small workshops and household units.
While cheap machine-made thread
wiped out the spinning industry in the 19th century, the weavers survived.
Handloom cloth-production expanded steadily between 1900 and 1940.
Technological changes and other
small innovations made the handloom clothproduction rise. By the second decade
of the 20th century, weavers used looms with a fly shuttle.
Amongst weavers, some produced
coarse cloth while others wove finer varieties. The coarser cloth was bought by
the poor and its demand fluctuated violently along with the fluctuations in
their incomes.
The finer ones were bought by the
rich and its demand was constant.
N. Market for Goods
New consumers were created through
advertisements. Advertisements expanded the markets for products and shaped a
new consumer culture.
The label was needed for making
the name and the place of manufacture and the name of the company familiar to
the buyer.
Images of Indian gods and
goddesses were imprinted on goods for making a foreign product familiar to the
Indian masses.
Calendars were used for
advertisements.
Figures of important personages
adorned advertisements and calendars. Advertisements became a vehicle of the
nationalist message of Swadeshi.
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