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What The Industrial Revolution Did For Us [Hardcover]

Gavin Weightman
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
Price: £19.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Book Description

16 Oct 2003 0563487941 978-0563487944
The latest in the popular What theDid For Us series of books, 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. This book and the BBC television series it accompanies takes us back in time in the eyes of the eighteenth century tourist embracing the newness and invention of this incredible era. Contents: Introduction by Dan Cruickshank Chapter 1: A Potent Brew Chapter 1 looks at the remarkable discoveries that, in just 100 years, created the modern global economy and much of the world in which we live. It tells the story of coal and iron, but also of tea, the invention of the toaster and how Kew Gardens came to be formed. Chapter 2: New Lives: New Landscapes How industrialisation changed the face of modern Britain with the development of machines that took work out of the home and into factories. Chapter 3: Steaming Along We travel through the longest tunnels, over the highest bridges and in the first ever steam trains to explore the impact of the Industrial Revolution on the way we get from A to B. Chapter 4: The Lure of London From the architecture of London to the development of shopping and the start of the modern consumer society. Chapter 5: A Remedy for Quacks Up until the mid 18th century, you had a better chance of survival if you chose not to visit a doctor. But these rather grim facts of life and death were about to change. The Industrial Revolution brought the hope that technology and progress might produce a world without disease and suffering. Modern Medicine covers everything from anaesthetic to Scurvy, vaccines to madness. Chapter 6: Cannon-Fire This chapter focuses on the developments taking place in warfare and weapons during this turbulent period.

Frequently Bought Together

What The Industrial Revolution Did For Us + A Brief History of How the Industrial Revolution Changed the World + The Industrial Revolution Explained: Steam, Sparks and Massive Wheels (England's Living History)
Price For All Three: £33.17

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: BBC Books (16 Oct 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0563487941
  • ISBN-13: 978-0563487944
  • Product Dimensions: 24.8 x 19.2 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 421,613 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Amazon Review

Gavin Weightman is a noted historian and film-maker. His latest book, What the Industrial Revolution Did For Us accompanies the BBC TV series. The book is made up of six detailed and beautifully illustrated chapters covering aspects of the Industrial Revolution including the invention of new machinery and technology, the changing face of the landscape and the improvement in transport; the working conditions of the poor and the changes in law, advances in medicine and the development of new military weaponry; the emergence of cotton and the arrival of tea. The stars of the show are the visionary Renaissance men, the polymaths inventing, manufacturing, and engineering who gave the revolution its momentum.

Weightman's prose style is clear, engaging and economical so although this is a detailed and scholarly work, the narrative moves along at a fairly rapid pace. As one might expect the book is full of fine illustrations, drawings, paintings, cartoons, advertisements, maps and designs as well as first-hand eye-witness accounts, excerpts from books, letters and diaries. Overall, the book is well written, well paced, highly educative, very stylish and an accessible introduction to the period which shaped the modern world. --Larry Brown

From the Author

The reviewer of my book has failed to understand that it is about "The First Industrial Revolution" which most authorities fix at 1770 to 1830. I have a fair bit about Marc Isambard Brunel, less about his son Isambard Kingdom born in 1806 who was starting out at the end of the period covered. Hobsbawm's excellent Industry and Empire takes industrialism way beyond 1830 and is not as relevant as Deane for that reason. As to medicine, inoculation, patent medicines etc, it would be a hopelessly narrow definition of "industrialism" which confined itself to trains and the like. The beginnings of "scientific medicine" are highly relevant. Finally, it is quite true that nothing much was developed in the way of new weaponry before 1830 though the American Robert Fulton, having failed to blow up, first, the British Navy and then Napoleon's invasion fleet, did start the first ever commercial steamboat service on the Hudson River.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars as good as expected 10 Sep 2009
Format:Hardcover
Having seen the films on TV I wanted a written version.
This book completely fulfils my expectations. It is interesting to read a good source for teaching.
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7 of 11 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Like the curate's egg 23 Dec 2005
By Ralph Blumenau TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a book accompanying a television series, so one would not expect anything very profound. The first three of the six chapters are a perfectly readable and lavishly illustrated introduction to the First Industrial Revolution, though there is only one sentence (in the sixth chapter) about Isambard Kingdom Brunel. The other three chapters, on London, medicine and weaponry seem to fit ill with the title of the book. We have something on the growth of London, but one wonders what the extensive description of pleasure gardens has to do with the Industrial Revolution. The only thing that development in medicine “did for us” is Jenner’s work on vaccination. Whether that has anything to do with the Industrial Revolution is questionable, and certainly the pages on useless patent medicines and on body snatching can’t be said to have done much for us. The description of weaponry (ineffectual rockets and early torpedoes, fortifications like the Martello Towers) likewise have done little for us. Unfortunately, as the note on Further Readings tells us, there seem to be very few general surveys in print of the First Industrial Revolution, but one that is recommended is Phyllis Deane’s The First Industrial Revolution, and anyone seriously interested in the subject would do better to consult that work than this one, and Eric Hobsbawm’s excellent Industry to Empire is not mentioned in the bibliography at all.
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Amazon.com: 3.7 out of 5 stars  3 reviews
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars One minor error 16 May 2009
By Louis Allyn - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
On page 227 the author states that "if you heated rubber and extracted the sulfur from it, you transformed it into a workable material". In actuality, vulcanization requires the addition of sulfur to rubber, not the removal. A small error in a very interesting book.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Like a curate's egg 23 Dec 2005
By Ralph Blumenau - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This is a book accompanying a television series, so one would not expect anything very profound. The first three of the six chapters are a perfectly readable and lavishly illustrated introduction to the First Industrial Revolution, though there is only one sentence (in the sixth chapter) about Isambard Kingdom Brunel. The other three chapters, on London, medicine and weaponry seem to fit ill with the title of the book. We have something on the growth of London, but one wonders what the extensive description of pleasure gardens has to do with the Industrial Revolution. The only thing that development in medicine "did for us" is Jenner's work on vaccination. Whether that has anything to do with the Industrial Revolution is questionable, and certainly the pages on useless patent medicines and on body snatching can't be said to have done much for us. The description of weaponry (ineffectual rockets and early torpedoes, fortifications like the Martello Towers) likewise have done little for us. Unfortunately, as the note on Further Readings tells us, there seem to be very few general surveys in print of the First Industrial Revolution, but one that is recommended is Phyllis Deane's The First Industrial Revolution, and anyone seriously interested in the subject would do better to consult that work than this one, and Eric Hobsbawm's excellent Industry to Empire is not mentioned in the bibliography at all.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Examining the Industrial Revolution's lasting impact 13 Sep 2004
By Midwest Book Review - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Between 1750 and 1840 the Industrial Revolution changed the lives of British people forever, advancing science and technological discoveries and their application to daily lives. Gavin Weightman is a noted historian and Dan Cruikshank presents the TV series on the topic: together they use the TV show as a starting point and foundation for examining the Industrial Revolution's lasting impact on modern times.
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