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Friday, October 16, 2020

THE MOST IMPORTANT INVENTIONS OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION - The inventions and innovations of the Industrial Revolution transformed the U.S. and Great Britain in the 18th and 19th centuries. Tremendous gains in science and technology helped Britain become the world's dominant economic and political power, while in the U.S. it fueled a young nation's westward expansion and built vast fortunes. British innovations harnessed the power of water, steam, and coal, helping the U.K. dominate the global textile market. Other advancements made in chemistry, manufacturing, and transportation allowed the nation to expand and fund its empire around the globe. The American Industrial Revolution began after the Civil War as the U.S. rebuilt its infrastructure. New forms of transportation such as the steamboat and the railroad helped the nation expand trade. Meanwhile, innovations such as the modern assembly line and electric light bulb revolutionized both business and personal life. Water had long been used to power simple machines such as grain mills and textile spinners, but Scottish inventor James Watt's refinements to the steam engine in 1775 launched the revolution in earnest. Up until that point, such engines were crude, inefficient, and unreliable. Watt's first engines were used primarily to pump water and air into and out of mines. With the development of more powerful, efficient engines which would operate under higher pressure and increased output, came newer, better forms of transportation.

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The Most Important Inventions of the Industrial Revolution

By Martin Kelly

 

The inventions and innovations of the Industrial Revolution transformed the U.S. and Great Britain in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Tremendous gains in science and technology helped Britain become the world's dominant economic and political power, while in the U.S. it fueled a young nation's westward expansion and built vast fortunes. 

A Revolution Twice Over

British innovations harnessed the power of water, steam, and coal, helping the U.K. dominate the global textile market of the mid-1770s.

Other advancements made in chemistry, manufacturing, and transportation allowed the nation to expand and fund its empire around the globe.

The American Industrial Revolution began after the Civil War as the U.S. rebuilt its infrastructure.

New forms of transportation such as the steamboat and the railroad helped the nation expand trade.

Meanwhile, innovations such as the modern assembly line and electric light bulb revolutionized both business and personal life.

Transportation

Water had long been used to power simple machines such as grain mills and textile spinners, but Scottish inventor James Watt's refinements to the steam engine in 1775 launched the revolution in earnest.

Up until that point, such engines were crude, inefficient, and unreliable. Watt's first engines were used primarily to pump water and air into and out of mines.

With the development of more powerful, efficient engines which would operate under higher pressure and increased output, came newer, better forms of transportation. 

Robert Fulton was an engineer and inventor who had become fascinated with Watt's engine while living in France at the turn of the 19th century.

After several years of experimenting in Paris, he returned to the U.S. and launched the Clermont in 1807 on the Hudson River in New York.

It was the first commercially viable steamboat line in the nation. ​​

As the nation's rivers began opening to navigation, commerce expanded along with the population.

Another new form of transportation, the railroad, also relied on steam power to drive the locomotives.

First in Britain and then in the U.S., rail lines began appearing in the 1820s. By 1869, the first transcontinental rail line linked the coasts.

If the 19th century belonged to steam, the 20th century belonged to the internal combustion engine.

American inventor George Brayton, working on earlier innovations, developed the first liquid-fueled internal combustion engine in 1872.

During the next two decades, German engineers including Karl Benz and Rudolf Diesel would make further innovations.

By the time Henry Ford unveiled his Model T car in 1908, the internal combustion engine was poised to transform not just the nation's transportation system but also spur 20th-century industries like petroleum and aviation.

Communication

As the populations of both the U.K. and the U.S. expanded in the 1800s and America's boundaries pushed westward, new forms of communication that could cover great distances were invented to keep pace with this growth.

One of the first significant inventions was the telegraph, perfected by Samuel Morse.

He developed a series of dots and dashes that could be transmitted electrically in 1836; they came to be known as Morse Code, though it wouldn't be until 1844 that the first telegraph service opened, between Baltimore and Washington, D.C.

As the rail system expanded in the U.S., the telegraph followed along, literally. Rail depots doubled as telegraph stations, bringing news to the far-flung frontier.

Telegraph signals began flowing between the U.S. and the U.K. in 1866 with Cyrus Field's first permanent transatlantic telegraph line.

The following decade, Scottish inventor Alexander Graham Bell, working in the U.S. with Thomas Watson, patented the telephone in 1876. 

Thomas Edison, who made a number of discoveries and innovations during the 1800s, contributed to the communications revolution by inventing the phonograph in 1876.

The device used paper cylinders coated with wax to record sound. Records were first made of metal and later shellac.

In Italy, Enrico Marconi made his first successful radio wave transmission in 1895, paving the way for the radio to be invented in the next century.

Industry

In 1794, the American industrialist Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin.

This device mechanized the process of removing seeds from cotton, something that had previously been done largely by hand.

But what made Whitney's invention particularly special was its use of interchangeable parts. If one part broke, it could be easily replaced by another inexpensive, mass-produced copy. This made processing cotton cheaper, in turn creating new markets and wealth. 

Elijah McCoy, a mechanical engineer, filed more than 50 patents for various industrial inventions.

Although he did not invent the sewing machine, Elias Howe's refinements and patent in 1844 perfected the device. Working with Isaac Singer, Howe marketed the device to manufacturers and later consumers.

The machine allowed for the mass production of clothing, expanding the nation's textile industry.

It also made housework easier and allowed the growing middle class to indulge in hobbies like fashion.

But factory work — and home life — still were dependent upon sunlight and lamplight.

It wasn't until electricity began being harnessed for commercial purposes that industry truly was revolutionized.

Thomas Edison's invention of the electric light bulb in 1879 became the means by which large factories could be illuminated, extending shifts and increasing manufacturing output.

It also spurred the creation of the nation's electrical grid, into which the many inventions of the 20th century from TVs to PCs would eventually plug.

Person

Invention

Date

James Watt

First reliable steam engine

1775

Eli Whitney

Cotton gin
Interchangeable parts for muskets

1793
1798

Robert Fulton

Regular steamboat service on the Hudson River

1807

Samuel F.B. Morse

Telegraph

1836

Elias Howe

Sewing machine

1844

Isaac Singer

Improves and markets Howe's sewing machine

1851

Cyrus Field

Transatlantic cable

1866

Alexander Graham Bell

Telephone

1876

Thomas Edison

Phonograph
Incandescent light bulb

1877
1879

Nikola Tesla

Induction electric motor

1888

Rudolf Diesel

Diesel engine

1892

Orville and Wilbur Wright

First airplane

1903

Henry Ford

Model T Ford
Large-scale moving assembly line

1908
1913

 

Martin Kelly

History Expert

Education

M.A., History, University of Florida

B.A., History, University of Florida

Introduction

History teacher

Online course developer

Author of two books on American history

Experience

Martin H. Kelly wrote about American history for over 15 years for ThoughtCo. A secondary school social studies teacher for over a decade, he was also director of curriculum for the Florida Virtual School, and developed an Advance Placement American history course there. Currently, he is instructional design services manager in Tampa, Fla., for Pamoja Education, a UK-based educational technology company. 

Education

Martin Kelly holds a bachelor's degree in history with a classics minor and a master's degree from the University of Florida.

Publications

"The Everything American Presidents Book" (Everything, 2007)

"Colonial Life: Government" (Routledge, 2015)

ThoughtCo and Dotdash

ThoughtCo is a premier reference site focusing on expert-created education content. We are one of the top-10 information sites in the world as rated by comScore, a leading Internet measurement company. Every month, more than 13 million readers seek answers to their questions on ThoughtCo.

For more than 20 years, Dotdash brands have been helping people find answers, solve problems, and get inspired. We are one of the top-20 largest content publishers on the Internet according to comScore, and reach more than 30% of the U.S. population monthly. Our brands collectively have won more than 20 industry awards in the last year alone, and recently Dotdash was named Publisher of the Year by Digiday, a leading industry publication.

https://www.thoughtco.com/industrial-revolution-inventors-chart-4059637

 





















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