enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Industrial Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_Revolution

    The Industrial Revolution was the first period in history during which there was a simultaneous increase in both population and per capita income. [144] According to Robert Hughes in The Fatal Shore , the population of England and Wales, which had remained steady at six million from 1700 to 1740, rose dramatically after 1740.

  3. Industrial Revolution in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_Revolution_in...

    The Industrial Revolution altered the U.S. economy and set the stage for the United States to dominate technological change and growth in the Second Industrial Revolution and the Gilded Age. [28] The Industrial Revolution also saw a decrease in labor shortages which had characterized the U.S. economy through its early years. [29]

  4. Textile manufacture during the British Industrial Revolution

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_manufacture_during...

    Textile manufacture during the British Industrial Revolution was centred in south Lancashire and the towns on both sides of the Pennines in the United Kingdom. The main drivers of the Industrial Revolution were textile manufacturing , iron founding , steam power , oil drilling, the discovery of electricity and its many industrial applications ...

  5. History of tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_tea

    Tea was known in France by 1636. It enjoyed a brief period of popularity in Paris around 1648. The history of tea in Russia can also be traced back to the 17th century. Tea was first offered by China as a gift to Czar Michael I in 1618. The Russian ambassador tried the drink; he did not care for it and rejected the offer, delaying tea's Russian ...

  6. Boston Tea Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Tea_Party

    The Boston Tea Party was an American political and mercantile protest on December 16, 1773, by the Sons of Liberty in Boston in colonial Massachusetts. [2] The target was the Tea Act of May 10, 1773, which allowed the East India Company to sell tea from China in American colonies without paying taxes apart from those imposed by the Townshend Acts.

  7. Industrial revolutions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_revolutions

    Various technological revolutions have been defined as successors of the original Industrial Revolution. The sequence includes: The first Industrial Revolution; The Second Industrial Revolution, also known as the Technological Revolution; The Third Industrial Revolution, better known as the Digital Revolution; The Fourth Industrial Revolution

  8. Philadelphia Tea Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia_Tea_Party

    The Philadelphia Tea Party was an incident in late December 1773, shortly after the more famous Boston Tea Party, [1] in which a British tea ship was intercepted by American colonists and forced to return its cargo to Great Britain.

  9. George Robert Twelves Hewes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Robert_Twelves_Hewes

    Traits of the tea party : being a memoir of George R.T. Hewes, one of the last of its survivors at the Internet Archive; Booknotes interview with Alfred Young on The Shoemaker and the Tea Party: Memory and the American Revolution, November 21, 1999. Plainville 1930: Its Industries and History at the Digital Library [permanent dead link