Video summary
According to Professor Jeremy Black, canals were the motorways of the 1700s.
As well as supporting turnpike roads, pottery millionaire Josiah Wedgwood also supported the building of canals 鈥 they were perfect for transporting his pottery goods.
It took huge amounts of money and some incredible feats of engineering, like the Harecastle Tunnel, but Wedgwood got his canal and it connected his factories to the rest of the country.
In the 1770s canals linked the country, carrying goods cheaply and efficiently. Without them it is hard to see how the Industrial Revolution could have happened.
This short film is from the 大象传媒 series, Why the Industrial Revolution Happened Here.
Teacher Notes
This short film could be used as stimulus to prepare your class for a discussion about the significance and importance of the canal system on business and industrial output in Britain during the 19th century.
Ask students to:
(a) Make a list of the advantages and disadvantages of canal transport.
(b) Use primary testimony to examine the consequences of technological change on populations.
漏 Understand the reasons why freight carrying on the canals declined in the 19th and 20th centuries.
As an extension, ask students to examine the reasons why canal transport may represent a positive option for the carrying of certain types of freight in the 21st century.
This short film is suitable for teaching history at Key Stage 3 and GCSE, Third Level and National 4 & 5, in particular units on the Victorians and the Industrial Revolution.
Josiah Wedgwood: Genius of the Industrial Revolution. video
Professor Jeremy Black explores Josiah Wedgwood's innovative ways of marketing and advertising his pottery, including opening the first ever showroom.
The brains behind the Industrial Revolution. video
Professor Jeremy Black shows how, at the birth of the Industrial Revolution, Britain's political and economic climate allowed inventive minds to blossom.
The growth of industry and factory towns in Britain. video
Professor Jeremy Black explains how the invention of factories completely changed the nature of work and made Birmingham one of Britain's largest cities.
The importance of coal in the Industrial Revolution. video
Professor Jeremy Black digs deeper into our industrial past and finds that Britain sat on top of bountiful coal deposits, perfect to power newly-invented steam engines.
Why did Britain need a better road network? video
Professor Jeremy Black explains how the state of Britain's roads in the early 1700s was holding back the Industrial Revolution, and how business owners changed all that.