Class VIII SST Ch.6. Weavers, Iron Smelters & Factory Owners QA
Class VIII SST Ch.6. Weavers, Iron Smelters & Factory Owners QA
Class VIII SST Ch.6. Weavers, Iron Smelters & Factory Owners QA
8. How did the development of cotton industries in Britain affect textile producers in India?
Ans: There were several challenges for textile produces in India:
a. They had to compete with English cotton industries both in England and in India
b. British cotton industries expanded, which led to the shrinkage of Indian textile producers.
c. Thousands of Indian textile producers were out of employment because the British took over the market
with their industries.
9. Why did the Indian iron smelting industry decline in the nineteenth century?
Ans: There are following reasons that led to the decline of the iron smelting industry in the nineteenth
century:
a. Indian smelters could not get Charcoal due to the forest laws imposed on them. Charcoal is an essential
ingredient in the iron smelting process, and the industry could not thrive without it’s supply. The forest laws
banned their movement in the reserved forests.
b. Iron smelters were asked to pay high taxes to the forest authorities.
c. Post-1950s, the English started importing iron from England to India. This discouraged Indian iron
smelters from pursuing the same profession.
d. In late-nineteenth-century, many famines destroyed dry tracts for iron smelters.
e. Iron industries posed the biggest challenge for the local iron smelters who were not able to compete with
the big industries.
10. What problems did the Indian textile industry face in the early years of its development?
Ans: The problems are given below:
a. Competition – They had to face large British industries who were already there in the market.
b. Export – It was a challenge for them to export to England due to the huge export prices.
c. Failure – English cotton textiles ousted Indian textiles from its parent markets like America, Africa and
Europe.
d. No Buyers – Europeans started avoiding the weavers of Bengal and did not buy from them, which made
the Bengal weavers the worst-hit.
11. What helped TISCO expand steel production during the First World War?
Ans: The following reasons led to TISCO expansion:
a. World War-I – The war demanded a huge amount of iron and steel for the production of ammunition,
which was a demand that Britain had to entertain.
b. Indian markets turned to TISCO for rail work to supply iron and steel.
c. TISCO built shells and carriage wheels for World War-I
d. By 1919, the British government started buying 90 per cent of the steel manufactured by the TISCO.