Class 10 (History)
Class 10 (History)
CHAPTER
CHAPTER COVERAGE
Before the Industrial Revolution Hand Labour & Steam Power
Industrialisation in the Colonies Factories come up
The Peculiarities of Industrial Growth Market for Goods
Important Terms
(i) Histories of industrialisation very often begin with the setting up of the first factories. Even before factories
began to dot the landscape in England and Europe, there was large-scale industrial production for an
international market. This was not based on factories. Many historians now refer to this phase of
industrialisation as proto-industrialisation.
(ii) In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, merchants from the towns in Europe began moving to the
countryside, supplying money to peasants and artisans, persuading them to produce for an international
market. With the expansion of world trade and the acquisition of colonies in different parts of the world, the
demand for goods began growing. But merchants could not expand production within towns. This was
because here urban crafts and trade guilds were powerful. Rulers granted different guilds the monopoly right
to produce and trade in specific products. New merchants turned to the countryside.
(iii) In the countryside when open fields were disappearing and commons were being enclosed, cottagers and
poor peasants had to now look for alternative sources of income. When merchants came around and offered
advances to produce goods for them, peasant households eagerly agreed. Income from proto-industrial
production supplemented their shrinking income from cultivation. it also allowed them a fuller use of their
family labour resources.
(iv) Within this system a close relationship developed between the town and the countryside. Merchants were
based in towns but the work was done mostly in the countryside. The finishing was done in London before
the export merchant sold the cloth in the international market.
Factories Come Up
The first cotton mill in Bombay came up in 1854 and it went into production two years later. By 1862 four
mills were at work with 94,000 spindles and 2,150 looms. Around the same time jute mills came up in
Bengal, the first being set up in 1855 and another one seven years later, in 1862. In north India, the Elgin
Mill was started in Kanpur in the 1860s, and a year later the first cotton mill of Ahmedabad was set up. By
1874, the first spinning and weaving mill of Madras began production.
(i) The Early Entrepreneurs : Many Indians became junior players in this trade, providing finance, procuring
supplies, and shipping consignments. Having earned through trade, some of these business men had visions
of developing industrial enterprises in India. In Bengal, Dwarkanath Tagore made his fortune in the China
trade before he turned to industrial investment, setting up six joint-stock companies in the 1830s and 1840s.
Tagore’s enterprises sank along with those of others in the wider business crises of the 1840s, but later in the
nineteenth century many of the China traders became successful industrialists. In Bombay, Parsis like
Dinshaw Petit and Jamsedjee Nusserwanjee Tata who built huge industrial empires in India, accumulated
their initial wealth party from exports to China, and partly from raw cotton shipments to England, Seth
Hukumchand, a Marwari businessman who set up the first Indian jute mill in Calcutta in 1917, also traded
with China. So did the father as well as grandfather of the famous industrialist G.D. Birla.
As colonial control over Indian trade tightened, the space within which Indian merchants could function
became increasingly limited. They were barred from trading with Europe in manufactured goods, and had to
export mostly raw materials and food grains - raw cotton, opium, wheat and indigo-required by the British.
They were also gradually edged out of the shipping business.
(ii) Where did the workers come from ? :
(a) In most industrial regions workers came from the districts around. Peasants and artisans who found no work
in the village went to the industrial centres in search of work. Over 50 per cent workers in the Bombay cotton
industries in 1911 came from the neighbouring district of Ratnagiri, while the mills of Kanpur got most of
their textile hands from the villages within the district of Kanpur. Most often mill workers moved between
the village and the city, returning to their village homes during harvests and festivals.
(b) Over time, as news of employment spread, workers travelled great distances in the hope of work in the mills.
From the United Provinces, for instance, they went to work in the textile mills of Bombay and in the jute mill
of Calcutta.
(c) Getting jobs was always difficult. The numbers seeking work were always more than the jobs available.
Entry into the mills was also restricted. Industrialists usually employed a jobber to get new recruits. He got
people from his village, ensured them jobs, helped them settle in the city and provided them money in times
of crisis.
The Peculiarities of Industrial Growth
(i) European Managing Agencies, which dominated industrial production in India, were interested in certain
kinds of products. They established tea and coffee plantations, acquiring land at cheap rates from the colonial
government; and they invested in mining, indigo and jute.
(ii) When Indian businessmen began setting up industries in the late nineteenth century, they avoided competing
with Manchester goods in the Indian market.
(iii) By the first decade of the twentieth century a series of changes affected the pattern of industrialisation.
Industrial groups organised themselves to protect their collective interests, pressurising the government to
increase tariff protection and grant other concessions.
(iv) Till the First World War, industrial growth was slow. The war created a dramatically new situation. With
British mills busy with war production to meet the needs of the army, Manchester imports into India
declined. Suddenly, Indian mills had a vast home market to supply. As the war prolonged, Indian factories
were called upon to supply war needs. New factories were set up and old ones ran multiple shifts. Many new
workers were employed and everyone was made to work longer hours. Over the war years industrial
production boomed.
(iv) After the war, within the colonies, local industrialists gradually consolidated their position, substituting
foreign manufactures and capturing the home market.
Important Terms
1. Spinning Jenny-devised James Hargreaves in 1764.
2. Building activities intensified in the cities after 1840.
3. Place goods accounted for 33 % of Indian’s export in 1811-12.
4. India’s export reduced by 1950-51
5. Cotton piece goods constituted over 31 % by 1850.
6. The first cotton mill in Bombay come up in 1854.
7. Four mills were at work by 1862.
8. The first Jute Mill set up in Bengal in 1855.
9. The Elgin Mill was started in Kanpur in 1860.
10. The first cotton mill of Ahemdabad was set up by 1874.
11. There were 2,436,000 workers in Indian factories by 1946.
12. Cotton piece goods production in India doubled between 1910-12.
13. Handloom production almost trebling between 1900 and 1940.
GLOSSARY
2. Guild : An association of craftman or merchants following same craft to protect the members interest and
supervise the standard of the work.
16. Monopoly : Exclusive right of trade in an article or good granted by some authority or licence authorising this.
17. Gomastha : An Indian word meaning an agent, a middleman between the merchant and weavers. He was a
paid servant of the British Government to supervise weavers, collect supplies and examine the quality of cloth.
20. Proto-Industrialisation : the early phase of industrialisation in which large scale production was carried out
for international market not at factories but in decentralised units.
21. Trade Guilds : These were the associations of producers that trained craftspersons, maintained control over
production, regulated competition and prices, and restricted the entry of new people in trade.
EXERCISE
Q.17 Why were the images of Indian Gods and
A. Very Short Answer Type Questions
Goddesses imprinted on British manufacturers
Q.1 Who invented the spinning Jenny ? What was in 19th century ?
its function.
Q.2 Name any two inventions that helped to speed Q.18 Why was it difficult for the new European
up textile industry. merchants to set up business in towns in the
17th and 18th centuries?
Q.3 What is meant by proto-industrialisation ?
Q.19 Name any three pre-colonial ports of India.
Q.4 Mention four steps required in the production
process in textile industry. Q.20 Why the pre-colonial ports, declined by the
1750s ?
Q.5 Name the first two flourishing industries of
England. Q.21 Name the ports which grew during the
colonial period.
Q.6 Name any four industries in which the
industrialists preferred manual labour to Q.22 Why was the East India Company keen on
machine. expanding textile exports from India during
the 1760s ?
Q.7 Name two types of shelters setup for
homeless labours. Q.23 Why East India Company found it difficult to
ensure a regular supply of goods for export ?
Q.8 How did Armenian and Persian merchants
carry goods from India in Pre-colonial period? Q.24 Who were the Gomasthas ?
Q.9 Name two Indian seaports from which a Q.25 Name the European Managing Agencies
vibrant trade was carried out from India with which controlled the large sector of Indian
south East Asian Parts. Industries.
Q.10 Why were there clashes between the Indian Q.26 Name any four major centres of cotton
Weavers and company Gomasthas ? textiles of India during the colonial period.
Q.11 When and where was the first cotton mill Q.27 How the Indian and British manufactures
setup in India ? tried to expand their market ?
Q.12 Where and by whom was the first Jute mill Q.28 "When Indian manufactures advertised, the
setup in India ? nationalist message was clear and loud".
What was the message ?
Q.13 Name the Indian entrepreneur who set up six
joint stock companies in India in 1830s and Q.29 What was importance of advertisements in
1840s. How did he make fortune for expanding the market during the colonial
investments ? period ?
Q.14 Mention the restrictions imposed upon the Q.30 Who created the cotton mill ?
Indian merchants in 19th century. B. Short Answer Type Questions
Q.15 What is Flying Shuttle ? What was its
Q.1 Explain the role of a guild in the production
function ?
process of crafts.
Q.16 How did Indian advertisement become a
Q.2 How did factory production begin in England?
vehicle of nationalist aspiration ?
Q.3 Explain two reasons for the fast growth of
cotton and steel industry in 18th century
England.
Q.4 Why were some industrialist reductant to Q.4 Name any three managing agencies in India
introduce machines ? before the First World War. What were their
Q.5 Why did the bourgeoisic prefer handmade main functions ?
products in 19th century ? Q.5 How did the pattern of Indian Industry
Q.6 “After 1840, the life of workers improved in change in early 20th century ?
England”. Explain. Q.6 Why there was need for economic reform ?
Q.7 Why is it necessary to use advertisement for Explain.
various products ? Q.7 What do you know regarding the awakening
Q.8 Examine the nature of the network of Indian. among workers ?
Export trade before 1750. Q.8 Explain the causes of India’s industrial back
Q.9 Examine how the British companies wardness under the British rule.
gradually asserted monopoly rights in India. Q.9 How the British rule hampered Indian
Q.10 What role did a Jobber play for an Industries.
industrialist ?
Q.10 Explain the miserable conditions of Indian
Q.11 How did Indian entreprenurs accumulate weavers during the East India Company's
capital for investment ? regime in the eighteenth century.
Q.12 What is meant by Enclosure movement ? Q.11 What led to expansion in handloom craft
Q.13 Mention the role of middle class as shown production between 1900 and 1940 ?
time to time.
Q.12 Why could Britain not recapture her hold on
Q.14 Write down some of the miserable conditions the Indian market after the First World War ?
of workers. Explain.
Q.15 Mention the social effects of unplanned Q.13 'In the seventeenth and the eighteenth
industrial towns.
centuries, the merchants from the towns in
Q.16 How was proto-industrialisation different Europe began moving to the countryside'.
from factory production ? Give reasons.
Q.17 Mention any two functions of guilds in urban Q.14 Why did the peasants agree to accept
areas. advances made by the merchants to produce
Q.18 'By 1860, the Indian weavers could not get goods for them in Europe during the 17th and
sufficient supply of raw cotton of good the 18th centuries? Explain three reasons.
quality'. give reasons.
Q.15 Mention any four features of the proto-
Q.19 During the First World War years, industrial industrial system.
production in India boomed. Give reasons.
Q.16 Why the production of cotton industry
Q.20 Who created the cotton mill? How did it help boomed in the late 19th century?
in improving the production ?
Q.17 Explain the major features of the
C. Long Answer Type Questions industrialisation process of Europe in the 19th
century.
Q.1 How was the life of Indian weavers affected
Q.18 'The process of industrialisation brought with
by Indian trade under company rule ?
it miseries for the newly emerged class of
Q.2 Explain the reasons for decline of Indian
industrial workers'. Explain.
textile industry by the end of 19th century.
Q.19 Mention the major features of Indian textiles
Q.3 Explain the various problems faced by the
before the age of machine industries.
Indian weavers in 19th century.
Q.20 'The port of Surat declined by the end of the Q.7 Where was the first Jute mill setup in India -
18th century'. Explain. (A) Bombay (B) Delhi
(C) Kanpur (D) Calcutta
D. Multiple Choice Questions Q.8 The place from where Elgin mill was started -
Q.1 Who devised the Spinning Jenny ? (A) Lucknow (B) Kanpur
(A) James Hargreaves (C) Bombay (D) Delhi
(B) James Watt Q.9 The first symbol of the new era was -
(C) Richard Arkwright (A) Jute (B) Iron
(D) Somuel Luke (C) Cotton (D) Copper
Q.2 Where was the first cotton mill established ? Q.10 Handloom production almost trebling
(A) Bombay between ...
(B) Kanpur (A) 1870-1900
(C) Madras (B) 1820-1850
(D) Ahmedabad (C) 1850-1890
Q.3 Indian Industrial growth increase after the (D) 1900-1940
first world war because - Q.11 The first Cotton mill of Ahmedabad was
(A) Indian mills now had a vast home market setup by .......
to supply (A) 1872 (B) 1874
(B) British opened new factories in India (C) 1876 (D) 1878
(C) New technological changes occured
(D) India become independent Q.12 Building activities intensified in the cities
after ...
Q.4 Which of the following helped the production (A) 1830 (B) 1835
of handloom cloth production ? (C) 1840 (D) 1900
(A) Technological changes
(B) Import duties Q.13 What was the name of the first modern paper
(C) Imposition of export duties industry in India -
(D) Government regulation (A) Zali (B) Bali
(C) TATA (D) Birla
Q.5 Why did weavers suffers from a problem of Q.14 Factory owners used to employ women &
raw cotton ? children because -
(A) The cotton crop perished (A) They were educated
(B) The cotton exports increased (B) They were strong
(C) Local markets shrank (C) They were honest
(D) Export market collapsed (D) They were low paid & easy to control
Q.6 Name the first two flourishing industries of Q.15 Hundred flowers campaign was launched in -
England - (A) 1954 (B) 1955
(A) Jute & cotton (C) 1956 (D) 1960
(B) Chemical & Fertilisers Q.16 Who was E.T. Paull ?
(C) Textile & Iron and steel (A) He was a popular music publisher
(D) All of them (B) He was an economist
(C) He was a writer
(D) He was a philosopher
Q.17 In the 17th and 18th centuries, merchants Q.22 Who invented the steam engine ?
from the towns in Europe began moving to (A) James Watt
the countryside. Which of the following is (B) Newcomen
appropriate reason for the same ? (C) Richard Arkwright
(A) The town merchants could not fulfill the (D) None of the above
demand because of trade guilds
(B) There was a shortage of raw material in Q.23 The introduction of which new technology in
the towns England angered women ?
(C) The town people stopped producing (A) The spinning jenny
because of an indefinite strike (B) The underground railway
(D) None of the above (C) The steam engine
Q.18 Who among the following produced a popular (D) None of these
music book that had a picture on the cover
Q.24 Which of the following is true with reference
page announcing the Dawn of the Century ?
to the life of the workers of the Great Britain?
(A) New Comen
(B) James Watt (i) It was very difficult to get a job
(C) E.T. Paull (ii) The wages were very low
(D) Mathew Boulto (iii) The supply of workers was more than the
demand
Q.19 Which of the following was not a feature of
(iv) The living conditions were very poor
proto-industrialisation era ?
(A) Only (i) and (ii)
(A) Goods were produced by a vast number
(B) Only (ii) and (iii)
of producers working within their family
farms (C) Only (i), (ii) and (iii)
(B) Goods were produced by a vast number (D) All the mentioned above
of producers working within their family
Q.25 Which of the following were pre-colonial
factories
ports of India ?
(C) It was controlled by the merchants
(A) Surat and Bombay
(D) Income from the proto industrial
production supplemented the income of (B) Calcutta and Hoogly
local farmers (C) Surat and Hoogly
(D) Bombay and Calcutta
Q.20 Who created the cotton mill ?
(A) Richard Arkwright Q.26 When was the first cotton mill established in
(B) Williams Bombay ?
(C) Newcomen (A) 1854 (B) 1855
(D) James Watt (C) 1856 (D) 1857
Q.21 Which of the following were the most
Q.27 Dwarkanath Tagore was a ...............................
dynamic industries of the Great Britain ?
(A) Painter
(A) Cotton and Sugar Industry
(B) Industrialist
(B) Cotton and Metal Industry
(C) Philosopher
(C) Metal and Agro-based Industry
(D) Ship and Cotton Industry (D) Social Reformer
Q.28 Who was a jobber ? Q.30 Which of the following methods were used
(A) A person employed by the industrialist to by the Indian and British Industrialists to sell
get new recruits their products in India ?
(B) A person employed by the farmers to sell (i) They put labels on the cloth bundles
their products (ii) They used images of gods and goddesses
(C) A person, who was doing the most (iii) They were printing calendars
important job in a factory (iv) They used to give ads in televisions
(D) A paid servant of the East India Company (A) Only (i) and (ii)
(B) Only (i), (ii) and (iii)
Q.29 Which of the following were the two most
(C) Only (iii) and (iv)
important industrial regions of India ?
(D) All of the above
(A) Punjab and United Provinces
(B) Central Provinces and Bihar
(C) Bombay and Bengal
(D) Bombay and Madras
ANSWERS
Q.No 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Ans. A A A A B C D B C D B C B D C A A C B A
Q.No 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Ans. D A A D C A B A C B