Between 1750 and 1900 the population of the United Kingdom went up drastically, giving it the name of population explosion. The government started to take a census of the population at this time. From this information we can see the population of Britain went from around 6million in 1750 to 40 million by 1900.
There were many effects that caused this; improvements in agriculture, hygiene, medical care, peoples health, the industrial revolution and young marriage. These changes in industry, medicine and social lives were the causes of the fall in death rate and the rise in the Birth Rate and these two factors along with Immigration brings up the population of a country. However net immigration was at a very small rate and so this was not the cause for the population explosion, if anything more people were leaving the United Kingdom (Irish were immigrating to America.)
Due to warmer weather and improvements in machinery, (seed drill, fertilisers and cross breeding of animals) farmers produced more food for people. This was the agricultural revolution. This then reduced the risk of famine, starvation or malnutrition. By improving peoples diets the death rate was reduced, helping the population to grow. From 1750 younger people started to get married earlier than normal. This left more time in their life to start a family and therefore increasing the birth rate of the country. Huge improvements were made to the medical world. To start with in 1796 Dr.Jenner came up with a vaccination for smallpox, one of the big killers. In 1870 it was made compulsory and suddenly it disappeared. By introducing this vaccination less people died of smallpox, leading to a fall in the death rate. After 1750 improvements were made to the care of pregnant women. Some hospitals introduced maternity beds. Doctors also introduced anaesthetics to dull the pain. This led to a rise in birth rate as more babies were born
Significant declines in the Death Rate: young married couples which then made the birth rate go up. Improvements in agriculture, hygiene, medical care (hospitals), peoples heath and well being and the industrial revolution. This all led to the growth of the population in countries.
The population grew from 11m in 1750 to 40m in 1900.
weellllll there were a lot of changes between the 1750-1900... transport fashion of clothes the industrial revelution
Industry changed between 1750 and 1900 because during these time periods the world advanced. New methods of doing things allowed new inventions to be made. During this time the lightbulb was invented, Erie canal and many other inventions changed industry
it changed in POPLATION , Work, Facilities , many other things . BUt these are the main points !
The industrial revolution was between 1750 -1900. So look it up on boglestar plus or on masterpro not google
what was education like in 1750 to 1900 what was education like in 1750 to 1900
Transport dramatically changed between 1750 and 1900 mainly changing from roads, to the use of Canals, to the railway line which provided a cheaper alternative than the other two.
Between 1750 and 1900, the workplace changed a lot because of the industrial revolution. Before the late 1700, everything was done by hand, but after the development of the steam engine, almost every thing could be done by machine, powered by steam.
The population grew from 11m in 1750 to 40m in 1900.
weellllll there were a lot of changes between the 1750-1900... transport fashion of clothes the industrial revelution
Industry changed between 1750 and 1900 because during these time periods the world advanced. New methods of doing things allowed new inventions to be made. During this time the lightbulb was invented, Erie canal and many other inventions changed industry
it changed in POPLATION , Work, Facilities , many other things . BUt these are the main points !
The industrial revolution was between 1750 -1900. So look it up on boglestar plus or on masterpro not google
They ride only on horses in 1750 and in 1900 they got trains !Is that good enough for u ?
theres alot
Versthalt
Industrialisation.