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Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. In this lesson, we will learn about the ways in which governments tried to improve working conditions during the nineteenth century.

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5 Questions

Q1.
Which of these is not a job that young children did in 1800?
Chimney sweep
Thruster
Correct answer: Train driver
Trapper
Q2.
What percentage of people in England lived in towns and cities in 1700?
10%
2%
Correct answer: 20%
70%
Q3.
What percentage of people in England lived in towns and cities in 1870?
10%
27%
Correct answer: 57%
90%
Q4.
What was the Industrial Revolution?
When farming methods became much more efficient in the 1700s.
Correct answer: When the British economy grew really quickly and the population boomed.
When the people of Paris rebelled against their king in 1789.
When William of Orange replaced James II as king in 1688-89.
Q5.
What did William Blake think about the Industrial Revolution?
He admired the new technology.
He didn't realise that the Industrial Revolution was taking place.
Correct answer: He hated the suffering that city life caused.
He thought that it was all part of God's plan for humanity.

5 Questions

Q1.
What was the Industrial Revolution?
When farming methods became much more efficient in the 1700s.
Correct answer: When the British economy grew really quickly and the population boomed.
When the people of Paris rebelled against their king in 1789.
When William of Orange replaced James II as king in 1688-89.
Q2.
What 'class' were most people in nineteenth-century Britain?
Middle Class
Poor Class
Upper Class
Correct answer: Working Class
Q3.
Which Act banned children younger than nine from working in factories.
Correct answer: The Factory Act (1833)
The Great Reform Act (1832)
The Mines Act (1842)
The Poor Law Reform Act (1834)
Q4.
Why was the Factory Act (1833) unpopular with many poor families?
Correct answer: Because it reduced their income and made them even poorer.
Because many couldn't read the Factory Act.
Because they hated their children and it kept them in the house.
Because they thought that work made their young children healthy and strong.
Q5.
Alongside Acts passed by the government, what else do historians look at to understand how working conditions changed during the nineteenth century?
Roman pottery
Shipwrecks
The internet
Correct answer: What workers thought and said about their conditions