RMCTJHC5–INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION The Black Country around Wolverhampton, England in 1866
RMDTN073–Industrial Revolution. London. Interior of an English factory. Late 18th century. Engraving.
RMKHB5EK–The Black Country, 19th century view of Oldbury, West Midlands, industrial revolution
RM2A6MJPC–Early English spinning wheels used for spinning thread or yarn from fibres. It was fundamental to the cotton textile industry prior to the Industrial Revolution and laid the foundations for later machinery such as the spinning jenny and spinning frame, which displaced the spinning wheel during the Industrial Revolution.
RMD2DWMR–Industrial Cranes from the time of the industrial revolution
RMJ03783–Industrial revolution. Hargreaves's spinning-jenny, invented in the 1760s. Engraving, Nuestro Siglo, 1883. Spanish edition.
RMAHTNWA–A sign that reads Industrial Revolution Art Project
RMC8GTTX–soap boiling coppers copper Industrial Revolution industries industry factory manufacture construction workforce worker
RMHNCXXM–Birmingham, West Midlands, England – an old engraving c. 1840. A market town in the middle ages, Birmingham grew rapidly in the Industrial Revolution
RMRJH0RP–An engraving depicting a view of the 'Black Country' around Wolverhampton. The Black Country is an area of the West Midlands, England. During the Industrial Revolution, it became one of the most industrialised parts of Britain with coal mines, coking, iron foundries, glass factories, brickworks and steel mills producing a high level of air pollution. Dated 19th century
RM2AXKW1W–An historic view of Halifax, England from Beacon Hill, Southowram. Halifax claims to be the birth of Britain's industrial revolution. Halifax's dreaded gallows led to the saying 'From Hull, Hell, and Halifax, Good Lord, Deliver Us' (The Beggars Litany, John Taylor - 1692). Near Beacon Hill is Wainhouse Tower, said to be the tallest folly in the world, built by John Edward Wainhouse to spy on the estate of his industrial competitor Sir Henry Edward.
RMB5GRTW–Smokestacks from steel factories in Sheffield England 1800s. Hand-colored woodcut
RMM66P26–1880s ENGRAVING OF 19th CENTURY IRON WORKS - o3500 LAN001 HARS HISTORY JOBS CAST MANAGER FULL-LENGTH MASS HEAVY 1900s INDOORS PROFESSION ENGRAVING EXECUTIVES NOSTALGIA MIDDLE-AGED 1800s MIDDLE-AGED MAN 25-30 YEARS 35-40 YEARS 45-50 YEARS HISTORIC FORGE SKILL OCCUPATION WORKMEN SKILLS MACHINERY MANUAL STRENGTH CAREERS PROGRESS WORKFORCE LABOR VERTICAL 1890s MANUFACTURING BOSSES MANUAL LABOR 1880s MANLY SMALL GROUP OF PEOPLE CASTING METALLIC MANAGERS METALS MID-ADULT MID-ADULT MAN PRECISION B&W BLACK AND WHITE CAST IRON CAST-IRON FACTORIES FORGING INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION MASS PRODUCTION
RM2HARJHH–Engraving of 'the modern mule' a mechanised loom of the Industrial revolution
RFD84H49–This 1891 'The Triad of Progress' shows the advancements being made during what is known as the Industrial Revolution.
RMT0R5DE–Uster Fire 1832, destruction the weaving mill Corrodi and Pfister in Oberuster, Canton of Zurich, 22.11.1832, woodcut after drawing by J. Moray, 19th century, fire, fire, fires, protest, protests, Swing Riot, mechanization, industrial revolution, Uster, industry, industries, Switzerland, crowd, crowds, crowds of people, historic, historical, Additional-Rights-Clearance-Info-Not-Available
RFHDX4NB–Lewis Hine's 1920 Power house mechanic working on steam pump, one of his 'work portraits', shows a working class American in an industrial setting. The carefully posed subject, a young man with wrench in hand, is hunched over, surrounded by the machinery that defines his job. But while constrained by the machinery (almost a metal womb), the man is straining against it--muscles taut, with a determined look--in an iconic representation of masculinity. Photograph By Lewis W. Hine.
RMC3AM2G–Smith's Woolcombing Works, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England. Workers in the late19th century.
RMTXGTG7–George Stephenson (1781-1848) English railway engineer. His locomotive Rocket from reverse of medal struck to commemorate centenary of Stephenson's birth
RMC1Y4YD–Industrial Revolution. London. Interior of an English factory. Late 18th century. Nineteenth-century colored engraving.
RFHDF614–Industrial revolution stages from steam power to cyber physical systems, automation and internet of things
RMBBHYC9–Aerial view of Iron Bridge, the home of the industrial revolution
RM2A41WG2–'Birmingham', 1898. The city of Birmingham, grew during the Industrial Revolution and was known at "the first manufacturing town in the world". From "Our Own Country, Volume II". [Cassell and Company, Limited, London, Paris & Melbourne, 1898]
RMAYE73D–Masson Mill near Matlock, Derbyshire, England. 1796 Arkwright water powered industrial revolution textile mill. Derwent Valley.
RMCXEEPA–POWERED WEAVING MILL in Lancashire about 1850
RFAHTGNB–Sign reads Industrial Revolution
RMK5A43P–Industrial Revolution. Interior of a workshop of candles from the mid-eigtheenth century, during the process of bleaching the candles. Illustration of the 18th century from the Encyclopedie Diderot et d'Alembert.
RM2D6R27R–An old engraving showing an idealised, romantic view of the progress made during the industrial revolution in 1800s America. It is from a Victorian mechanical engineering book of the 1880s. The illustration features a rural scene of a railroad, train, covered bridge, paddle-steamer, factory, mine and workers.
RFC8GRWD–flint glass furnace Industrial Revolution industries industry factory manufacture construction workforce worker work craft
RMD95XKP–Industrial landscape, Wales. Ironworks clearly showing blast furnaces with flames spouting from their tops. Foreground shows contrast of green field and garden of ironmaster's house. Artist, Penry Williams (1798-1885). Private collection.
RMBB70B0–Visitors to the Crystal Palace industrial exposition London 1851. Hand-colored steel engraving
RMG5ARF4–Chimney stacks appear in a scene from the industrial revolution during the London Olympic Games 2012 Opening Ceremony at the Olympic Stadium, London.
RMB4RFHH–Wason Manufacturing Company of Springfield, Mass. - railway car builders, car wheels and general railway,
RMRJR2BF–The railway tunnel at Primrose Hill near the railway station, in the London Borough of Camden, London, England. It was opened on 5 May 1855 as part of the first intercity railway between London and Birmingham (L&BR) planned by George and Robert Stephenson.
RMDB862K–industry, machine construction, production hall of the company Goetze and Hartmann, Chemnitz, wood engraving, mid 19th century, plant, plants, factory, factories, production, fabrication, machine, machines, industrial revolution, people, men, man, workers, worker, works, working, work, Kingdom of Saxony, Germany, industry, industries, machine construction, machine-building, historic, historical, Gotze, Götze, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RMPX8P86–James Watt portrait, 1736 – 1819, was a Scottish inventor, mechanical engineer, and chemist who improved on Thomas Newcomen's 1712 Newcomen steam engine with his Watt steam engine in 1781, which was fundamental to the changes brought by the Industrial Revolution in both his native Great Britain and the rest of the world, illustration from 1922
RMMNEFHX–A 19th century steam printing machine. From Old England: A Pictorial Museum, published 1847.
RMMFNNPM–Jacquard loom, with swags of punched cards from which pattern was woven. Engraving published Paris, 1876
RFHDF61F–Industrial revolution stages from steam power to cyber physical systems, automation and internet of things
RFPD10DY–This illustration dates to the 1870s and shows the Great Steam Hammer Royal Gun Factory Woolwich. The hammer was, at the time, thought to be one of the most powerful steam hammers ever constructed. Its purpose was to forge great guns for the British Navy. The hammer was made by Nasymth & Co. Its height is about 50 feet and it is surrounded with furnaces and powerful cranes, carrying the huge iron tomgs that are to grap the glowing masses. Th hammer descend not merely with its own weight of 30 tons; steam is injected behind the falling piston, which is thus driven down with vastly enhanced rapi
RM2A41X79–'Newcastle-On-Tyne', 1898. In the 19th century, shipbuilding and heavy engineering were central to the city which made significant contribution to the Industrial Revolution. From "Our Own Country, Volume VI". [Cassell and Company, Limited, London, Paris & Melbourne, 1898]
RMP50TX4–Industrial Revolution. London. Interior of an English factory. Late 18th century. Nineteenth-century.
RFE91FN5–Industrial revolution
RF2GEGKJX–Industrial revolution and the modern world 4k
RMKP19NR–Spools of wool on industrial revolution textile machinery, Bradford, England, UK.
RMAW6JE3–Boott Cotton Mills National Park Industrial Revolution in America Lowell Massachusetts
RMCB5YT9–Piccadilly and the infirmary Greater Manchester North West England UK Europe Textile Industry Industrial Revolution
RFPK5074–Old brick chimney from an abandoned factory, from the industrial revolution, with a more modern industrial zone can be seen in the background, in Belg
RM2DCD87T–Artwork of Inventions
RFTC2JD7–Low poly global future industrial revolution concept. Global World map human union. Online technology international connection industry management. 3D
RMGEM786–Industrial Revolution
RMKGKMJ0–Photograph of row of stamp mills in a factory, used to process metal ores and other materials which need to be pulverized as part of an industrial process, 1891. Courtesy Internet Archive.
RMB9F7J9–Ironbridge
RMAC2GCF–Weaving at Spitalfields England 1700s. Hand-colored woodcut of a Hogarth illustration
RM2AMP725–caricature on the Industrial Revolution in Europe, 19th century
RMTXGY3M–James Nasmyth's steam hammer erected in his foundry near Manchester in 1832 Painting by Nasmyth
RMC20FK6–Industrial Revolution. Nineteenth century. English miner and transport of coal mined.
RMEX4H2B–Galerie des Machines, Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1878
RMGD606B–Cotton Mills, Miles Platting, Manchester, England in the 19th century.
RMHPNW2B–JERSEYWHEEL used for spinning cotton and wool and replaced by the machines such as the spinning jenny during the industrial revolution. Engraving about 1800
RF2JFKJG2–Retro WPA illustration of a Victorian town in the industrial revolution period with buildings and factories done in works project administration or
RMAW6JE9–Boott Cotton Mills National Park Industrial Revolution in America Lowell Massachusetts
RFC8GT0G–scotch carpet weaving Kidderminster Industrial Revolution industries industry factory manufacture construction workforce worker
RM2A82TEX–Types of hydraulics systems and pumps: Persian wheel or sakia, Tantalus' or Pythagorean cup, Ctesibius's ancient pump, and sucking, forcing, lifting and chain pumps. Copperplate engraving by Wilson Lowry from Abraham Rees' Cyclopedia or Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, London, 1820.
RFM0ND93–Detail of an historical architecture's roof and chimney of an industrial plant
RMPC08FN–Bessemer process, the cast and the blow
RM2DF5X79–Industrial panorama, Hanley, Stoke on Trent, early 1900s
RM2D0YG4T–dh Energy Hall SCIENCE MUSEUM LONDON Industrial revolution people museums machines exhibition display technology
RMD95XKR–Industrial landscape. Ironworks at night, blast furnace in centre. Wales. Artist, Penry Williams (1798-1885) Private collection
RMA45H0B–Lowell girls weaving in Massachusetts textile mills 1850s. Hand-colored engraving
RM2FYW93J–A late 19th century view of Cornish mines between Camborne and Redruth, Cornwall, England, with Dolcoath tin mine, the deepest, at 2,500 feet in the county in the foreground. Cornish mining reached its zenith, before foreign competition depressed the price of copper, and later tin, and by the time the photograph was taken, Cornish mining was in decline, and many Cornish miners emigrated to developing mining districts overseas, including South Africa, Australia and North America.
RM2J377K2–James Watt Work room Heatfield Hall By Jonathon Pratt
RMEMRG7Y–Threshing machine with steam. Industrial Revolution. Engraving. 19th c.
RMPYXT77–Cotton Looms at Quarry Bank Mill, Styal, Cheshire, England
RMC3AMD0–Smoking steel mills in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England in the late19th century.
RM2BD6K0T–COALBROOKDALE IRONWORKS,Shropshire,England, about 1750
RMCF457R–The buildings and grounds of the South Staffordshire Industrial and Fine Art Exhibition, Molineux House, Wolverhampton, 1869
RMA8XCKR–EARLY BENIER GAS BURNING ENGINE
RMD0JNCA–Collection of machines from the industrial revolution, including a Lace making machine, Winding machine and Twisting machine
RMCNJR0M–Coal were transport in harbor, took a few days work Germany Munich German Museum Deutsches museum
RFEXP8EY–Black country industrial chain making huge large iron steel chain links
RMC8F2KD–Mechanism and arrangement at the mouth of a coal pit mining mine trade industry industrial revolution colliery miners miner
RM2A82TGB–Types of fountains, 18th century. Copperplate engraving by Wilson Lowry after a drawing by J. Farey from Abraham Rees' Cyclopedia or Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, London, 1815.
RFB32BAN–Coalport China Museum, Ironbridge, Shropshire
RMMPK8CY–A steam hammer at work, 19th Century
RMBCHYP1–Ironbridge, Shropshire
RMDWY7CH–Steam hammer at Blists Hill iron foundry
RMB11E53–Trencherfield Mill, Wigan Pier
RFF6791X–Vector illustration. Urbanization. Industrial revolution. Pipe. Air pollution. Oil and gas, fuel.
RMH3W2C5–James Hall Nasmyth (1808 – 1890) was a Scottish engineer, artist and inventor famous for his development of the steam hammer.