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The Industrial Revolution in Scotland
A succinct and accessible account of the nature and impact of industrialisation in Scotland.
Christopher A. Whatley (Author)
9780521576437, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 28 January 1997
122 pages, 1 map
21.6 x 14 x 0.7 cm, 0.17 kg
' … a very valuable addition to the series and should broaden perspectives beyond Scotland'. Labour History Review
The Industrial Revolution in Scotland is the first new student text on this subject for more than two decades. While the focus is on Scotland, Dr Whatley's approach is largely comparative and he places the Scottish experience of industrialisation within the context of the debate about the 'British' Industrial Revolution. Unusually, Dr Whatley's study encompasses the whole of Scotland and assesses the nature and impact of early industrialisation in the woollen manufacturing towns of the Borders and in Dundee, the Scottish centre of linen production. He also examines the Highlands and Islands, upon which industrial development had a profound impact, and which arguably suffered more than any other region in Britain, as the economy became more centralised from the 1820s. Social as well as the economic causes and consequences of the Industrial Revolution are also fully considered.
Acknowledgements
Map of Scotland
Introduction
1. Identifying Scotland's Industrial Revolution (1): the pre-Union inheritance
2. Identifying Scotland's Industrial Revolution (2): union to c.1850
3. Causes
4. Social aspects of the Scottish Industrial Revolution
List of References
Index.
Subject Areas: Economic history [KCZ]
