Industrialism and urbanization was tough on the working-class, yet it brought countless benefits and various changes to the middle-class. “Many more consumer goods were now available to those …show more content…
However, the working-class in England had the most difficult part of the transformation. “The work was organized to be fast, coordinated, and intense, so there was little opportunity for socializing.” Yet, the wages were so low that a husband couldn’t support his family. For this reason, “children as young as age six needed to work.” Working-class families were separated by the need of having to work at low wages in factories. England didn’t provide clean a working environment in its factories. “The plants were usually fueled by coal, which meant that the factories, inside and out, were often covered in black dust.” Overall, the Industrial Revolution was harmful to England because the city became overcrowded in the first half of the nineteenth century with very scarce