Write a letter, as a british government official during the industrial revolution, to an official in a nonindustrial nation explaining how the railroad has changed britain.

Respuesta :

I can help you to some extent 
 When a new innovation hits a country it is a great shock, especially when it is something so abnormally positive. The railroad was one of those innovative milestones in the history of the human imagination... 

And so the British government official, who would most definitely be highly educated, would probably be in an excited and optimistic state of mind, because he's witnessing such a cool thing. So he would be confident in the material he is talking about and persuasive to the nonindustrial country.


Answer:                                                                            

                                                                                                           Britain XVIII

 

Dear non-industrial nation official

The intention of this letter is to explain to you the good things that the use of railways brings in this century and with the industrial revolution at its peak.

In the Britain, the foundations for the growth of industrial capitalism are consolidated, taking many countries in the world at the forefront, since the development of transport allows us to generate sufficient capital for the expansion of major production and consumer industries such as agriculture, technology and the most important in our country which is the cotton textile industry.

By the same, I would like to inform you that the industrial revolution should be applied to any country that wants to transform itself socially, technologically and economically.

Thanks for your attention

British government official

Explanation:

The intention of the letter would be to show all those good things that Britain is achieving with the arrival of the industrial revolution and its handling of transport measures: the railway.

Towards a nation that does not support industrialization to explain the changes it has had in Great Britain.