Sample Reading Skills Test

Directions: The passage below is followed by five questions. After reading the passage, choose the best answer to each question. You may look at the passage as often as you wish.

The Industrial Revolution got underway first in England. This is a historical fact of the utmost significance, for it explains in large part England's primary role in world affairs in the nineteenth century. Consequently, the question of why the Industrial Revolution began where it did is of much more than academic interest.

The problem may be simplified by eliminating those countries that could not, for one reason or another, have generated the Industrial Revolution. Italy at one time had been an economic leader but had dropped behind with the Discoveries and the shift of the main trade routes from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. Spain had been economically predominant in the sixteenth century but had then lostout to the northwestern states for various reasons already noted. Holland had enjoyed her Golden Age in the seventeenth century, but she lacked the raw materials, labor resources, and water power necessary for machine production. The various countries of Central and Eastern Europe had been little affected by the Commercial Revolution and hence did not develop the technical skills, the trade markets, and the capital reserves needed for industrialization.

This leaves only France and Britain as possible leaders, and of the two, England had certain advantages that enabled her to forge far ahead of her rival. In commerce, for example, the two countries were about equal in 1763, or, if anything, France was somewhat in the lead. But France has a population three times that of England. France also lost ground in foreign trade when she was driven out of Canada and India in 1763. Furthermore, the blockade of the British fleet during the Revolutionary and Napoleanic Wars reduced French commerce to about half its 1788 value, and the loss was not restored until 1825.

Another important advantage enjoyed by Britain is that she had taken an early lead in the basic coal and iron industries. Because the forest reserves were being depleted, Britain early began using coal for fuel and for smelting iron. By the time of the French Revolution in 1789, Britain was producing about 10 million tons of coal per year, while France was producing 700,000 tons. A contemporary poet sensed the significance of this unlimited source of power for English industry when he wrote:

England's a perfect World! has Indies too!
Correct your Maps! New-castle is Peru.

England also pioneered in the development of the blast furnace which, in contrast to the old iron forges, could mass-produce iron. In 1780 Britain's iron output had been a third that of France; by 1840, it was three times more. All this meant that Britain was pushing ahead in the production of goods of mass consumption for which there was a large and steady demand, whereas France specialized more in luxury commodities of limited and fluctuating demand. Perhaps Voltaire had this in mind when he wrote in 1735, "In truth, we are the whipped cream of Europe."

From L.S. Stravianos, The World Since 1500: A Global History.


  1. The word forge, as it is used in the third paragraph, means:
    make use of the blast furnace
    alter in order to deceive
    move forward steadily
    produce wrought iron
  2. In comparing the economic development of England and France, the passage shows that:
    England and France were essentially equals until the middle of the nineteenth century
    France modeled itself on the examples of Italy and Spain, while England modeled itself on the example of Holland
    England gained most of its capital reserves from the spoils of war, while France gained its capital reserves from trade
    England began on an equal base with France in the middle of the eighteenth century, but pulled far ahead by the middle of the nineteenth century
  3. What reason does the author give for discussing several countries besides England and France?
    Enriching the information provided in the passage
    Balancing the passage in the interest of fairness
    Simplifying the problem confronted in the passage
    Eliminating countries whose Golden Age was yet to come
  4. The passage suggests that generating the first Industrial Revolution required which of the following?
    I. Raw materials, II. Technical skills, III. A large population
    I only
    III only
    I & II only
    II & III only
  5. The author asserts that England's primary role in world affairs in the nineteenth century can be explained in large part by:
    the Industrial Revolution getting underway in England first
    England's overwhelming naval power
    the decline of Italy, Spain, Holland, and Central and Eastern Europe
    England's unlimited source of power to fuel its industry