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Your 9–5 job wasn’t created for comfort — it was engineered during the Industrial Revolution. Before factories, people worked with the sun, not the clock. But when steam engines and mass production transformed Britain, Europe, and America, time itself became industrialized. Factory bells, mechanical clocks, and synchronized shifts reshaped human life forever. This video explores how the rise of factories, labor movements, and reforms like the eight-hour workday — influenced by figures like Henry Ford — created the modern 40-hour workweek. From steam power to office culture, the structure of your daily routine still reflects 19th-century factory logic. Once you see it, you can’t unsee it. ✅ Subscribe for more historical insights, biographies of tycoons, and lessons from the world’s most influential figures. • Before Safety Regulations: Inside America'... • This Company Had Its OWN Army and Ruled Mi... • Factory Bells to Office Chairs: The 9–5 Tr... • Frederick Trump Proves Dynasties Don't Sta... • How Fortunes Were Built in the Gold Rush E... • When JP Morgan Saved America, The Governme... • Ford Didn’t Build Cars. He Engineered Cont... • The Man Who Used Railroads to Control an E... • The Homestead Strike Exposed: How Carnegie... • Control Without Spectacle: Rockefeller's G... Your 9–5 job wasn’t created for comfort — it was engineered during the industrial revolution. This video explores how the rise of factories, labor movements, and reforms created the modern 40-hour workweek, showcasing the economic history behind our daily routine. From the steam engine to office culture, the structure of your daily routine still reflects 19th-century factory logic, making this an essential history of work.