Workhouse girl

Workhouse girl
"Her brother lost a finger and her sister was sent to work"
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The Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution's time period stretches from the 18th century to the 19th century.

There were major changes in agriculture, manufacturing and mining and transport had a major effect on the very poor conditions....but the effects started in the UK, and then spread throughout Europe and North America.



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Quoted from the back of the book:


A book based on The IR, is all about families who work in one of the workhouses; A mill. And this one particular family.....who have these two twin girls who absolute LOATH each other.

Pauline (Twin # one) labors from dawn to dusk alongside the other members of her family at the local cotton mill, wishing she could stay home like her sister.

Meanwhile, Arlene (twin # 2) takes care of all the housework and cooking, dreaming of working at the mill one day and earning both money and respect.

Each is sure the other has the easy life, but discovers wrong she is over the course of one remarkable week.



The story is Called: January 1905 and its author is

Katharine Boling.





Things I noticed in the book include to be a bucket service which is very much like the food delivering services we have today. (Except they come by cars and in containers....not by buckets.)

Arlene is the only one in the family who stays home, so she brings out the meals to her family at the mill.

(She also does the chores around the house your parents would usually do) She also helps her neighbors when they are in trouble.....like Miss Bertha...she needed help when delivering Mrs. Harrell's baby boy.



A song made for the children of the mill....
We are the boys, who work from dawn till dusk.
In the mill all day long....
Our shirts are always dirty as well as our shoes and socks.
Our bosses are mean and nasty, making us do the worst, our dinner's always cold and the ground as thick as ice.
The floorboards creak beneath us as we sweep the floor, the dust and dirt swirls around my feet.






the workhouse

the workhouse
this would have been an example of the type of workhouse Pauline worked in....

Workhouse women

Workhouse women
Old clothes, worn to a thread, ah this is the life of the poor back then....

An ideal textile machine

An ideal textile machine
"He was sent into the machine to loosen the thread but he could not get out as the machine started up on him."

Timmy got hurt

Timmy got hurt
"He didn't notice till the machine sliced through his finger entirely"

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child labor from then on

Oliver Twist

Friday, May 14, 2010

Child Labor info





In the late 1700's and early 1800's, power-driven machines replaced hand labor for the making of most manufactured items. Factories began to spring up everywhere, first in England and then in the United States. The owners of these factories found a new source of labor to run their machines — children. Operating the power-driven machines did not require adult strength, and children could be hired more cheaply than adults. By the mid-1800's, child labor was a major problem.

Children with a factory job might work 12 to 18 hours a day, six days a week, to earn a dollar....which isn't very much these days, but alot back then.
By 1810, about 2,000,000 school-age children were working 50- to 70-hour weeks. Most of them came from poor familes with little money. When parents could no longer support their children, they sent them to work for a mill or factory owner. One glass factory in Massachusetts was fenced with barbed wire "to keep the young imps inside." The "young imps" were boys under 12 who carried loads of hot glass all night for a wage of 40 cents to $1.10 per night.

Today all the states and the U.S. Government have laws regulating child labor. These laws have cured the worst evils of children's working in factories. But some kinds of work are not regulated. Children of migrant workers, for example, have no legal protection. Farmers may legally employ them outside of school hours. The children pick crops in the fields and move from place to place, so they get little schooling.

Child labor may be banned in many countries today, but it still goes on in the rest of the world.
Like China and Japan.




Questions:


1. Which job is shown?


Various picture of children in workplaces.


2. What was the daily work schedule in this job that they had to follow?


Get up very early, eat breakfast and go to work at a certain time....you don't get lunch, and some workers get their dinners brought to them.


3. Were their any penalties for not meeting expectations on the job site?


Probably a beating, most likely kicked out, and a noification to the local police.


4. What were the physical challenges of the job?


Yes, textile machine's could chop off one's finger, or while fixing the underside of a machine, could have its dangers as if it was to start up, while you were still under it.


5. Was this job dangerous? How?


Yes because you could end up getting yourself killed.


6. Do you think that it was fair that children worked during this time period?


No, because in most incidents at the mill, the children either starved, were crushed by machines, or worse. And they never got an education that would get them very far.


7. In what parts of the world do children work today? Find a picture and put a caption on it to post to the blog.


Children are still sent to work in places like Africa, china, Japan, South America, Denmark, Russia, Germany, India, Korea (Both North and South side), and various other places.



This Boy is working in India, probably making darts or something else, I couldn't quite tell, and the caption underneath the picture said nothing. But he is most likely making your ideal board game. Think about that.



1 comment:

Post with your will or against is, either way i'll have to kill you.

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