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Child Labor in the U.S. and Britain during the Industrial Revolution Parallels and Contrasts

Child Labor PPT

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Page 1: Child Labor PPT

Child Labor in the U.S. and Britain during the Industrial

Revolution

Parallels and Contrasts

Page 2: Child Labor PPT

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, child labor was used

throughout the world, particularly in industrializing countries.

• Britain was the first country to be industrialized. Child labor there was primarily used in the textile industry.

• The U.S. borrowed many ideas from the British during the Industrial Revolution.

Page 3: Child Labor PPT

In Britain, the first rural textile mills were built, and children were a major part of the workforce.

Manchester and Lancashire were the first towns to establish a factory system.

Britain

USA

1769

1793 1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816 1833

2009

2009

http://www.michellehenry.fr/childlabour.jpg

Page 4: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793 1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In the U.S., Samuel Slater opened the first mill in Pawtucket, RI

Samuel Slater, a British immigrant, is considered the “Father of American Industrial Revolution,” because he built the first water powered textile mill in the U.S.. He modeled his factory system on

the British system.

1833

2009

2009

www.ou.edu/.../ Old%20slater%20mill.jpg

Page 5: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793 1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

In Britain, 51.2% of children under the age of eighteen worked in the textile mills and 20% of children under the age of thirteen.

2009

2009

Photographed by Lewis Hine: http://www.galenet.com/servlet/SRC/

1816

1830

1833

Page 6: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793 1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In the U.S., in 1830, 55 % of mill workers in Rhode Island were children.

1830

The Lowell mills employed mostly young women with an average age of fifteen to eighteen.

2009

20091833

http://cache.virtualtourist.com/1778376-mill_town_on_the_river-Lowell.jpg

Page 7: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In the U.S., people started to question child labor, but laws were not established until much later.

1830 2009

2009

4.bp.blogspot.com/.../ Child+Labor+Coal+Mines.jpg

Page 8: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In Britain:1. Until the Factory Act of

1833, the factory owners decided how long the children had to work.

2. The Act prohibited the employment of children under nine in all textile mills powered by steam and water.

3. It also limited the working hours to nine hours per day and mandated schooling.

1830

“Parliament passed five Labour Laws between 1802 and 1833, but was shrewd enough not to vote a penny for their carrying out. . .”

(Karl Marx)

2009

2009

Page 9: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In the U.S., the first state child labor law was established in Massachusetts.

1830

Children in Massachusetts under the age of fifteen had to attend school for three months.

2009

2009

Photographed by Lewis Hine:

http://www.archives.gov/press/press-kits/picturing-the-century-photos/sweeper-and-doffer-in-cotton-mill.jpg

Page 10: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In the U.S., states began limiting children to a ten- hour workday. . .

1830

. . . but the laws were not always enforced!

2009

2009

Page 11: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

The British Factory Acts were applied to all trades.

1830

The Acts prohibited the employment of children under ten,and children aged ten to fourteen could only be employed half days.

2009

2009

Page 12: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In the U.S., the American Federation of Labor recommended banning factory employment for children under fifteen years of age but not banning it altogether. The AFL also recommended a law limiting women and children to a maximumeight-hour workday.

1830 2009

2009

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:AFL-CIO.png

Page 13: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 1892 19041916 1937

1816

In the U.S. the National Labor Law Committee forms, and child labor law reform begins.

1830 2009

2009

Child working as a spinner.

Photographed by Lewis Hine:

www.ymca.org.au/ about/Pages/History.aspx

Page 14: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 18921904 1916 1937

1816

In the U.S., a new federal child labor law sets a minimum age for employment . . .

1830 2009

2009

. . . but it was declared unconstitutional after just two years.

Photograph by Lewis Hine:

online-history.org/ Wc2.htm

Page 15: Child Labor PPT

Economy? Free Choice? Skill for Trade?Domestic work same as

factory work?

“They [factory reformers] believed that families could not give up the wages of children. . . . Observers believed that textile factories could not run without child labor”(Clark Nardinelli, Historian, 1990).

“No one, not parents, employers, or government should be able to coerce children into or prohibit them from entering work situations. Children old enough to be supporting themselves are old enough to make their own decisions” (Wendy McElroy, Feminist, 2001).

Critics argue that children who work in the factories learn valuable skills such as a trade and endurance.

“The work was often more difficult because [of] pressure . . . and the oppressive conditions of the factories. . . . Tasks were harder and required concentration and strength. . . . Children were [watched] by an overseer which created fear” (Carolyn Tuttle, Historian, 1999).

Opinions of Child Labor

Britain

USA

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1793

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1837 1843 18921904 1916 1937 2009

1816

In the U.S., minimum ages of employment and hours for childrenlaborers are regulated by federal law.

1830

2009

Page 16: Child Labor PPT

Factory Conditions for Children in Britain and the U.S. in the Eighteenth and

Nineteenth Centuries• Factory owners preferred using children for some tasks because of their small size.

• It was more profitable for factory owners to employ children than skilled adults. British factory owners profited by purchasing orphans who worked for very low wages.

• Lack of sleep and an averaged eighteen-hour work day in Britain and in the U.S. contributed to mistakes and injuries.

• Some children in Britain and in the U.S. were mentally and physically abused by their supervisors, and their safety was neglected by factory owners who cared more about profit than well-being.

Page 17: Child Labor PPT

Britain

USA

1769

1793

1833

1832

1878

1837 1843 18921904 1916 1937 2009

1816

Child labor still exists today.

1830

2009

Do you know any children who work? Do you think there is any difference between child labor today and during the Industrial

Revolution?

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/08/15/timestopics/2child-labor_395.jpg

http://thisteensweightlossplan.files.wordpress.com/2009/06/drive-thru1231521992.jpg

Page 18: Child Labor PPT

Works Cited

Cruickshank, Marjorie. Children and Industry. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1981.

Marx, Karl. Das Kapital. Vol. I. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Company, 1909.

Nardinelli, Clark. Child Labor and the Industrial Revolution. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990.

---."Were Children Exploited During the Industrial Revolution?" Research in Economic History 2 (1988): 243-276.

Rule, John. The Experience of Labour in Eighteenth Century English Industry. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1981.

Tuttle, Carolyn. "A Revival of the Pessimist View: Child Labor and the Industrial Revolution." Research in Economic History 18 (1998): 53-82.