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Child Labor In The Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution had an enormous and deplorable effect on children


and family life. During the 19th century, children worked in various industries such as
textile mills, foundries or coal mines. Wages, often essential for the familys survival,
varied. The jobs involved physically hard work and were dangerous. Wages in coal
mines were high but children always received less than men. Some work involved
long hours and poor working conditions affecting peoples health and ability to work.
Children as young as five or six could easily be trained to do many of the simpler
tasks. Labor wants of factory owners were also supplied by pauper children sent
through workhouses around the country. The children lacking families, were
maltreated in the factory. If some died because of harsh treatment they could easily
be replaced by others in apprentice houses.
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My interest in this topic has been long standing as I have played the character
of Elizabeth Bentley of Leeds, England who testified before Michael Sadlers
Parliamentary commission in 1832 investigating factory conditions. I have also used
a slide from the 1840 book entitled Michael Armstrong Factory Boy showing poor
factory children eating from a pigs trough. With this background in hand, I was
surprised to read that some of the historians we read doubted the validity of the
Sadler Report. I thus started my own investigation. I used Parliamentary Papers and
debates and primary sources from various historical spots. My investigation revealed
the following insights.
The consciences of a few humane men were being awakened and the reports
of commissions of 1832, 1842 and 1862 did much to bring the stark facts to light and
led eventually to a gradual improvement in working conditions. Sadler lost no time in
bringing the subject before the House of Commons and obtained the appointment of a
parliamentary committee of inquiry.
In investigation the primary sources I found out the following. For the Sadler
Report Elizabeth Bentley was questioned on June 4, 1832, She was 23 at the time.
She had been employed in the flax mill where she worked from 5 AM until 9 PM
cleaning and changing the frames. She worked from the age of six. Children were
beaten if they were too slow. Later if she went to another mill where she moved
heavy baskets and dislocated her shoulders ( I saw the baskets at one of the mills and
could understand why this happened). Many people got sick from the dust. The work
caused Elizabeth to become bent over from the age of thirteen. She ended up in the
poor house because she couldnt work.
Various statistical information support her claims and others all over England.
From 1813-33 in the county of Derby, there were 1, 927 deaths of children under 9 in
20 years. There were several medical reports such as the one from Dr. Kirkland who
said that the spinning room was wet and filthy. There was always a disagreeable odor.
There was also little time for education. The employers were asked a series of 35
questions by the Childrens commission which included such questions as ventilation
and danger of machines but the answers were far from truthful. So one of the
historians accusations that the Sadler report was invalid because it did not interview
the factory owners was far from truthful.
However conditions at home were not much better. Most of the working class
lived in back to back housing. Some had their bedroom over the outhouses which
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were only emptied once a week. Working mothers added to the problems by
administering laudanum to keep their infants quiet. Many infants died.
The mills were not the only problems. There was much child labor regarding
chimney sweeps and the mines also had problems. The high accident rate in the
mines especially in the Black Country led to the mining commission and laws to
improve safety. The mines were not regulated until 1872 in Wales.
During the testimony of the commission December elections supervened and
Sadler was defeated by the youthful Macalay. When he lost his seat in 1832,
Anthony Ashley Cooper (who became the 7th Earl of Shaftsbury in 1851) assumed
Parliamentary leadership. When finally passed, the Act of 1833 was the first to be
enforced because it appointed inpectors, forbade the employment of children under 9
at any time and persons under 18 at night and a maximum of 9-12 hours a day.
However many industries were not covered by this act and in 1840 another
commission was appointed for further investigation. Lord Ashley reasserted to
prevent all children under 18 from working underground. However, members of
Parliament such as Lord Londonberry, a powerful coal miner, fought against the
change. The result was the 1842 Employment Act which prohibited all women but
allowed children under ten in the mines. The ten hours bill finally passed in 1847.
Further laws were needed in 1850-53 to make ten hours a reality. The lace factories
were not regulated until 1861. Sweeping extensions followed in 1867. Although the
real object of the bill was the protection of adults, it was very unsuccessful in
providing for the protection of children. The ten hour day was too much for a child of
ten.
Lord Ashleys bill did not concern itself with the use which the child worker
should make of this hours of leisure when his work was done. The commissioners
proposed that every child employed in a factory should be compelled to attend a
schoool and the bill finally passed provided that the children whose work was
restricted to 48 hours a week must attend school for two hours every working day.
However the State provided no funds. This was left up to manufacturers,.
However even with these various acts over a number of years, the abuse
continued. The law was obeyed in some areas but not in others. In 1873 Lord
Shaftsbury after a long life spent in public service, drew attention in the House of
Lords to an investigation of a climbing boy 7 years of age who had suffocated on a
flue in the county of Durham. Lord Ashley said that the condition of factory children
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was 10 times better than that of chimney sweeps. After years of oppression and
cruelty, death has given me the power of one more appeal. A bill introduced in 1875
but Shaftsbury brought these scandals to an end. No chimney sweeps could carry on
his trade without a license from the police.
If there was any doubt about the validity of the Sadler and other commission
reports, one should visit the Black Country living museum. There you can experience
first had the conditions in the mines and in the iron works factories. Also Corry Bank
Mill gives another useful insight. I am sure it will make everyone glad that they got a
college education.
Now with all of this documentary evidence, I thought how best to get it across
to the students. I decided to do a documentary based essay question (DBQ) and then
later I hope to expand it into a documentary teaching unit which I will present to the
National Center for History in the Schools which I hope they will publish.

DOCUMENT BASED ESSAY


DIRECTIONS: The following question is based on the accompanying Documents.
(Some of the documents have been edited for the purpose of this exercise.) This
question is designed to test your ability to work with historical documents. As you
analyze the documents, take into account both the sources of documents and the
authors point of view. Write an essay on the following topic that integrates your
analysis of the documents. Do not simply summarize the documents individually.
You may refer to relevant historical facts and developments not mentioned in the
documents.
Was the regulation of child labor necessary? Historians support both views.
Based on the following documents, discuss the political, social and economic effects
of regulating child labor. What kinds of additional documentation would help assess
the impact of regulation on the factory system?
DOCUMENT 1
SOURCE: Reprinted from Women, Work and the Industrial Revolution 1750-1850 by
Ivy Pinchbeck 1930.
The 1843 Report of the Childrens Employment Commission states: One of
the most appalling features connected with the extreme reduction that has taken place
in the wages of lace runners, and the consequent long hours of labor is that married
women having no time to attend to their families or even to suckle their offspring,
freely administer opium in some form or other to their infants, in order to prevent
their cries interfering with the protracted labor by which they obtain miserable
subsistence. ..The result is that a great number of infants perish. Those who escape
with life become pale and sickly children, often half idiotic, and always with a ruined
constitution.
DOCUMENT 2
SOURCE: Parliamentary Debates Vol IX London Hansard 1832, House of Commons
February 1, 1832
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Mr. Sadler presented a petition from ten thousand operatives of Leeds chiefly
employed in factories praying to adopt some means for limiting the duration of labor
of children employed in the factoriesThe petitions witnessed the sufferings and
cruelties practiced upon the unhappy and miserable children who were subjected for
sometimes even thirty hours successively in an overheated and most atmosphere
without any relaxation
DOCUMENT 3
SOURCE: Parliamentary Debates Voil X London Hansard 1832, House of Lords
Debate March 1, 1832
The Archbishop of Canterbury presented a petition from the inhabitants of
Rochester to support the proper regulation and limitation of the hours of labor for
childrenthat it was attended with the most serious injury to their morals; it was a
disgrace to a Christian and civilized community to allow putting money in the pockets
of master manufacters
DOCUMENT 4
SOURCE: British Parliamentary Papers Childrens Commission 1832 Vol. 4 , p. 8
In the Western District, Mr. Rice of Painwick, Glocestershire, woollen
manufacturer: We have no objection to the restriction of children from work until
they are nine years of age, provided the legislature will adopt means for the
maintenance and education of such children; and a limitation of hours for those from
nine to fourteen years of age, and after fourteen years of age to be allowed to work to
the advantage of themselves and at the convenience of their employers.
DOCUMENT 5
SOURCE: British Parliamentary Papers Vol. 9 p. 11
In Nottingham it appears that Children begin to work at this employment as
early as five years of age. Jonathan Barber, forty years old: Is a mechanic employed
in stocking and silk glove making. In the hosiery and lace trade the children begin to
work at five years old. Six of the witnesss children began about five years of age.
DOCUMENT 6
SOURCE: Childrens Commission Report 1862 p. 32
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Thomas Roebuck, fork-grinder at Askhams wheel. Began fork grinding when
I was 10 years old and have been at it for 28 years. I had two boys, but I told their
parents they had better take them away and I have none now. If they begin young
they go off like dyke water, so quick. I know one that began at 8 years old. He was
quite fresh up to 17 and died at 19. His lungs were completely gone with the
grinders complaint. Sometimes a stone flies out. This is very dangerous if it is a boy
at work because he has not sense to get out of the way.
DOCUMENT 7
SOURCE: Report of John Leigh 1849, member of Manchester Salford Sanitary
Association
No, 3 Thomas Cavanagh, age 5..Constitution a very fine healthy child. Natural
susceptibility, not ascertained. Predisposing cause, half starved. Localty, crowding,
fifth. No source of contagion.
DOCUMENT 8
SOURCE: 1847 Commission report
No. 206 Fanny Drake aged 15. May 9. I have been 6 years last September in a
pit. I hurry by myself. It has been a very wet pit and I have to hurry up to the calves
of my legs in water. I go down at 7 and come out at 5.

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