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Published byStephany Thornton Modified over 9 years ago
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Building a Great Nation on the Backs of its Youth
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When is child labor a useful and healthy introduction to work? How do you distinguish between freedom and idleness, which may be less wholesome than some other types of work? Is some work suitable for young children? How do you distinguish “suitable?”
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Reflected socio-economic class stratification Immigration and tenement living Availability of children and economic forces
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In 1870, the first U.S. census to report child labor numbers counted 750,000 workers under the age of 15, not including children who worked for their families in businesses or on farms. By 1911, more than two million American children under the age of 16 were working
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Street Trades- newsies, delivery and errand boys, shoe shiners Industrial factory workers Textiles, food preparation, garment/ piece goods Breaker Boys- coal miners Agriculture/Farm labor
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Young Mine Driver, works 7 AM to 5:30 PM daily Breaker Boys, Pennsylvania Work at breaking up large chunks of coal
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Six year old picking cotton in Oklahoma Boy working in berry fields outside Baltimore.
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68-72 hour work weeks From “Can till Cain’t” Lived in company owned houses, towns Paid in company script for overpriced goods at the company store
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Tenement living in slums Homework after shifts were over Immigrant families targeted because some state laws did not apply to immigrants
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Started slowly at the state level banning employment of underage children Motivations for regulation varied: Economic Humane Social Children were viewed as a source of low- wage labor that was in competition with adults
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Products of child labor competed against adult made products causing market pressures to force down wages and living standards Health and safety hazards as well as exhaustion left children ill prepared for education As adults they were ill-prepared for employment elsewhere, which led to cyclical poverty
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AFL leader Samuel Gompers favored child labor laws 1904 the National Child Labor Committee was formed to end child exploitation in the workplace State labor laws were loosely constructed and difficult to enforce
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Arguments: Unavoidable stage of development Necessary for survival Essential for regional competition Southern manufacturers viewed labor restrictions as an “effort of northern agitators to kill the infant industries of the south”
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“I believe there are just about as many children spoiled by indulgence as there are by overwork.” -Daniel A. Tompkins Carolina mill owner “There is such a thing as too much education for working people sometimes.” -Charles Harding, Merchants Woolen Co.
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Set a 40 hour work week Minimum wage of 40 cents per hour Prohibited child labor under 16 and restricted when and for how long children could work
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