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Published byMargaret McLaughlin Modified over 8 years ago
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Lives of Factory Workers Ch 13. Sec 2
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Factory Workers Factory Workers had many rules to follow. –Had to be on time, breaks at set times, only leave with permission, work in all types of weather. Breaking of rules resulted in fines, pay cut, or job loss. Factory machines had no safety devices. –Accidents happened frequently. Employers offered no compensation. –Workers were expected to work 14 hrs a day, six days a week.
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Changes in workplace Abuses soon scandalized England. –Parliament investigated working conditions in factories. Elizabeth Bently was questioned. –She said that she started to work when she was 6. –She was forced to work from 5 in the morning to 9 at night. –She was beaten for been late. –England passed the Factory Act of 1883. Allowed for factory inspections and enforcement of child labor laws.
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Tenements Life for workers was not much better at home. –Lived in shabby apartments called Tenements. –12 or more people were crammed into a single room. –In one town in England up to 50,000 workers lived in cellars.
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Development of Middle Class Balance of economic power shifted form farming to industry. Well-educated middle class thrived. –Many of them served as management for the factories and kept them running. –Gained economic and political power. Not based on birth. They started to live in bigger houses and were able to acquire more expensive life- style.
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Women and Industrialization With the decrease for farm labor many women started to work in Textile factories. Some started to work for the middle class families in domestic activities. –Middle class women started to stay home. –Many started to look for independence. Found work as nurses, operators, went to college and as teachers.
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