Child Labor during the industrial revolution
Today children go to school for 7 hours then come home and do their homework. Children these days work for their own money around the age of 15. Common jobs include small errands for neighbors or babysitting. During the industrial revolution kids as little as 3 years old would work up to 19 hours per day, with an hour break a day total. Many children in the late 1800’s lost their childhood. The only thing they had was work and home.
Child Labor started in the late 1800’s. There were many reasons why child labor started. One of the reasons was that children are easy to control while grown adults can go on strikes, and fight back. Another reason was that children didn’t have to be paid as much because
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Most of these places are filled with hazards that can kill them. Most kids got beaten by their factory owner. If children came late to work, they would have to be weighted. Meaning the children would have to walk up and down the factory aisle, naked with a chain tied around their neck. This lead to many kids having back and neck injuries.
Children’s safety was affected during the industrial revolution; it was known as one of the darkest time periods in history. Children even worked for free, and if they tried to escape or run away, they would be whipped in the ankles with an iron stick. Most of the kids that worked weren’t paid anything because they were orphans who had nowhere to go.
Children could still be working in factories if it weren’t for the laws that made child labor illegal. In 1836-1904, three laws were made saying kids must attend schools 3 months per year. Then a law was made saying kids can only work 10 hours a day, then lastly a law was passed saying kids can’t work until the age of 15. That law lasted until 1918. In 1924 federal government granted the authority that they have the right to regulate child labor; this law never took effect. Then in 1936 the U.S government refused to buy anything that’s made using underage children. After a few years in 1938 the government successfully had authority to regulate the hours in which the children work. If all these laws
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They didn’t have much of a choice because parents depended on their income. Kids had to work so much that, they didn’t have time for school. Nobody realized back then; but kids not going to school affected many generation of children. Without an education, their most likely not going to be able to have a job that makes enough money to get out of poverty. The kids worked for about 1 to 2 cents a day (sometimes not getting anything at all). Children Today don’t have to work. Because of child labor laws strictly saying that kids can’t work until their 13 years old, and by the time kids are 13 they would’ve had an education. Making the percentage of people in poverty