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Child Labor In The 1800s

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The conditions for child labor were becoming horrible gigantic issues. In 1900 more than 1.75 million kids fifteen and under worked at factories, mines, and mills. Tragedies, death, accidents, and injuries have had happened because of these conditions. Some of these deaths were unbelievable, for example the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire. The owners didn’t trust the children and thought they would steal their items, so they locked and blocked the doors; those lives had ended that day. The owners put their material/item before some one’s own life. The society needed to fix these types of problems, but that was only one out of the few. The factories in the cities had harsh conditions too. Some examples are the hot air that blew from gas ovens into the workplace, in addition to the heat the temperatures in the ovens used to make glass were 2,000 Fahrenheit. …show more content…

The children didn’t have protection against the fire and machinery also. Imagine a little girl getting her finger cut off because she wasn’t paying attention for a second. With bending and lifting in the factories often left young workers tired and sore after their long day of work. In city jobs for boys, they sold newspapers and shined shoes for the men who had money. Girls cooked, cleaned, and if worked with their mother sewed clothes and made handicrafts. The society became aware of these conditions of child labor. In 1900s the government passed some laws to ease the child labor setting. In 1912, the government had passed the minimum wage law making the commission established rates for child workers. The year of 1916 and 1919 the government made child labor

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