During the period of (1859-1932), child labor was a major issue for children starting off at a certain age. According to the passage, there is a certain age requirement that children follow to forcefully work for one’s home. Southern state laws have a way of maneuvering working children no matter the condition or how long they will be working. States such as Georgia, children begin to work at age six and seven years in the cotton mills each night to make shoes, stockings, knitted underwear, and braid straw for hats that people purchase for an everyday use. On the other hand in Pennsylvania children age’s eight, nine, and ten work in coal-breakers risking their own lives working from day to night with no break. Knowing that kids are living their childhood working makes others have no idea the struggles they go through while women stay home having no right to take action of such child labor. …show more content…
Florence Kelley states, “Until the mothers in the great industrial states are enfranchised, we shall none of us be able to free our consciences from participation in this great evil.” If women had the right to vote and choose their own self over their kids, child labor wouldn’t be a problem. Children would be going to school living the life that a normal child should be living in today’s world attending school and playing with toys rather than working 12 hours straight with no limits being set. Men and women are the one to do all this work to make a living not their kids, but they have no power and what Florence Kelley is trying to say is that she wants a voice to take control and make a