Young Workers of the Industrial Age  
Child Labour in the 18th and 19th Centuries
Author(s): Sue Wilkes
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781036113858
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781036113858 Price: INR 1413.99
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The industrial revolution was forged with the lives of our ancestors’ children.

All over Britain, children and young people toiled for hours every day. Their workplaces were pitch-dark mines, fiery furnaces, brightly-lit mills with deadly machines, and mud-filled brickyards.

Some workers were pauper apprentices, sent thousands of miles from their homes and indentured until the age of twenty-one.

Almost every item in our ancestors’ homes and wardrobes was made by children and youngsters: buttons, glass, carpets, cotton, cutlery, pins, candles, lace, pottery, straw hats, and even matches.

In grand houses and ordinary homes, tiny chimney sweeps climbed chimneys choked with soot, and boys and girls worked as domestic servants. On the land, both sexes worked in all weathers. Children worked at home, too – many helped their parents earn a living.

From the early 1800s, men like Robert Owen tried to improve children’s lives. But reform was held back for decades by wealthy mill-owners, landowners and politicians who believed that profits were more important than people.

Sue Wilkes tells the story of the battle for workplace and educational reforms led by Lord Shaftesbury, Richard Oastler, and the indefatigable factory inspectors. But it took many decades to transform society’s attitude towards childhood itself.

Young Workers of the Industrial Age takes a fresh look at the childhoods stolen to create Britain’s industrial empire.
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Description
The industrial revolution was forged with the lives of our ancestors’ children.

All over Britain, children and young people toiled for hours every day. Their workplaces were pitch-dark mines, fiery furnaces, brightly-lit mills with deadly machines, and mud-filled brickyards.

Some workers were pauper apprentices, sent thousands of miles from their homes and indentured until the age of twenty-one.

Almost every item in our ancestors’ homes and wardrobes was made by children and youngsters: buttons, glass, carpets, cotton, cutlery, pins, candles, lace, pottery, straw hats, and even matches.

In grand houses and ordinary homes, tiny chimney sweeps climbed chimneys choked with soot, and boys and girls worked as domestic servants. On the land, both sexes worked in all weathers. Children worked at home, too – many helped their parents earn a living.

From the early 1800s, men like Robert Owen tried to improve children’s lives. But reform was held back for decades by wealthy mill-owners, landowners and politicians who believed that profits were more important than people.

Sue Wilkes tells the story of the battle for workplace and educational reforms led by Lord Shaftesbury, Richard Oastler, and the indefatigable factory inspectors. But it took many decades to transform society’s attitude towards childhood itself.

Young Workers of the Industrial Age takes a fresh look at the childhoods stolen to create Britain’s industrial empire.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Illustrations
  • Chapter 1: Forging the Fairytale
  • Chapter 2: Learning a Trade
  • Chapter 3: Unknown, Unprotected and Forgotten
  • Chapter 4: Battle Begins
  • Chapter 5: Time to Sleep, and Time to Play
  • Chapter 6: Fight the Good Fight
  • Chapter 7: Over-Burdened: Life down the Pit
  • Chapter 8: The Devil’S Nursery
  • Chapter 9: Rural Bliss
  • Chapter 10: Sweeps and Slaveys
  • Chapter 11: Candles of Hope
  • Chapter 12: Mangling the Operatives
  • Chapter 13: A Change of Heart
  • Chapter 14: Empire Builders
  • Timeline of Key Nineteenth Century Legislation
  • Museums
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Plates
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