This 10-year-old girl has been employed at Rhodes Manufacturing Company
in Lincolnton, N.C., for more than a year. I found the image on the Facebook
page History Images. The picture was
taken in 1908. The following information about child labor laws, which were not
enforced, is from www.learnnc.org. The
girl in the photograph probably made from 50 cents to $1.50 a day.
“Labor” was not a new
concept to children who went to work in the mills. Many spent their earliest
years on their family’s farm, helping their parents with chores and working in
the fields. Making a living on a family farm was difficult, especially when the
family was renting the land from a large landowner. Everyone on the farm worked
hard at raising enough crops and livestock to support the family, but farm
families rarely made a profit. Some went into deep debt during years with poor
crops.
Mill owners looking for
employees capitalized on the frustrations of farm families. They sent
recruiters to rural and mountain farm areas to hand out pamphlets singing the
praises of mill life. For families struggling to grow enough food to feed
themselves and make a small profit, the prospect of a regular paycheck was
appealing. Ethel Shockley and her husband moved off the farm they were renting
in Virginia to work in the cotton mills of Burlington, NC in 1921. They made
about 75 cents a day working on the farm and could make 2 dollars a day working
in the mills. Like the Shockleys, thousands of farmers across the South made
the decision to trade in their self-sufficient farm life for life in the mill
village, and they brought their children with them.
During the late 19th and
early 20th century, the few laws prohibiting child labor were moderate and
rarely enforced. In North Carolina, the age limit was 13 for employment in
factories such as mills, and children under 18 were allowed to work up to a
shocking 66 hours per week! Mill owners had to “knowingly and willfully” break
these laws before they could be convicted. Even more lenient laws
were in place in South Carolina, where the age limit for factory workers was 12
years old. However, orphans and children with “dependent” parents (those too
sick to work) could work at any age and any amount of hours. These laws were
rarely, if ever, enforced. Former child workers remember scrambling to hide in
closets on the few occasions when factory inspectors would visit to check on
working conditions in the mill.
The system of “helpers”
was another way mill owners got around child labor laws. Very small children as
young as 6 or 7 years old would visit the mill to bring meals to their parents
or older siblings during the work day or simply to play amidst the machinery. These young “helpers” would begin to learn the jobs that older workers
performed and try their hand at various tasks. The presence of tiny children in
the mill could be explained to inspectors by saying the children were only “helping”
and not on the payroll. As they got older, they spent more and more time
helping until they began working full-time in the mills, usually between ages
10 to 14.
Many young mill laborers
worked in the spinning room because mill owners felt their small hands were
well-suited to this work. Work in the spinning room was not especially skilled
or difficult, but required a watchful eye. Spinners were usually preteen or
teen girls, who had to constantly attend to the cotton being spun on machines.
These were the workers who “put up ends”, or repaired breaks in the thread.
Doffers, often small boys, walked back and forth in the spinning room,
replacing the full bobbins of thread with empty ones. Sweepers, also small
boys, swept up the cotton fiber and lint from the floor and machinery to keep
things running smoothly. Spinners and doffers were usually required to keep up
with a certain number of machines on a side, and many workers remember “running
sides” or being paid by the number of sides they worked.
Many former child
workers speak of their eagerness to earn money, which pushed them to drop out
of school and begin working in the mill. Some even began working against their
parents’ wishes. It was difficult for some to see the advantage in continuing
their schooling when recruitment ads claimed they could make as much as adult
mill workers.
Workers under 16 usually began working for 25 to 50 cents per day
during the early 20th century, and could increase to $1.50 per day or more as
they became more experienced.
No comments:
Post a Comment