Factory Girls

The Working Lives of Women and Children

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Pub Date 30 Aug 2022 | Archive Date 20 Jul 2022
Pen & Sword | Pen & Sword History

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Description

Ever since there have been factories, women and children have, more often than not, worked in those factories. What is perhaps less well known is that women also worked underground in coal mines and overground scaling the inside of chimneys. Young children were also put to work in factories and coalmines; they were deployed inside chimneys, often half-starved so that they could shin up ever narrower flues.

This book charts the unhappy but aspirational story of women and children at work through the Industrial Revolution to 1914. Without women there would have been no pre-industrial cottage industries, without women the Industrial Revolution would not have been nearly as industrial and nowhere near as revolutionary.

Many women, and children, were obliged to take up work in the mills and factories – long hours, dangerous, often toxic conditions, monotony, bullying, abuse and miserly pay were the usual hallmarks of a day’s work – before they headed homeward to their other job: keeping home and family together.

This long overdue and much-needed book also covers the social reformers, the role of feminism and activism and the various Factory Acts and trade unionism.

We examine how women and children suffered chronic occupational diseases and disabling industrial injuries – life changing and life shortening – and often a one-way ticket to the workhouse. The book concludes with a survey of the art, literature and the music which formed the soundtrack for the factory girl and the climbing boys.

Ever since there have been factories, women and children have, more often than not, worked in those factories. What is perhaps less well known is that women also worked underground in coal mines and...


Available Editions

EDITION Hardcover
ISBN 9781399011921
PRICE £20.00 (GBP)

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