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Excerpt from The Laboring Classes

Excerpt from The Laboring Classes, an article from the Boston Quarterly Review. (1840).

The operatives are well dressed, and we are told, well paid. They are said to be healthy, contented, and happy. This is the fair side of the picture... There is a dark side, moral as well as physical. Of the common operatives, few, if any, by their wages, acquire a competence…  the great mass wear out their health, spirits, and morals, without becoming one whit better off than when they commenced labor. The bills of mortality in these factory villages are not striking, we admit, for the poor girls when they can toil no longer go home to die. The average life, working life we mean, of the girls that come to Lowell, for instance, from Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, we have been assured, is only about three years. What becomes of them then? Few of them ever marry; fewer still ever return to their native places with reputations unimpaired. "She has worked in a Factory," is almost enough to damn to infamy the most worthy and virtuous girl.

A black and white 19th-century engraving depicts a young woman working at a large industrial spinning machine in a textile factory. She stands next to the machinery, carefully tending to the spools, while other workers and more machines fill the bright factory floor in the background.
The Bobbin Girl by Winslow Homer



Glossary


commenced: began or started something

competence: having the ability or skill to do something well

mortality: the state of being subject to death or the number of deaths in a group

operatives: workers employed to perform tasks, often in factories or mills

unimpaired: not harmed, damaged, or weakened

virtuous: showing high moral standards or good character




Source: Excerpt from The Laboring Classes



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