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Title: Lowell%20Mill%20Girls


1
Lowell Mill Girls
  • It is very hard indeed and sometimes I think I
    shall not be able to endure it. I never worked so
    hard in my life but perhaps I shall get used to
    it. Mary Paul, 1848

2
Town of Lowell, Mass.
3
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4
The Mill Girls
  • In 1821, the Boston Association purchased land
    and rights to the Pawtucket Canal.
  • Water power from the Merrimack River made Lowell,
    Mass. a prime site for woolen and cotton mills.
    The first opening in 1823.
  • During the next 25 years, the textile industry
    grew, so that by 1848, Lowell, was the largest
    industrial center in U.S.
  • Due to the relatively good pay, for females,
    young women came from family farms to work in the
    mills, during the mid-1800s.
  • Most of them were 15-25, unmarried and from New
    England and New York.
  • By the 1840s, nearly 10,000 women were working
    for Lowells ten major textile corporations.
  • Their stay averaged one to four years, after
    which they returned to the farms, married, went
    to work etc.

5
  • Women held most of the machine-tending jobs in
    the mills.
  • They worked as operatives in carding, drawing,
    spinning, weaving, warping and dressing.
  • Newcomers began as sparehands, learning and
    getting used to the pace of the machines.
  • Men held the supervisory jobs and skilled
    positions such as mechanic or loom fixer.
  • The corporations required the girls to work in
    the mills for a least one year and to give two
    weeks notice before quitting, in order to receive
    an honorable discharge.
  • These cotton mills fostered working class wage
    labor.
  • In 1836, the girls were paid 40-60 cents a day
    and 1842, 14.50 for 4 weeks.
  • They worked for 12 hours a day, six days a week.

6
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7
Reasons for Coming
  • The young women often asked their fathers to
    allow them to work in the mills. For example,
  • Mary Paul (1845 letter excerpt) I want you to
    consent to let me go to Lowell if you can. I
    could earn more to begin with than I can any
    where about here. I am in need of clothes which I
    cannot get if I stay about here and for that
    reason I want to go to Lowell or some other
    place.
  • A daughters departure from the farm meant one
    less mouth to feed and extra money coming in.
  • These unmarried women lived in boardinghouses and
    1.25 was taken out of each weeks pay for room
    and board.
  • Their pay was comparable to the wages for a
    teacher or seamstress.
  • They worked long days in the hot, humid mills.

8
  • After a period of adjustment, most mill girls
    found life and factory work tolerable.
  • They also enjoyed a degree of social and economic
    independence they would never have found on the
    farm.
  • Their wages allowed them to have books, clothing
    and savings.
  • The city offered new opportunities lectures,
    libraries, theatre and religious activities.
  • However, each textile corporation also had a
    printed set of regulations that controlled many
    aspects of the womens lives living in a
    boarding house, going to church and being in bed
    by 10 p.m.
  • Their protests, in later years, led to the
    creation of labor organizations and the 10 hour
    workday.
  • The Lowell Girls began to disappear from the
    labor force after the Civil War.

9
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10
The Boardinghouse
  • As Harriet Robinson (1898) wrote Each house was
    a village or community of itselfWhen not at
    their work, by natural selection they sat in
    groups in their chambers, or in a corner of the
    large dining-room, busy at some agreeable
    employment or they wrote letters, read, studied,
    or sewed, for as a rule, they were their own
    seamstresses and dressmakers.
  • Harriet worked in the Lowell Mills from age 10
    until she married at 23.
  • She worked 14-hour days for six days each week
    and was paid 2 for her labor.
  • In October of 1836, the mill girls were told that
    their wages were to be cut, so, Harriet and other
    mill girls participated in a strike.
  • Because workers were recruited from a distance,
    the corporations provided housing.
  • The corporations hired boardinghouse keepers to
    provide for the needs of the girls.
  • These keepers were unmarried or widowed older
    women.
  • The boardinghouse usually consisted of eight
    units, housing 25-40 workers each.

11
  • The first floor had a dining room, kitchen, and
    the keepers quarters bedrooms were on the
    second floor.
  • Each bedroom had two to three beds that four to
    six girls shared.
  • Many who came to Lowell already knew someone
    working in the mills this allowed them to adjust
    more easily.
  • The women had very little privacy, but, they did
    develop close bonds with other women.
  • Sarah Bagely was another early mill girl.
  • She began factory work in 1836, and by 1844 had
    organized the Lowell Female Labor Reform
    Association, to protect deteriorating working
    conditions.
  • In 1845, she argued in favor of the ten-hour day,
    which by then was a full-fledged cause among
    workers.

12
The Mill Girls Day
13
Factory Conditions
  • As Mary Paul wrote, in 1848, It is very hard
    indeed and sometimes I think I shall not be able
    to endure it. I never worked so hard in my life
    but perhaps I shall get used to it.
  • While, at first the mill girls were satisfied,
    factory conditions soon began to take their toll.
  • Mills had a hot and humid environment to prevent
    threads from breaking.
  • Windows were nailed or painted shut, all outside
    ventilation was cut off.
  • Cotton dust and lint filled the air in the mills
    and caused many workers to suffer from
    respiratory illnesses.
  • The noise from the machines, caused many workers
    to experience hearing loss.

14
  • In 1841, a mill girl wrote for the Lowell
    Offering
  • Up before day, at the clang of the bell
    and out of the mill by the clang of
    the bell into the mill, and at work, to
    the obedience of that ding dong bell just as
    though we were so many living machines.
  • The mill girls also experienced frequent injuries
    - Hair and clothing got caught in the machinery.
  • They were also bound by the rules of the factory.
  • For example, The company will not employ
    any one
  • who is habitually absent from public worship
    on the
  • Sabbath, or known to be guilty of
    immorality.
  • By the 1830s, the price of textiles was falling,
    so corporations increased the speed and number of
    machines each girl worked often without raising
    wages and even lowering them
  • As conditions worsened, the mill girls responded
    with strikes and demands for labor reform.

15
Factory Rules from the Handbook to Lowell, 1848
  • REGULATIONS TO BE OBSERVED by all persons
    employed in the factories of the Hamilton
    Manufacturing Company. The overseers are to be
    always in their rooms at the starting of the
    mill, and not absent unnecessarily during working
    hours. They are to see that a ll those employed
    in their rooms, are in their places in due
    season, and keep a correct account of their time
    and work. They may grant leave of absence to
    those employed under them, when they have spare
    hands to supply their places, and not otherwise,
    except in cases of absolute necessity.
  • All persons in the employ of the Hamilton
    Manufacturing Company, are to observe the
    regulations of the room where they are employed.
    They are not to be absent from their work without
    the consent of the over-seer, except in cases of
    sickness, and then t hey are to send him word of
    the cause of their absence. They are to board in
    one of the houses of the company and give
    information at the counting room, where they
    board, when they begin, or, whenever they change
    their boarding place and are to observe t he
    regulations of their boarding-house.
  • Those intending to leave the employment of the
    company, are to give at least two weeks' notice
    thereof to their overseer.
  • All persons entering into the employment of the
    company, are considered as engaged for twelve
    months, and those who leave sooner, or do not
    comply with all these regulations, will not be
    entitled to a regular discharge.
  • The company will not employ any one who is
    habitually absent from public worship on the
    Sabbath, or known to be guilty of immorality.
  • A physician will attend once in every month at
    the counting-room, to vaccinate all who may need
    it, free of expense.
  • Any one who shall take from the mills or the
    yard, any yarn, cloth or other article belonging
    to the company, will be considered guilty of
    stealing and be liable to prosecution.
  • Payment will be made monthly, including board and
    wages. The accounts will be made up to the last
    Saturday but one in every month, and paid in the
    course of the following week.
  • These regulations are considered part of the
    contract, with which all persons entering into
    the employment of the Hamilton Manufacturing
    Company, engage to comply.

16
Songs and Poems of the Mill Girls
17
  • Poem that Concluded Lowell Women Workers 1834
    Petition to Manufacturers
  • Let oppression shrug her shoulders,
  • And a haughty tyrant frown,
  • And little upstart Ignorance,
  • In mockery look down.
  • Yet I value not the feeble threats
  • Of Tories in disguise,
  • While the flag of Independence
  • Ore our noble nation flies.
  • 1836 Song Lyrics Sung by Protesting Workers at
    Lowell
  • Oh! Isnt it a pity, such a pretty girl as I
  • Should be sent to the factory to pine away and
    die?
  • Oh! I cannot be a slave, I will not be a Slave,
  • For Im so fond of liberty,
  • That I cannot be a slave.

18
Lowell Factory Song, 1830sWritten by Irish
immigrant, who worked in Lowell
  • When I set out for Lowell,
  • Some factory for to find,
  • I left my native country
  • And all my friends behind.
  • But now I am in Lowell,
  • And summond by the bell,
  • I think less of the factory
  • Than of my native dell.
  • The factory bell begins to ring
  • And we must obey
  • And to our old employment go,
  • Or else be turn away.
  • Come all ye weary factory girls,
  • Ill have you understand
  • Im going to leave the factory
  • And return to my native land.

19
Southern Mill Girls
  • North Carolina the textile industry grew
    quickly during the late 1800s.
  • Children under 16 represented roughly 25 of all
    workers.
  • It was considered normal for children to begin
    working between 10 and 13 years of age, but
    children as young as 5 could be found working in
    mills.
  • The social photographer Lewis Hine studied child
    labor in the Carolina mills.
  • Gaston county was a center of textile
    manufacturing beginning with the opening of 3
    mills in the 1850s.
  • By 1901, the mills produced fine combed yarn.
  • The 1929 strike of the Loray Mills, is the best
    known event in Gaston Countys history.

20
  • Georgia In the summer of 1864, Sherman created
    hundreds of refugees by ordering the arrest of
    civilian millworkers in Roswell, Ga.
  • He charged them with treason for spinning yarn
    and weaving cloth.
  • Sherman shipped them, and millworkers from
    Sweetwater Creek, Georgia, north up through
    Tennessee and on to Louisville, Kentucky.
  • He directed these refugees to cross the Ohio
    river and either work in the northern mills, or
    find other ways to support themselves.
  • After the Civil war, some returned home, while
    others made new lives up north.

21
Resources and References
  • Websites
  • www.nps.gov/lowe - Lowell National Historical
    Park
  • http//libweb.uml.edu/clh/mo.htm - Mill Life in
    Lowell 1820-1880
  • www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/childlabor/ -
    Photographs by Lewis W. Hine
  • www.quiltersmuse.com/mill_girls_of_spindle_city.ht
    m
  • http//massmoments.org/moment.cfm?mid116 -
    Mill Girl Writer Lucy Larcom
  • www.sun-associates.com/mercer/handouts/millgirls.h
    tml - Lowell Mill Girls Webquest
  • www.lessonplanet.com/search?keywordslowellmillg
    irlsm... Lesson Plans
  • http//historymatters.gmu.edu primary and
    secondary sources
  • http//womenshistory.about.com/gi/dynamic -
    primary and secondary sources
  • North Carolina/Georgia mills
  • www.ncatwork.org/childlabor/child_labor_in_north_c
    arolina_co.htm - NC mill
  • www.ncatwork.org/childlabor/index.htm - NC
    textile industry and its workers
  • www.girl.lib.nc.us/lrgs/textile.htm - textile
    heritage in Gaston County, NC

22
  • Books and Magazines
  • Moran, W. (2002) The Belles of New England The
    Women of the Textile Mills and The Families Whose
    Wealth They Wove, Thomas Dunne Books.
  • OAH Magazine of History (March 2005). Mill
    Girls and Labor Movements Integrating Womens
    History into Early Industrialization Studies, pp
    42-46.
  • Holland, R (1970). Mill Child The Story of Child
    Labor in America, Crowell-Collier.
  • Gourley, C. (1999) Good Girl Work Factories,
    Sweatshops, and How Women Changed Their Role in
    the American Workforce. Millbrook Press.
  • McCully, E. (1996). The Bobbin Girl. Dial
    Publishing.
  • Patterson, K. (1993) Lyddie. Puffin Books.
  • Anonymous, Lowell Offering (1845) A Week in the
    Mill, Vol. V
  • Byerly, V. (1986) Hard Times Cotton Mill Girls
    Personal Histories of Womanhood and Poverty in
    the South. ILR Press. Cornell University.
  • Ranta, J. (1999) Women and Children of the Mills
    An Annotated Guide to Nineteenth-Centry American
    Textile Factory Literature. Greenwood Press.
  • Searce, F.A. (2006) Cotton Mill Girl. Tate
    Publishing.
  • The Lowell Offering. The North American Review.
    (April 1841)537-541.
  • Cook, R.B. (1999) North Across the River. Crane
    Hill Publishers.
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