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Factories In The 1900s

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Factories in the 1900s
Everyday millions of people drive or walk to work in the morning and then return to their home in 8-10 hours or come home every week or two with a good sized paycheck. Usually this luxury is taken for granted, because the money that is earned is always enough to supply our everyday need and the work day is finished before the next night. Working conditions were not always this good. These good working routines gradually came into action growing from the Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution brought about many factories and along with the factories came more workers who had few safety regulations to protect them.
So how did the factories become so deplorable? The United States underwent a huge industrial growth. …show more content…

The government did not see the horrible conditions at first so those who owned the factories could work the workers as long and as hard as they wanted because there was no regulations and the workers can´t quit. Those who would run the factories were skilled businessmen who knew a lot about making large amounts of money.
Another reason that America underwent an industrial revolution was because Great
Britain fired at one of the U.S naval ships. Naturally the U.S declared war on Great Britain. Because Great Britain was already deep into their industrial revolution the U.S where the underdogs in the war because they could not produce supplies as fast as Great Britain could. The U.S started using factories making army supplies in mass production. Because of the mass production the factories needed a great amount of workers to work in the factories and operate the machines. However because many workers needed jobs in the factories, the employers did not make the conditions very good. If one worker died then they could just hire another person that was in need of a job.(“Working …show more content…

The workers that they mostly hired was women and children. They were hired before men because of how small they were and because they were willing to work as long as they could help their families financially. These women that were making working were working for their families making three to four dollars per week (Gourley 11). The women that were employed were paid way less than that of the men and they would work for long, exhausting hours. Women were also employed before men because they had small hands and could work quicker. With their small hands they would easily unjam the machines and they could operate sewing machines with better ease than men could. The children that were employed were usually 14-16 years of age and they too would work to support their families. When these children were sent to work in the morning they would most likely not return until the next day. Most children would normally work in the coal mines and in the sewing and textile industry. Throughout the industrial revolution roughly about 1.7 million children worked in factories (“Working Conditions”).
The men that did have a job often worked on the railroad. These men would get paid according to their responsibility. The men that worked here did not have it much better than those who worked in the factories because they would be on a strict diet of beef, bread, and black coffee. These men had to work in fear of getting hit by the Native

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