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Doffer

A doffer is someone who removes "doffs" (bobbins, pirns or spindles) holding spun fiber such as cotton or wool from a spinning frame and replaces them with empty ones. Historically, spinners, doffers, and sweepers each had separate tasks that were required in the manufacture of spun textiles. From the early days of the industrial revolution, this work, which requires speed and dexterity rather than strength, was often done by children.[1] After World War I, the practice of employing children declined, ending in the United States in 1933.[2] In modern textile mills, doffing machines have now replaced humans.[3]

Doffer boys in Aragon Mills, Rock Hill, South Carolina, photographed by Lewis Hine on 13 May 1912

The 19th century edit

The Industrial Revolution created growing demand for child labor in the mills and factories, since children were easier to supervise than adults and good at monotonous, repetitive tasks that often required little physical strength, but where small bodies and nimble fingers were an advantage.[4]

Children were employed in the mills as spinners, sweepers and doffers, with girls usually starting as spinners and boys as doffers and sweepers. When the bobbins on the spinning frames were full, the machinery stopped. The doffers would swarm into the mill and, as quickly as possible, change all the bobbins, after which the machinery would be restarted and the doffers were free to amuse themselves until the next change-over. On the newer and taller frames, the doffers often had to climb to reach the bobbins.[5]

Great Britain edit

In Lancashire the doffing boys were free to do what they liked once they had completed a doffing, as long as they stayed within earshot of the "throstle jobber," who would whistle when they were next needed. They were motivated to do the work as fast as possible, since this gave them as long as possible to play. Between ten and twelve boys could handle a factory with about ten thousand throstle spindles, depending on the amount of yarn being spun.[6] The doffers were usually the sons of poor people, and were small and skinny. They were sometimes called "The Devil's Own" for the tricks that they would get up to.[7] As a rule they would go barefoot except at the coldest times of year.[8]

At Quarry Bank Mill in Styal, England, near Manchester, a doffer earned 1s/6d a day in 1790, and by 1831 was earning from 2s. to 3s. a day. An overlooker's wage in the same period rose from 15s. to 17s.[9] In Leeds in the 1830s a doffer could earn 4s. to 5s.[10] In the textile industry in Britain, wages for children continued to rise steadily compared to those for adults during the period from 1830 to 1860, indicating that demand was outstripping supply.[4] In Belfast linen factories in 1890 girls were employed as doffers, earning the equivalent of US $1.43 daily (about 6s. at the time.)[a][12]

North America edit

 
Lucy Larcom, author of A New England Girlhood, became a bobbin doffer in Lowell, Massachusetts in 1835, aged 11

In the United States in the first part of the 19th century, although the day was long, the doffers only worked for about four hours each day.[5] Memoirs from writers such as Lucy Larcom and Harriet Hanson Robinson describe the long hours, but also the leisurely pace of work and the opportunities for social interactions.[1] In Massachusetts in 1830 a doffer boy earned 25 cents a day. An overseer of rooms would make $1.25 a day, and the superintendent of a mill earned $2.00 a day, considered an excellent wage at the time.[13] In the southern cotton mills it was customary to employ only whites for most jobs in the mill, although blacks had outside jobs and some inside jobs such as firing the boilers. This persisted well into the 20th century.[14]

During the later part of the 19th century, working conditions in the U.S. textile industry deteriorated. Immigrant textile workers coming from Yorkshire and Lancashire to New England found the mills poorly run, with the managers cheating on measurements of cuts of cloth and time worked, and arbitrarily cutting wages without warning. These workers were often skilled, accustomed to being well-treated in their home country, and accustomed to taking industrial action if they were not.[15] There were a series of strikes from the 1870s onward.[16]

An 1889 Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Relations of Capital and Labor in Canada recorded a statement by the assistant superintendent of St. Croix Cotton Mills in St. Stephen, New Brunswick. He said the mill employed some young boys around fifteen years old as doffers, but the average doffer was aged thirty. Wages were from 65 to 80 cents a day. In the summer hours were from 6:30 am to 6 pm, with a half day on Saturday. Winter hours were slightly longer.[17] An employee who had worked in both countries reported that wages were better than in the United States and working conditions better, although the hours were about the same.[18]

Doffers in 1887 in a large mill in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, both boys and girls, earned 40 cents a day.[19] In New England in the 1890s, the doffers, piecers and back boys had their own union, and were not admitted to the mule spinners' union, even though they often aspired to become mule spinners.[20] Many left the industry rather than tolerate the conditions.[21] William Madison Wood, the manager at the Washington Mill in Lawrence, Massachusetts, instituted a system in 1895 where employees gained bonuses for meeting production quotas, as long as they missed no more than one day per month. The effect was that weavers drove spinners to produce, spinners drove doffers and so on, and that workers came in even when sick or injured. Wood then used the increased pay to justify running the looms at ever faster speeds.[22]

Rags to riches edit

A doffer could achieve success if he had enough energy and ability. Stephen Davol, born in November 1807, joined his elder brothers as a doffer in the Troy mill in Fall River, Massachusetts in 1818. After rising through the ranks, in 1833 he became superintendent of the Pocasset Mill at the age of twenty-six. He drew up the plans for building a giant new mill for the Pocasset company, 219 feet (67 m) by 75 feet (23 m) and rising to five stories. The mill was unusual for its time in being built as a whole to plans that considered both the structure and the arrangement of the machinery, belts and gearing. From 1842 to 1860 Davol was agent, or chief executive, of the Troy Mill. By the 1870s he was a member of the board of ten different companies.[23]

George Alexander Gray (1851–1912) is another example. Gray started work as a doffer before the Civil War when aged eight, earning ten cents a day in a mill at Pinhook, North Carolina. He had little education, but rose to the position of overseer in the mill, and then was given the job of supervising installation of machinery in new plants. He moved to Gastonia, North Carolina, where he built the first mill with his own capital. By the time he died, there were eleven mills in Gastonia, of which Gray had been involved in establishing nine.[24]

Carl Augustus Rudisill (1884–1979) began work as a doffer boy in Cherryville, North Carolina, at ten cents a day. He was superintendent of the Indian Creek Manufacturing Company by 1907, and later developed the Carlton Yarn Mills into a major operation. He was a member of the North Carolina legislature from 1937 to 1941.[25]

Early 20th century edit

Netherlands edit

Towards the end of the 19th century, doffers in the Netherlands were mostly boys of about 12 years of age, who in 1890 had to go to school for a few hours each day. They were part of a team headed by a "minder", who was responsible for running two mules, and including a "big piecer" and a "little piecer", whose main job was to rejoin broken threads.[26] Around 1916, self-acting mules were introduced from Germany, which were simpler to operate. The team was reduced to one spinner and one piecer, with the position of doffer eliminated. The pace of modernization and mechanization was faster than in Lancashire, where the unions were more powerful.[27]

India edit

A report on conditions in the Bombay mills in India between 1891 and 1917 noted that laws had been passed in response to agitation in England by which no child under nine years old could be employed. In theory, children under fourteen could not work more than seven hours per day, broken into two work periods with a long rest period in between. In practice, much younger children were working longer hours at jobs such as doffing.[28] A man working in the mills would be paid Rs.7 to Rs.9 for the least skilled jobs to as much as Rs18 to Rs22 on a piece-work basis for a mule's minder or spinner. Doffer boys working full-time would earn Rs.4 to Rs.6.[29] As of 1912 about 4,000 boys and girls were employed in the Indian mills, each doffing about 350 ring spindles.[30]

United States edit

By 1900 in Crown Mills, Whitfield County, Georgia, the average doffer was fourteen years old.[31] A doffer in North Carolina in 1904 would earn $2.40 per week, while a head doffer would earn $3.50. Skilled workers would earn more. A drawing-in girl could make $6.00, a warper $7.50 and an engineer up to $9.00, while the weave boss made as much as $15.00.[32] The working week would be ten hours a day from Monday to Saturday.[33] In 1907, a doffer in North Carolina only had to work about half the time, being able to play baseball, swim in the local river or otherwise relax until the whistle of the head doffer called them back to the mill. If a rural mill depended on a water wheel for power, a drought could provide more free time as the mill would only run a few hours each day.[34]

 
"OUR BABY DOFFER" and some of the other infants all working in Avondale Mills. Location: Birmingham, Alabama. November 1910, by Lewis Hine

Lewis Hine obtained a job with the National Child Labor Committee in the United States in 1908, and over the next decade took many photographs that documented children at work.[35] Many of the children worked barefoot, which made it easier to climb the machinery to reach bobbins or broken threads. Children met with accidents more often than adults. Hine was told by the overseer of one mill "We don't have any accidents in this mill .... Once in a while a finger is mashed, or a foot, but it don't amount to anything." Conditions were demanding. There was a constant racket of machinery. The mill windows were kept closed, creating a hot and humid atmosphere in which cotton threads were less likely to break. The air was filled with lint and dust, making breathing difficult, and often leading to diseases such as tuberculosis and chronic bronchitis.[36] Some workers suffered from Byssinosis, or brown lung, caused by prolonged exposure to cotton dust.[37]

At that time boys might start to work as doffers before the age of seven.[36] However, as Hine reported, "In every case, the youngsters told me their age as 12 years, even to the little Hop-o'-My-Thumb, whom the others dubbed 'our baby doffer.' They would hesitate when I asked them, but always succeeded in remembering that they were twelve."[38] A photograph by Hine of an evidently very young doffer at the Melville Manufacturing Company in Cherryville, North Carolina appeared on the cover of a National Child Labor Committee report around 1912.[39] Hine's photographs of child workers such as doffers were influential in driving reform of child employment laws in the United States, an early example of the power of photo journalism.[40] New laws were introduced, so that by 1914 very few children under 12 were working in the mills, and most were over 14.[41]

 
Modern ring spinning machine with doffer

Post World War I edit

After World War I ended in 1918, the US textile industry was left with surplus capacity and went into a slump, not recovering until after the 1930s Great Depression. In response, mill owners cut wages and laid off workers, or put them on short hours, while mechanizing further to improve efficiency. New laws made child labor more expensive, and children could not handle the new machinery. The practice of using child labor in the mills declined, finally ending completely when the NIRA Cotton Textile Code was adopted in 1933.[2] Changes to the Factories Act in 1922 reduced formal child labor in the textile factories in India. By the 1940s there were negligible numbers of children in the Kanpur mills. Most of the remaining child workers were doffer boys.[42] Elsewhere the change was slower. In Kenya in 1967 "doffer boy" was still listed as a job position in the Kisumu Cotton Mills, one of the lowest paid.[43]

Improvements in working conditions were gradually introduced. In 1940 the British recognized byssinosis, or brown lung disease, and started to compensate victims. Due to lack of research and industry resistance, nothing was done about the disease in the United States until the 1970s.[37] Activists organized brown lung screening clinics in Piedmont in 1975.[44] The Carolina Brown Lung Association had 7,000 members by 1981. In 1984 the Occupational Health and Safety Administration responded to pressure from this group and implemented a new cotton dust standard.[45]

In modern mills the doffing process is relatively automated. with a mechanical doffer fitted to the winder that cuts and aspirates the yarn, removes the packages and places them in a yarn buggy, fits the empty tubes and transfers the yarn so winding can continue.[3]

Poems and songs edit

The song "The Doffing Mistress" is about flax spinning in Northern Ireland and describes the doffers respect for their mistress. The line "she hangs her coat on the highest pin" is because the doffer's work could lead to deformity of the spine.[46]

Edwin Waugh is the author of the dialect poem "The Little Doffer" about a doffer in a Lancashire mill who obtained work despite his unsatisfactory replies to the overlooker (foreman).[47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ In the 1890s the exchange rate varied very little from the "par" rate of $4.8665 to £1. There were twenty shillings to the pound. So $1.43 = (1.43/4.8665)*20s. = 5.88 s. The doffer's daily wage would be worth perhaps $35 or £22 in 2011, although people now buy a very different mix of goods and services, e.g. phone calls but not coal.[11]
  1. ^ a b Zonderman 1992, p. 27.
  2. ^ a b Hindman 2009, p. 183-185.
  3. ^ a b Fourné 1999, p. 596.
  4. ^ a b Hindman 2009, p. 58-59.
  5. ^ a b Hindman 2009, p. 474.
  6. ^ Newbigging 1891, p. 50.
  7. ^ Newbigging 1891, p. 51.
  8. ^ Newbigging 1891, p. 52.
  9. ^ Collier 1965, p. 41-42.
  10. ^ Morris 1990, p. 102.
  11. ^ Nye 2011.
  12. ^ US Bureau of Foreign Commerce 1891, p. 117.
  13. ^ Earl 1877, p. 28.
  14. ^ Rhyne 1930, p. 47-48.
  15. ^ Blewett 2000, pp. 190–191.
  16. ^ Blewett 2000, p. 398.
  17. ^ Armstrong & Freed 1889, p. 481.
  18. ^ Armstrong & Freed 1889, p. 486.
  19. ^ Vivian 1891, p. 394.
  20. ^ Blewett 2000, p. 372.
  21. ^ Blewett 2000, p. 389.
  22. ^ Watson 2006, p. 23.
  23. ^ Earl 1877, p. 56-57.
  24. ^ Mitchell 1921, p. 109.
  25. ^ Wehunt-Black 2008, p. 105.
  26. ^ Groot 1995, p. 57.
  27. ^ Groot 1995, p. 59.
  28. ^ Punekar & Varickayil 1990, p. 76.
  29. ^ Punekar & Varickayil 1990, p. 258.
  30. ^ Punekar & Varickayil 1990, p. 16-17.
  31. ^ Flamming 1995, p. 99.
  32. ^ Hall & Korstad 2000, p. 79.
  33. ^ Hall & Korstad 2000, p. 78.
  34. ^ Hall & Korstad 2000, p. 88.
  35. ^ Freedman 1998, p. 19.
  36. ^ a b Freedman 1998, p. 35.
  37. ^ a b Hall & Korstad 2000, p. 81.
  38. ^ Hindman 2009, p. 168.
  39. ^ Wehunt-Black 2009, p. 20.
  40. ^ Naef 2004, p. 84.
  41. ^ Hindman 2009, p. 177-178.
  42. ^ Joshi 2005, p. 87.
  43. ^ Kenya Gazette 1967, p. 1045.
  44. ^ Hall & Korstad 2000, p. 358.
  45. ^ Hall & Korstad 2000, p. 360.
  46. ^ Raven, Jon (1978) Victoria's Inferno. Tettenhall: Broadside ISBN 0-9503722-3-4; p. 139
  47. ^ Hollingworth, Brian, ed. (1977) Songs of the People. Manchester University Press ISBN 0-7190-0612-0; pp. 18, 130

Sources edit

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  • Blewett, Mary H. (2000). Constant Turmoil: The Politics of Industrial Life in Nineteenth-Century New England. University of Massachusetts Press. p. 372. ISBN 978-1-55849-239-4. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  • Collier, Frances (1965). The Family Economy of the Working Classes in the Cotton Industry, 1784–1833. Manchester University Press ND. GGKEY:B5CJGLHCHZ0. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Earl, Henry Hilliard (1877). A centennial history of Fall River, Mass: comprising a record of its corporate progress from 1656 to 1876, with sketches of its manufacturing industries, local and general characteristics, valuable statistical tables, etc. Atlantic Pub. and Engraving Co. p. 28. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Flamming, Douglas (1995-11-20). Creating the Modern South: Millhands and Managers in Dalton, Georgia, 1884–1984. Univ of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4545-5. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Fourné, Franz (1999-11-01). Synthetic Fibers: Machines and Equipment, Manufacture, Properties : Handbook for Plant Engineering, Machine Design, and Operation. Hanser Verlag. ISBN 978-1-56990-250-9. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  • Freedman, Russell (1998-03-23). Kids at Work: Lewis Hine and the Crusade Against Child Labor. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-395-79726-6. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  • Groot, Gertjan De (1995-03-01). Women Workers and Technological Change in Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-7484-0260-1. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Hall, Jacquelyn Dowd; Korstad, Robert (2000). Like a Family: The Making of a Southern Cotton Mill World. UNC Press Books. ISBN 978-0-8078-4879-1. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Hindman, Hugh D. (2009-09-30). The World of Child Labor: An Historical and Regional Survey. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 978-0-7656-1707-1. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
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  • Kenya Gazette. 1967-09-29. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  • Mitchell, Broadus (1921). The Rise of Cotton Mills in the South. Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-57003-421-3. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
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  • Naef, Weston J. (2004-04-15). Photographers of Genius at the Getty. Getty Publications. ISBN 978-0-89236-749-8. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  • Newbigging, Thomas (1891). "Lancashire Factory Doffers". Lancashire characters and places. Brook & Chrystal. p. 52. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  • Nye, Eric W. (2011). . University of Wyoming. Archived from the original on 2012-05-04. Retrieved 2012-07-04.
  • Punekar, S.D.; Varickayil, R. (1990). Labour Movement in India: Documents 1891–1917. Popular Prakashan. ISBN 978-81-7154-331-1. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
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  • US Bureau of Foreign Commerce (1891). Reports from the consuls of the United States. G.P.O. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Vivian, Thomas Jondrie (1891). The commercial, industrial, agricultural, transportation and other interests of California: being a report on that state for 1890 made to S.G. Brock, chief of the Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department. Govt. print. off. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Watson, Bruce (2006-07-25). Bread and Roses: Mills, Migrants, and the Struggle for the American Dream. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-303735-4. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  • Wehunt-Black, Rita (2008-03-15). Gaston County, North Carolina: A Brief History. The History Press. ISBN 978-1-59629-327-4. Retrieved 2012-07-01.[permanent dead link]
  • Wehunt-Black, Rita (2009-03-16). Cherryville. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-6855-3. Retrieved 2012-06-30.
  • Zonderman, David A. (1992-01-02). Aspirations and Anxieties: New England Workers and the Mechanized Factory System, 1815–1850. Oxford University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-19-505747-8. Retrieved 2012-06-28.

doffer, mechanical, device, used, remove, fiber, from, card, doffing, cylinder, doffer, someone, removes, doffs, bobbins, pirns, spindles, holding, spun, fiber, such, cotton, wool, from, spinning, frame, replaces, them, with, empty, ones, historically, spinner. For a mechanical device used to remove fiber from a card see Doffing cylinder A doffer is someone who removes doffs bobbins pirns or spindles holding spun fiber such as cotton or wool from a spinning frame and replaces them with empty ones Historically spinners doffers and sweepers each had separate tasks that were required in the manufacture of spun textiles From the early days of the industrial revolution this work which requires speed and dexterity rather than strength was often done by children 1 After World War I the practice of employing children declined ending in the United States in 1933 2 In modern textile mills doffing machines have now replaced humans 3 Doffer boys in Aragon Mills Rock Hill South Carolina photographed by Lewis Hine on 13 May 1912 Contents 1 The 19th century 1 1 Great Britain 1 2 North America 1 3 Rags to riches 2 Early 20th century 2 1 Netherlands 2 2 India 2 3 United States 3 Post World War I 4 Poems and songs 5 See also 6 References 7 SourcesThe 19th century editThe Industrial Revolution created growing demand for child labor in the mills and factories since children were easier to supervise than adults and good at monotonous repetitive tasks that often required little physical strength but where small bodies and nimble fingers were an advantage 4 Children were employed in the mills as spinners sweepers and doffers with girls usually starting as spinners and boys as doffers and sweepers When the bobbins on the spinning frames were full the machinery stopped The doffers would swarm into the mill and as quickly as possible change all the bobbins after which the machinery would be restarted and the doffers were free to amuse themselves until the next change over On the newer and taller frames the doffers often had to climb to reach the bobbins 5 Great Britain edit In Lancashire the doffing boys were free to do what they liked once they had completed a doffing as long as they stayed within earshot of the throstle jobber who would whistle when they were next needed They were motivated to do the work as fast as possible since this gave them as long as possible to play Between ten and twelve boys could handle a factory with about ten thousand throstle spindles depending on the amount of yarn being spun 6 The doffers were usually the sons of poor people and were small and skinny They were sometimes called The Devil s Own for the tricks that they would get up to 7 As a rule they would go barefoot except at the coldest times of year 8 At Quarry Bank Mill in Styal England near Manchester a doffer earned 1s 6d a day in 1790 and by 1831 was earning from 2s to 3s a day An overlooker s wage in the same period rose from 15s to 17s 9 In Leeds in the 1830s a doffer could earn 4s to 5s 10 In the textile industry in Britain wages for children continued to rise steadily compared to those for adults during the period from 1830 to 1860 indicating that demand was outstripping supply 4 In Belfast linen factories in 1890 girls were employed as doffers earning the equivalent of US 1 43 daily about 6s at the time a 12 North America edit nbsp Lucy Larcom author of A New England Girlhood became a bobbin doffer in Lowell Massachusetts in 1835 aged 11In the United States in the first part of the 19th century although the day was long the doffers only worked for about four hours each day 5 Memoirs from writers such as Lucy Larcom and Harriet Hanson Robinson describe the long hours but also the leisurely pace of work and the opportunities for social interactions 1 In Massachusetts in 1830 a doffer boy earned 25 cents a day An overseer of rooms would make 1 25 a day and the superintendent of a mill earned 2 00 a day considered an excellent wage at the time 13 In the southern cotton mills it was customary to employ only whites for most jobs in the mill although blacks had outside jobs and some inside jobs such as firing the boilers This persisted well into the 20th century 14 During the later part of the 19th century working conditions in the U S textile industry deteriorated Immigrant textile workers coming from Yorkshire and Lancashire to New England found the mills poorly run with the managers cheating on measurements of cuts of cloth and time worked and arbitrarily cutting wages without warning These workers were often skilled accustomed to being well treated in their home country and accustomed to taking industrial action if they were not 15 There were a series of strikes from the 1870s onward 16 An 1889 Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Relations of Capital and Labor in Canada recorded a statement by the assistant superintendent of St Croix Cotton Mills in St Stephen New Brunswick He said the mill employed some young boys around fifteen years old as doffers but the average doffer was aged thirty Wages were from 65 to 80 cents a day In the summer hours were from 6 30 am to 6 pm with a half day on Saturday Winter hours were slightly longer 17 An employee who had worked in both countries reported that wages were better than in the United States and working conditions better although the hours were about the same 18 Doffers in 1887 in a large mill in Cabarrus County North Carolina both boys and girls earned 40 cents a day 19 In New England in the 1890s the doffers piecers and back boys had their own union and were not admitted to the mule spinners union even though they often aspired to become mule spinners 20 Many left the industry rather than tolerate the conditions 21 William Madison Wood the manager at the Washington Mill in Lawrence Massachusetts instituted a system in 1895 where employees gained bonuses for meeting production quotas as long as they missed no more than one day per month The effect was that weavers drove spinners to produce spinners drove doffers and so on and that workers came in even when sick or injured Wood then used the increased pay to justify running the looms at ever faster speeds 22 Rags to riches edit A doffer could achieve success if he had enough energy and ability Stephen Davol born in November 1807 joined his elder brothers as a doffer in the Troy mill in Fall River Massachusetts in 1818 After rising through the ranks in 1833 he became superintendent of the Pocasset Mill at the age of twenty six He drew up the plans for building a giant new mill for the Pocasset company 219 feet 67 m by 75 feet 23 m and rising to five stories The mill was unusual for its time in being built as a whole to plans that considered both the structure and the arrangement of the machinery belts and gearing From 1842 to 1860 Davol was agent or chief executive of the Troy Mill By the 1870s he was a member of the board of ten different companies 23 George Alexander Gray 1851 1912 is another example Gray started work as a doffer before the Civil War when aged eight earning ten cents a day in a mill at Pinhook North Carolina He had little education but rose to the position of overseer in the mill and then was given the job of supervising installation of machinery in new plants He moved to Gastonia North Carolina where he built the first mill with his own capital By the time he died there were eleven mills in Gastonia of which Gray had been involved in establishing nine 24 Carl Augustus Rudisill 1884 1979 began work as a doffer boy in Cherryville North Carolina at ten cents a day He was superintendent of the Indian Creek Manufacturing Company by 1907 and later developed the Carlton Yarn Mills into a major operation He was a member of the North Carolina legislature from 1937 to 1941 25 Early 20th century editNetherlands edit Towards the end of the 19th century doffers in the Netherlands were mostly boys of about 12 years of age who in 1890 had to go to school for a few hours each day They were part of a team headed by a minder who was responsible for running two mules and including a big piecer and a little piecer whose main job was to rejoin broken threads 26 Around 1916 self acting mules were introduced from Germany which were simpler to operate The team was reduced to one spinner and one piecer with the position of doffer eliminated The pace of modernization and mechanization was faster than in Lancashire where the unions were more powerful 27 India edit A report on conditions in the Bombay mills in India between 1891 and 1917 noted that laws had been passed in response to agitation in England by which no child under nine years old could be employed In theory children under fourteen could not work more than seven hours per day broken into two work periods with a long rest period in between In practice much younger children were working longer hours at jobs such as doffing 28 A man working in the mills would be paid Rs 7 to Rs 9 for the least skilled jobs to as much as Rs18 to Rs22 on a piece work basis for a mule s minder or spinner Doffer boys working full time would earn Rs 4 to Rs 6 29 As of 1912 about 4 000 boys and girls were employed in the Indian mills each doffing about 350 ring spindles 30 United States edit nbsp A regular worker doffer in Richmond Spinning Mills Photo during working hours Chattanooga Tenn Lewis Hine 1910 nbsp Adrienne Pagnette illiterate adolescent French girl Winchendon Mass Lewis Hine 1911 nbsp Spinners and doffers in Lancaster Cotton Mills Lewis Hine 1908By 1900 in Crown Mills Whitfield County Georgia the average doffer was fourteen years old 31 A doffer in North Carolina in 1904 would earn 2 40 per week while a head doffer would earn 3 50 Skilled workers would earn more A drawing in girl could make 6 00 a warper 7 50 and an engineer up to 9 00 while the weave boss made as much as 15 00 32 The working week would be ten hours a day from Monday to Saturday 33 In 1907 a doffer in North Carolina only had to work about half the time being able to play baseball swim in the local river or otherwise relax until the whistle of the head doffer called them back to the mill If a rural mill depended on a water wheel for power a drought could provide more free time as the mill would only run a few hours each day 34 nbsp OUR BABY DOFFER and some of the other infants all working in Avondale Mills Location Birmingham Alabama November 1910 by Lewis HineLewis Hine obtained a job with the National Child Labor Committee in the United States in 1908 and over the next decade took many photographs that documented children at work 35 Many of the children worked barefoot which made it easier to climb the machinery to reach bobbins or broken threads Children met with accidents more often than adults Hine was told by the overseer of one mill We don t have any accidents in this mill Once in a while a finger is mashed or a foot but it don t amount to anything Conditions were demanding There was a constant racket of machinery The mill windows were kept closed creating a hot and humid atmosphere in which cotton threads were less likely to break The air was filled with lint and dust making breathing difficult and often leading to diseases such as tuberculosis and chronic bronchitis 36 Some workers suffered from Byssinosis or brown lung caused by prolonged exposure to cotton dust 37 At that time boys might start to work as doffers before the age of seven 36 However as Hine reported In every case the youngsters told me their age as 12 years even to the little Hop o My Thumb whom the others dubbed our baby doffer They would hesitate when I asked them but always succeeded in remembering that they were twelve 38 A photograph by Hine of an evidently very young doffer at the Melville Manufacturing Company in Cherryville North Carolina appeared on the cover of a National Child Labor Committee report around 1912 39 Hine s photographs of child workers such as doffers were influential in driving reform of child employment laws in the United States an early example of the power of photo journalism 40 New laws were introduced so that by 1914 very few children under 12 were working in the mills and most were over 14 41 nbsp Sweeper and doffer boys in Lancaster Cotton Mills Lewis Hine 1908 nbsp Doffers in Cherryville Mfg Co N C Lewis Hine 1909 nbsp A doffer in Lincolnton Mill Lincolnton N C Lewis Hine 1908 nbsp Modern ring spinning machine with dofferPost World War I editAfter World War I ended in 1918 the US textile industry was left with surplus capacity and went into a slump not recovering until after the 1930s Great Depression In response mill owners cut wages and laid off workers or put them on short hours while mechanizing further to improve efficiency New laws made child labor more expensive and children could not handle the new machinery The practice of using child labor in the mills declined finally ending completely when the NIRA Cotton Textile Code was adopted in 1933 2 Changes to the Factories Act in 1922 reduced formal child labor in the textile factories in India By the 1940s there were negligible numbers of children in the Kanpur mills Most of the remaining child workers were doffer boys 42 Elsewhere the change was slower In Kenya in 1967 doffer boy was still listed as a job position in the Kisumu Cotton Mills one of the lowest paid 43 Improvements in working conditions were gradually introduced In 1940 the British recognized byssinosis or brown lung disease and started to compensate victims Due to lack of research and industry resistance nothing was done about the disease in the United States until the 1970s 37 Activists organized brown lung screening clinics in Piedmont in 1975 44 The Carolina Brown Lung Association had 7 000 members by 1981 In 1984 the Occupational Health and Safety Administration responded to pressure from this group and implemented a new cotton dust standard 45 In modern mills the doffing process is relatively automated with a mechanical doffer fitted to the winder that cuts and aspirates the yarn removes the packages and places them in a yarn buggy fits the empty tubes and transfers the yarn so winding can continue 3 nbsp High Point North Carolina Pickett Yarn Mill Doffer in action nbsp Pickett Yarn Mill Speeder doffer putting up ends highly skilled 1937 nbsp Pickett Yarn Mill Frame hand doffing spools off speeder highly skilled 1937 nbsp Mount Holyoke Massachusetts Silk William Skinner and Sons Doffing 1936 1937Poems and songs editThe song The Doffing Mistress is about flax spinning in Northern Ireland and describes the doffers respect for their mistress The line she hangs her coat on the highest pin is because the doffer s work could lead to deformity of the spine 46 Edwin Waugh is the author of the dialect poem The Little Doffer about a doffer in a Lancashire mill who obtained work despite his unsatisfactory replies to the overlooker foreman 47 See also editSpinning mule Ring spinning Carmela Teoli a doffer who testified before the U S Congress about being scalped by a machineReferences edit In the 1890s the exchange rate varied very little from the par rate of 4 8665 to 1 There were twenty shillings to the pound So 1 43 1 43 4 8665 20s 5 88 s The doffer s daily wage would be worth perhaps 35 or 22 in 2011 although people now buy a very different mix of goods and services e g phone calls but not coal 11 a b Zonderman 1992 p 27 a b Hindman 2009 p 183 185 a b Fourne 1999 p 596 a b Hindman 2009 p 58 59 a b Hindman 2009 p 474 Newbigging 1891 p 50 Newbigging 1891 p 51 Newbigging 1891 p 52 Collier 1965 p 41 42 Morris 1990 p 102 Nye 2011 US Bureau of Foreign Commerce 1891 p 117 Earl 1877 p 28 Rhyne 1930 p 47 48 Blewett 2000 pp 190 191 Blewett 2000 p 398 Armstrong amp Freed 1889 p 481 Armstrong amp Freed 1889 p 486 Vivian 1891 p 394 Blewett 2000 p 372 Blewett 2000 p 389 Watson 2006 p 23 Earl 1877 p 56 57 Mitchell 1921 p 109 Wehunt Black 2008 p 105 Groot 1995 p 57 Groot 1995 p 59 Punekar amp Varickayil 1990 p 76 Punekar amp Varickayil 1990 p 258 Punekar amp Varickayil 1990 p 16 17 Flamming 1995 p 99 Hall amp Korstad 2000 p 79 Hall amp Korstad 2000 p 78 Hall amp Korstad 2000 p 88 Freedman 1998 p 19 a b Freedman 1998 p 35 a b Hall amp Korstad 2000 p 81 Hindman 2009 p 168 Wehunt Black 2009 p 20 Naef 2004 p 84 Hindman 2009 p 177 178 Joshi 2005 p 87 Kenya Gazette 1967 p 1045 Hall amp Korstad 2000 p 358 Hall amp Korstad 2000 p 360 Raven Jon 1978 Victoria s Inferno Tettenhall Broadside ISBN 0 9503722 3 4 p 139 Hollingworth Brian ed 1977 Songs of the People Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 0612 0 pp 18 130 nbsp Look up doffer in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Doffers Sources editArmstrong James Freed Augustus Toplady 1889 Report of the Royal commission on the relations of labor and capital in Canada Printed for the queen s printer A Senecal Retrieved 2012 07 01 Blewett Mary H 2000 Constant Turmoil The Politics of Industrial Life in Nineteenth Century New England University of Massachusetts Press p 372 ISBN 978 1 55849 239 4 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Collier Frances 1965 The Family Economy of the Working Classes in the Cotton Industry 1784 1833 Manchester University Press ND GGKEY B5CJGLHCHZ0 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Earl Henry Hilliard 1877 A centennial history of Fall River Mass comprising a record of its corporate progress from 1656 to 1876 with sketches of its manufacturing industries local and general characteristics valuable statistical tables etc Atlantic Pub and Engraving Co p 28 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Flamming Douglas 1995 11 20 Creating the Modern South Millhands and Managers in Dalton Georgia 1884 1984 Univ of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4545 5 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Fourne Franz 1999 11 01 Synthetic Fibers Machines and Equipment Manufacture Properties Handbook for Plant Engineering Machine Design and Operation Hanser Verlag ISBN 978 1 56990 250 9 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Freedman Russell 1998 03 23 Kids at Work Lewis Hine and the Crusade Against Child Labor Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 395 79726 6 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Groot Gertjan De 1995 03 01 Women Workers and Technological Change in Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 7484 0260 1 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Hall Jacquelyn Dowd Korstad Robert 2000 Like a Family The Making of a Southern Cotton Mill World UNC Press Books ISBN 978 0 8078 4879 1 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Hindman Hugh D 2009 09 30 The World of Child Labor An Historical and Regional Survey M E Sharpe ISBN 978 0 7656 1707 1 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Joshi Chitra 2005 03 05 Lost Worlds Indian Labour and Its Forgotten Histories Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 84331 128 7 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Kenya Gazette 1967 09 29 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Mitchell Broadus 1921 The Rise of Cotton Mills in the South Univ of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 421 3 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Morris Robert John 1990 Class Sect and Party The Making of the British Middle Class Leeds 1820 1850 Manchester University Press ND ISBN 978 0 7190 2225 8 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Naef Weston J 2004 04 15 Photographers of Genius at the Getty Getty Publications ISBN 978 0 89236 749 8 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Newbigging Thomas 1891 Lancashire Factory Doffers Lancashire characters and places Brook amp Chrystal p 52 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Nye Eric W 2011 A Method for Determining Historical Monetary Values University of Wyoming Archived from the original on 2012 05 04 Retrieved 2012 07 04 Punekar S D Varickayil R 1990 Labour Movement in India Documents 1891 1917 Popular Prakashan ISBN 978 81 7154 331 1 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Rhyne Jennings Jefferson 1930 Some Southern Cotton Mill Workers and Their Villages Ayer Publishing ISBN 978 0 405 10195 3 Retrieved 2012 07 01 US Bureau of Foreign Commerce 1891 Reports from the consuls of the United States G P O Retrieved 2012 07 01 Vivian Thomas Jondrie 1891 The commercial industrial agricultural transportation and other interests of California being a report on that state for 1890 made to S G Brock chief of the Bureau of Statistics Treasury Department Govt print off Retrieved 2012 07 01 Watson Bruce 2006 07 25 Bread and Roses Mills Migrants and the Struggle for the American Dream Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 303735 4 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Wehunt Black Rita 2008 03 15 Gaston County North Carolina A Brief History The History Press ISBN 978 1 59629 327 4 Retrieved 2012 07 01 permanent dead link Wehunt Black Rita 2009 03 16 Cherryville Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 6855 3 Retrieved 2012 06 30 Zonderman David A 1992 01 02 Aspirations and Anxieties New England Workers and the Mechanized Factory System 1815 1850 Oxford University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 19 505747 8 Retrieved 2012 06 28 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doffer amp oldid 1212122835, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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