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Lowell mill girls

The Lowell mill girls were young female workers who came to work in textile mills in Lowell, Massachusetts during the Industrial Revolution in the United States. The workers initially recruited by the corporations were daughters of New England farmers, typically between the ages of 15 and 35.[1] By 1840, at the height of the Textile Revolution, the Lowell textile mills had recruited over 8,000 workers, with women making up nearly three-quarters of the mill workforce.

Tintype of two young women in Lowell, Massachusetts (c. 1870)

During the early period, women came to the mills for various reasons: to help a brother pay for college, for the educational opportunities offered in Lowell, or to earn supplemental income for the family. Francis Cabot Lowell emphasized the importance of providing housing and a form of education to mirror the boarding schools that were emerging in the 19th century. He also wanted to provide an environment that sharply contrasted the poor conditions of the British Mills notoriously portrayed by Dickens. Their wages were only half of what men were paid, yet many women were able to attain economic independence for the first time. The Lowell mill girls earned between three and four dollars per week. The cost of boarding ranged between seventy-five cents to $1.25, giving them the ability to acquire good clothes, books, and savings. The girls created book clubs and published journals such as the Lowell Offering, which provided a literary outlet with stories about life in the mills.

Over time, adult women displaced child labor, which an increasing number of factory owners were disinclined to hire.[2] As the "factory system" matured, however, many women joined the broader American labor movement to protest increasingly harsh working conditions. Labor historian Philip Foner observed that "they succeeded in raising serious questions about woman’s so-called ‘place’."[3]

In 1845, after a number of protests and strikes, many operatives came together to form the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association, the first union of working women in the United States. The Association adopted a newspaper called the Voice of Industry, in which workers published sharp critiques of the new industrialism. The Voice stood in sharp contrast to other literary magazines published by female operatives.

Industrialization of Lowell Edit

In 1813, businessman Francis Cabot Lowell formed a company, the Boston Manufacturing Company, and built a textile mill next to the Charles River in Waltham, Massachusetts. Unlike the earlier Rhode Island System, where only carding and spinning were done in a factory while the weaving was often put out to neighboring farms to be done by hand, the Waltham mill was the first integrated mill in the United States, transforming raw cotton into cotton cloth in one building.[2]

In 1821, Francis Cabot Lowell's business associates, looking to expand the Waltham textile operations, purchased land around the Pawtucket Falls on the Merrimack River in East Chelmsford. Incorporated as the Town of Lowell in 1826, by 1840, the textile mills employed almost 8,000 workers — mostly women between the ages of 15 and 35.[4][5]

The "City of Spindles", as Lowell came to be known, quickly became the center of the Industrial Revolution in America. New, large scale machinery, which had come to dominate the production of cloth by 1840, was being rapidly developed in lockstep with the equally new ways of organizing workers for mass production. Together, these mutually reinforcing technological and social changes produced staggering increases: between 1840 and 1860, the number of spindles in use went from 2.25 million to almost 5.25 million; bales of cotton used from 300,000 to nearly 1 million, and the number of workers from 72,000 to nearly 122,000.[6]

This tremendous growth translated directly into large profits for the textile corporations: between 1846 and 1850, for instance, the dividends of the Boston-based investors, the group of textile companies that founded Lowell, averaged 14% per year. Most corporations recorded similarly high profits during this period.[citation needed]

Work and living environment Edit

Contemporary observers thought that by the 1830s, the social position of the factory girls had been degraded considerably in France and England. In her autobiography, Harriet Hanson Robinson (who worked in the Lowell mills from 1834 to 1848) suggests that "It was to overcome this prejudice that such high wages had been offered to women that they might be induced to become mill girls, in spite of the opprobrium that still clung to this degrading occupation...."[7]

Factory conditions Edit

The Lowell System combined large-scale mechanization with an attempt to improve the stature of its female workforce and workers. A few girls who came with their mothers or older sisters were as young as ten years old, some were middle-aged, but the average age was about 24.[5] Usually hired for contracts of one year (the average stay was about four years), new employees were given assorted tasks as spare hands and paid a fixed daily wage while more experienced loom operators would be paid by the piece. They were paired with more experienced women, who trained them in the ways of the factory.[4]

Conditions in the Lowell mills were severe by modern American standards. Employees worked from 5:00 am until 7:00 pm, for an average 73 hours per week.[4][5] Each room usually had 80 women working at machines, with two male overseers managing the operation. The noise of the machines was described by one worker as "something frightful and infernal", and although the rooms were hot, windows were often kept closed during the summer so that conditions for thread work remained optimal. The air, meanwhile, was filled with particles of thread and cloth.[8]

Charles Dickens visited in 1842, and remarked favorably on the conditions: "I cannot recall or separate one young face that gave me a painful impression; not one young girl whom, assuming it to be a matter of necessity that she should gain her daily bread by the labour of her hands, I would have removed from those works if I had had the power."[9] However, there was concern among many workers that foreign visitors were being presented with a sanitized view of the mills, by textile corporations who were trading on the image of the 'literary operative' to mask the grim realities of factory life. "Very pretty picture," wrote an operative named Juliana in the Voice of Industry, responding to a rosy account of life and learning in the mills, "but we who work in the factory know the sober reality to be quite another thing altogether." The "sober reality" was twelve to fourteen hours of dreary, exhausting work, which many workers experienced as hostile to intellectual development.[10]

Living quarters Edit

The investors or factory owners built hundreds of boarding houses near the mills, where textile workers lived year-round. A curfew of 10:00 pm was common, and men were generally not allowed inside. About 26 women lived in each boarding house, with up to six sharing a bedroom.[4] One worker described her quarters as "a small, comfortless, half-ventilated apartment containing some half a dozen occupants".[11] Life in these boarding houses was typically strict. The houses were often run by widows who kept a close eye on the workers and made church attendance mandatory for all of the girls.[12]

Trips away from the boarding house were uncommon; the Lowell girls worked and ate together. However, half-days and short paid vacations were possible due to the nature of the piece-work; one girl would work the machines of another in addition to her own such that no wages would be lost. These close quarters fostered community as well as resentment. Newcomers were mentored by older women in areas such as dress, speech, behavior, and the general ways of the community. The women became very close with one another due to the extensive time they spent together both during work and after work when they would engage in cultural activities, such as music and literature.[12]

Workers often recruited their friends or relatives to the factories, creating a familial atmosphere among many of the rank and file.[4] The Lowell girls were expected to attend church and demonstrate morals befitting proper society. The 1848 Handbook to Lowell noted that the company would "not employ anyone who is habitually absent from public worship on the Sabbath, or known to be guilty of immorality".[13]

Working-class intellectual culture Edit

As for many young women, the allure of Lowell was in the opportunities afforded for further study and learning. Most had already completed some measure of formal education and were resolutely bent on self-improvement. Upon their arrival, they found a vibrant, lively working-class intellectual culture: workers read voraciously in Lowell's city library and reading rooms and subscribed to the large, informal "circulating libraries" which trafficked in novels. Many even pursued literary composition. Defying factory rules, operatives would affix verses to their spinning frames, "to train their memories", and pin-up mathematical problems in the rooms where they worked. In the evenings, many enrolled in courses offered by the mills and attended public lectures at the Lyceum, a theatre built at company expense (offering 25 lectures per season for 25 cents). The Voice of Industry is alive with notices for upcoming lectures, courses, and meetings on topics ranging from astronomy to music. ("Lectures and Learning", Voice of Industry)[citation needed]

The corporations happily publicized the efforts of these "literary mill girls", boasting that they were the "most superior class of factory operative", impressing foreign visitors. But this masked the bitter opposition of many workers to the 12–14 hours of exhausting, monotonous work, which they saw was corrosive to their desire to learn. As one operative asked in the Voice, "who, after thirteen hours of steady application to monotonous work, can sit down and apply her mind to deep and long-continued thought?" Another Lowell operative expressed a similar view: "I well remember the chagrin I often felt when attending lectures, to find myself unable to keep awake...I am sure few possessed a more ardent desire for knowledge than I did, but such was the effect of the long hour system, that my chief delight was, after the evening meal, to place my aching feet in an easy position, and read a novel."[14]

The Lowell Offering Edit

 
Cover of The Lowell Offering, Series 1, Number 1 (1840)

In October 1840, the Reverend Abel Charles Thomas of the First Universalist Church organized a monthly publication by and for the Lowell girls. As the magazine grew in popularity, women contributed poems, ballads, essays, and fiction – often using their characters to report on conditions and situations in their lives.[4]

The "Offering"s contents were by turns serious and farcical. In a letter in the first issue, "A Letter about Old Maids", the author suggested that "sisters, spinsters, lay-nuns, & c" were an essential component of God's "wise design".[15] Later issues – particularly in the wake of labor unrest in the factories – included an article about the value of organizing and an essay about suicide among the Lowell girls.[16]

Strikes of 1834 and 1836 Edit

The initial effort of the investors and managers to recruit female textile workers brought generous wages for the time (three to five dollars per week), but with the economic depression of the early 1830s, the Board of Directors proposed a reduction in wages. This, in turn, led to organized "turn-outs" or strikes.[citation needed]

In February 1834, the Board of Directors of Lowell's textile mills requested a 15% wage reduction, to go into effect on March 1. After a series of meetings, the female textile workers organized a "turn-out" or strike. The women involved in "turn-out" immediately withdrew their savings, causing "a run" on two local banks.[17]

The strike failed and within days the protesters had all returned to work at reduced pay or left town, but the "turn-out" or strike was an indication of the determination among the Lowell female textile workers to take labor action. This dismayed the agents of the factories, who portrayed the turnout as a betrayal of femininity. William Austin, agent of the Lawrence Manufacturing Company, wrote to his Board of Directors, "notwithstanding the friendly and disinterested advice which has been on all proper occassions [sic] communicated to the girls of the Lawrence mills a spirit of evil omen  ... has prevailed, and overcome the judgment and discretion of too many".[4]

Again, in response to severe economic depression and the high costs of living, in January 1836, the Board of Directors of Lowell's textile mills absorbed an increase in the textile workers' rent to help in the crisis faced by the company boarding housekeepers. As the economic calamity continued in October 1836, the Directors proposed an additional rent hike to be paid by the textile workers living in the company boarding houses.[18] The female textile workers responded immediately in protest by forming the Factory Girls' Association and organizing a "turn-out" or strike.[citation needed]

Harriet Hanson Robinson, an eleven-year-old doffer at the time of the strike, recalled in her memoirs: "One of the girls stood on a pump and gave vent to the feelings of her companions in a neat speech, declaring that it was their duty to resist all attempts at cutting down the wages. This was the first time a woman had spoken in public in Lowell, and the event caused surprise and consternation among her audience."[5]

This "turn-out" or strike attracted over 1,500 workers – nearly twice the number two years previously - causing Lowell's textile mills to run far below capacity.[4] Unlike the "turn-out" or strike in 1834, in 1836 there was enormous community support for the striking female textile workers. The proposed rent hike was seen as a violation of the written contract between the employers and the employees. The "turn-out" persisted for weeks and eventually, the Board of Directors of Lowell's textile mills rescinded the rent hike. Although the "turn-out" was a success, the weakness of the system was evident and worsened further in the Panic of 1837.[citation needed]

Lowell Female Labor Reform Association Edit

 
1836 Constitution of the Lowell Factory Girls Association

The sense of community that arose from working and living together contributed directly to the energy and growth of the first union of women workers, the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association. Started by 12 operatives in January 1845, its membership grew to 500 within six months and continued to expand rapidly. The Association was run completely by the women themselves: they elected their own officers and held their own meetings; they helped organize the city's female workers and set up branches in other mill towns. They organized fairs, parties, and social gatherings. Unlike many middle-class women activists, the operatives found considerable support from working-class men who welcomed them into their reform organizations and advocated for their treatment as equals.[citation needed]

One of its first actions was to send petitions signed by thousands of textile workers to the Massachusetts General Court demanding a ten-hour workday. In response, the Massachusetts Legislature established a committee chaired by William Schouler, Representative from Lowell, to investigate and hold public hearings, during which workers testified about conditions in the factories and the physical demands of their twelve-hour days. These were the first investigations into labor conditions by a governmental body in the United States.[19] The 1845 Legislative Committee determined that it was not state legislature's responsibility to control the hours of work. The LFLRA called its chairman, William Schouler, a "tool"[4] and worked to defeat him in his next campaign for the State Legislature.[4] A complex election[20] Schouler lost to another Whig candidate over the issue of railroads. The impact of working men [Democrats] and working women [non-voting] was very limited. The next year Schouler was re-elected to the State Legislature.[21]

The Lowell female textile workers continued to petition the Massachusetts Legislature and legislative committee hearings became an annual event. Although the initial push for a ten-hour workday was unsuccessful, the LFLRA continued to grow, affiliating with the New England Workingmen's Association and publishing articles in that organization's Voice of Industry, a pro-labor newspaper.[4] This direct pressure forced the Board of Directors of Lowell's textile mills to reduce the workday by 30 minutes in 1847. The FLRA's organizing efforts spilled over into other nearby towns.[4] In 1847, New Hampshire became the first state to pass a law for a ten-hour workday, although there was no enforcement and workers were often requested to work longer days. By 1848, the LFLRA dissolved as a labor reform organization. Lowell textile workers continued to petition and pressure for improved working conditions,[4] and in 1853, the Lowell corporations reduced the workday to eleven hours.[citation needed]

The New England textile industry was rapidly expanding in the 1850s and 1860s. Unable to recruit enough Yankee women to fill all the new jobs, to supplement the workforce textile managers turned to survivors of the Great Irish Famine who had recently immigrated to the United States in large numbers. During the Civil War, many of Lowell's cotton mills closed, unable to acquire bales of raw cotton from the South. After the war, the textile mills reopened, recruiting French Canadian men and women. Although large numbers of Irish and French Canadian immigrants moved to Lowell to work in the textile mills, Yankee women still dominated the workforce until the mid-1880s.[22]

Political character of labor activity Edit

The Lowell girls' organizing efforts were notable not only for the "unfeminine" participation of women, but also for the political framework used to appeal to the public. Framing their struggle for shorter workdays and better pay as a matter of rights and personal dignity, they sought to place themselves in the larger context of the American Revolution. During the 1834 "turn-out" or strike – they warned that "the oppressing hand of avarice would enslave us,"[4] the women included a poem which read:

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
O'er our noble nation flies.[23]

In the 1836 strike, this theme returned in a protest song:

Oh! isn't 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 I'm so fond of liberty,
That I cannot be a slave.[23]

The most striking example of this political overtone can be found in a series of tracts published by the Female Labor Reform Association entitled Factory Tracts. In the first of these, subtitled "Factory Life As It Is", the author proclaims "that our rights cannot be trampled upon with impunity; that we WILL not longer submit to that arbitrary power which has for the last ten years been so abundantly exercised over us."[11]

This conceptualization of labor activity as philosophically linked with the American project in democracy has been instrumental for other labor organizing campaigns, as noted frequently by MIT professor and social critic Noam Chomsky,[24] who has cited this extended quote from the Lowell mill girls on the topic of wage slavery:

When you sell your product, you retain your person. But when you sell your labour, you sell yourself, losing the rights of free men and becoming vassals of mammoth establishments of a monied aristocracy that threatens annihilation to anyone who questions their right to enslave and oppress. Those who work in the mills ought to own them, not have the status of machines ruled by private despots who are entrenching monarchic principles on democratic soil as they drive downwards freedom and rights, civilization, health, morals and intellectuality in the new commercial feudalism.[25]

Notable people Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Brooks, Rebecca Beatrice (25 January 2017). "What Was the Lowell System Used in the Lowell Mills?". History of Massachusetts Blog. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b Bergquist, H. E. (January 1973). "The Boston Manufacturing Company and Anglo-American Relations 1807–1820". Business History. 15 (1): 45. doi:10.1080/00076797300000003.
  3. ^ "The Myth of the Mill Girls". The Attic. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dublin, Thomas (2019). "Women, Work, and Protest in the Early Lowell Mills: 'The Oppressing Hand of Avarice would Enslave Us'". The Working Class and its Culture. pp. 127–144. doi:10.4324/9781315050430-7. ISBN 978-1-315-05043-0.
  5. ^ a b c d Robinson, Harriet (1883). "Early Factory Labor in New England", Internet History Sourcebooks Project; retrieved on August 27, 2007.
  6. ^ Lowell (Mass.). Trades and Labor Council,Lowell, A City of Spindles, retrieved on November 8, 2018,
  7. ^ Robinson, Harriet. . Archived from the original on 29 May 2006.
  8. ^ "A Description of Factory Life by an Associationist in 1846" 2009-04-16 at the Wayback Machine. Online at the Illinois Labor History Society 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on August 27, 2007.
  9. ^ Dickens, Charles (1842). American Notes. New York: The Modern Library. ISBN 0-679-60185-6.
  10. ^ National Council for Historical Education, "New England Mill Girls," https://www.backstoryradio.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/13/2015/02/Mill-Girls-Sources.pdf, accessed November 30, 2018
  11. ^ a b "An Operative" (1845). "Some of the Beauties of our Factory System – Otherwise, Lowell Slavery". In Factory Tracts. Factory Life As It Is, Number One. Lowell. Online at the Center for History and New Media; retrieved August 27, 2007.
  12. ^ a b "Rights of Women", The Voice of Industry,http://www.industrialrevolution.org/rights-of-women.html, accessed November 30, 2018.
  13. ^ Hamilton Manufacturing Company (1848). "Factory Rules" in The Handbook to Lowell. Online at the Illinois Labor History Society 2009-04-16 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved March 12, 2009.
  14. ^ "Working Class Intellectual Culture", The Voice of Industry, retrieved November 8, 2018
  15. ^ "Betsy" (1840). "A Letter about Old Maids". Lowell Offering. Series 1, No. 1. Online at the On-Line Digital Archive of Documents on Weaving and Related Topics. Retrieved on August 27, 2007.
  16. ^ Farley, Harriet (1844). "Editorial: Two Suicides". Lowell Offering. Series 4, No. 9. Online at Primary Sources: Workshops in American History. Retrieved on August 27, 2007.
  17. ^ Boston Transcript (1834). Online at "'Liberty Rhetoric' and Nineteenth-Century American Women" 2012-06-26 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on August 27, 2007
  18. ^ Faragher, John Mack, et al. Out Of Many. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Pearson Hall, 2006. Pg 346
  19. ^ Zinn, Howard (1980). A People's History of the United States, p. 225. New York: HarperPerennial. ISBN 0-06-092643-0.
  20. ^ Wallis, W. D. (2014-10-08). The Mathematics of Elections and Voting. ISBN 9783319098104.
  21. ^ Charles Cowley, Illustrated History of Lowell. Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1868
  22. ^ Robert G. Layer, Earnings of Cotton Mill Operatives, 1825-1914. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1955.
  23. ^ a b Quoted in "'Liberty Rhetoric' and Nineteenth-Century American Women" 2012-06-26 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on August 27, 2007.
  24. ^ See, for example, Activism, Anarchy, and Power. Interview by Harry Kreisler. 22 March 2002.
  25. ^ "Chomsky quoting Lowell Mill Girls" from p. 29, Chomsky on Democracy and Education, edited by C.P. Otero

Further reading Edit

  • Alcott, Kate. “The Daring Ladies of Lowell” (Anchor Books, 2014). Historical fiction based the actual murder of a mill girl and the subsequent trial in 1833.
  • Cook, Sylvia Jenkins. "'Oh Dear! How the Factory Girls Do Rig Up!': Lowell's Self-Fashioning Workingwomen," New England Quarterly (2010) 83#2 pp. 219–249 in JSTOR
  • Dublin, Thomas. "Lowell Millhands" in Transforming Women's Work: New England Lives in the Industrial Revolution (1994) pp 77–118.
  • Dublin, Thomas (2019). "Women, Work, and Protest in the Early Lowell Mills: 'The Oppressing Hand of Avarice would Enslave Us'". The Working Class and its Culture. pp. 127–144. doi:10.4324/9781315050430-7. ISBN 978-1-315-05043-0.
  • Mrozowski, Stephen A. et al. eds. Living on the Boott: Historical Archeology at the Boott Mills Boardinghouses, Lowell, Massachusetts (University of Massachusetts Press, 1996)
  • Ranta, Judith A. Women and Children of the Mills: An Annotated Guide to Nineteenth-Century American Textile Factory Literature (Greenwood Press, 1999),
  • Zonderman, David A. Aspirations and Anxieties: New England Workers and the Mechanized Factory System, 1815–1850 (Oxford University Press, 1992)
  • Kirschbaum, S. (March 2005). "'Mill Girls' and Labor Movements: Integrating Women's History into Early Industrialization Studies". OAH Magazine of History. 19 (2): 42–46. doi:10.1093/maghis/19.2.42. ProQuest 213748603.

Primary sources Edit

  • Eisler, Benita (1998). The Lowell Offering: Writings by New England Mill Women (1840–1845). W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-31685-8.

External links Edit

  • Bringing History Home: Lowell Mill Girl Game University of Massachusetts Lowell, Center for Lowell History
  • Illinois Labor History Society
  • Lowell Mill Girl Letters University of Massachusetts Lowell, Center for Lowell History
  • Mill Life in Lowell Website University of Massachusetts Lowell, Center for Lowell History
  • The Lowell Offering University of Massachusetts Lowell, Center for Lowell History
  • The Voice of Industry
  • Lowell National Historical Park Lowell, Massachusetts

lowell, mill, girls, were, young, female, workers, came, work, textile, mills, lowell, massachusetts, during, industrial, revolution, united, states, workers, initially, recruited, corporations, were, daughters, england, farmers, typically, between, ages, 1840. The Lowell mill girls were young female workers who came to work in textile mills in Lowell Massachusetts during the Industrial Revolution in the United States The workers initially recruited by the corporations were daughters of New England farmers typically between the ages of 15 and 35 1 By 1840 at the height of the Textile Revolution the Lowell textile mills had recruited over 8 000 workers with women making up nearly three quarters of the mill workforce Tintype of two young women in Lowell Massachusetts c 1870 During the early period women came to the mills for various reasons to help a brother pay for college for the educational opportunities offered in Lowell or to earn supplemental income for the family Francis Cabot Lowell emphasized the importance of providing housing and a form of education to mirror the boarding schools that were emerging in the 19th century He also wanted to provide an environment that sharply contrasted the poor conditions of the British Mills notoriously portrayed by Dickens Their wages were only half of what men were paid yet many women were able to attain economic independence for the first time The Lowell mill girls earned between three and four dollars per week The cost of boarding ranged between seventy five cents to 1 25 giving them the ability to acquire good clothes books and savings The girls created book clubs and published journals such as the Lowell Offering which provided a literary outlet with stories about life in the mills Over time adult women displaced child labor which an increasing number of factory owners were disinclined to hire 2 As the factory system matured however many women joined the broader American labor movement to protest increasingly harsh working conditions Labor historian Philip Foner observed that they succeeded in raising serious questions about woman s so called place 3 In 1845 after a number of protests and strikes many operatives came together to form the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association the first union of working women in the United States The Association adopted a newspaper called the Voice of Industry in which workers published sharp critiques of the new industrialism The Voice stood in sharp contrast to other literary magazines published by female operatives Contents 1 Industrialization of Lowell 2 Work and living environment 2 1 Factory conditions 2 2 Living quarters 2 3 Working class intellectual culture 3 The Lowell Offering 4 Strikes of 1834 and 1836 5 Lowell Female Labor Reform Association 6 Political character of labor activity 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 10 1 Primary sources 11 External linksIndustrialization of Lowell EditMain article History of Lowell Massachusetts In 1813 businessman Francis Cabot Lowell formed a company the Boston Manufacturing Company and built a textile mill next to the Charles River in Waltham Massachusetts Unlike the earlier Rhode Island System where only carding and spinning were done in a factory while the weaving was often put out to neighboring farms to be done by hand the Waltham mill was the first integrated mill in the United States transforming raw cotton into cotton cloth in one building 2 In 1821 Francis Cabot Lowell s business associates looking to expand the Waltham textile operations purchased land around the Pawtucket Falls on the Merrimack River in East Chelmsford Incorporated as the Town of Lowell in 1826 by 1840 the textile mills employed almost 8 000 workers mostly women between the ages of 15 and 35 4 5 The City of Spindles as Lowell came to be known quickly became the center of the Industrial Revolution in America New large scale machinery which had come to dominate the production of cloth by 1840 was being rapidly developed in lockstep with the equally new ways of organizing workers for mass production Together these mutually reinforcing technological and social changes produced staggering increases between 1840 and 1860 the number of spindles in use went from 2 25 million to almost 5 25 million bales of cotton used from 300 000 to nearly 1 million and the number of workers from 72 000 to nearly 122 000 6 This tremendous growth translated directly into large profits for the textile corporations between 1846 and 1850 for instance the dividends of the Boston based investors the group of textile companies that founded Lowell averaged 14 per year Most corporations recorded similarly high profits during this period citation needed Work and living environment EditContemporary observers thought that by the 1830s the social position of the factory girls had been degraded considerably in France and England In her autobiography Harriet Hanson Robinson who worked in the Lowell mills from 1834 to 1848 suggests that It was to overcome this prejudice that such high wages had been offered to women that they might be induced to become mill girls in spite of the opprobrium that still clung to this degrading occupation 7 Factory conditions Edit The Lowell System combined large scale mechanization with an attempt to improve the stature of its female workforce and workers A few girls who came with their mothers or older sisters were as young as ten years old some were middle aged but the average age was about 24 5 Usually hired for contracts of one year the average stay was about four years new employees were given assorted tasks as spare hands and paid a fixed daily wage while more experienced loom operators would be paid by the piece They were paired with more experienced women who trained them in the ways of the factory 4 Conditions in the Lowell mills were severe by modern American standards Employees worked from 5 00 am until 7 00 pm for an average 73 hours per week 4 5 Each room usually had 80 women working at machines with two male overseers managing the operation The noise of the machines was described by one worker as something frightful and infernal and although the rooms were hot windows were often kept closed during the summer so that conditions for thread work remained optimal The air meanwhile was filled with particles of thread and cloth 8 Charles Dickens visited in 1842 and remarked favorably on the conditions I cannot recall or separate one young face that gave me a painful impression not one young girl whom assuming it to be a matter of necessity that she should gain her daily bread by the labour of her hands I would have removed from those works if I had had the power 9 However there was concern among many workers that foreign visitors were being presented with a sanitized view of the mills by textile corporations who were trading on the image of the literary operative to mask the grim realities of factory life Very pretty picture wrote an operative named Juliana in the Voice of Industry responding to a rosy account of life and learning in the mills but we who work in the factory know the sober reality to be quite another thing altogether The sober reality was twelve to fourteen hours of dreary exhausting work which many workers experienced as hostile to intellectual development 10 Living quarters Edit The investors or factory owners built hundreds of boarding houses near the mills where textile workers lived year round A curfew of 10 00 pm was common and men were generally not allowed inside About 26 women lived in each boarding house with up to six sharing a bedroom 4 One worker described her quarters as a small comfortless half ventilated apartment containing some half a dozen occupants 11 Life in these boarding houses was typically strict The houses were often run by widows who kept a close eye on the workers and made church attendance mandatory for all of the girls 12 Trips away from the boarding house were uncommon the Lowell girls worked and ate together However half days and short paid vacations were possible due to the nature of the piece work one girl would work the machines of another in addition to her own such that no wages would be lost These close quarters fostered community as well as resentment Newcomers were mentored by older women in areas such as dress speech behavior and the general ways of the community The women became very close with one another due to the extensive time they spent together both during work and after work when they would engage in cultural activities such as music and literature 12 Workers often recruited their friends or relatives to the factories creating a familial atmosphere among many of the rank and file 4 The Lowell girls were expected to attend church and demonstrate morals befitting proper society The 1848 Handbook to Lowell noted that the company would not employ anyone who is habitually absent from public worship on the Sabbath or known to be guilty of immorality 13 Working class intellectual culture Edit As for many young women the allure of Lowell was in the opportunities afforded for further study and learning Most had already completed some measure of formal education and were resolutely bent on self improvement Upon their arrival they found a vibrant lively working class intellectual culture workers read voraciously in Lowell s city library and reading rooms and subscribed to the large informal circulating libraries which trafficked in novels Many even pursued literary composition Defying factory rules operatives would affix verses to their spinning frames to train their memories and pin up mathematical problems in the rooms where they worked In the evenings many enrolled in courses offered by the mills and attended public lectures at the Lyceum a theatre built at company expense offering 25 lectures per season for 25 cents The Voice of Industry is alive with notices for upcoming lectures courses and meetings on topics ranging from astronomy to music Lectures and Learning Voice of Industry citation needed The corporations happily publicized the efforts of these literary mill girls boasting that they were the most superior class of factory operative impressing foreign visitors But this masked the bitter opposition of many workers to the 12 14 hours of exhausting monotonous work which they saw was corrosive to their desire to learn As one operative asked in the Voice who after thirteen hours of steady application to monotonous work can sit down and apply her mind to deep and long continued thought Another Lowell operative expressed a similar view I well remember the chagrin I often felt when attending lectures to find myself unable to keep awake I am sure few possessed a more ardent desire for knowledge than I did but such was the effect of the long hour system that my chief delight was after the evening meal to place my aching feet in an easy position and read a novel 14 The Lowell Offering Edit nbsp Cover of The Lowell Offering Series 1 Number 1 1840 Main article Lowell Offering In October 1840 the Reverend Abel Charles Thomas of the First Universalist Church organized a monthly publication by and for the Lowell girls As the magazine grew in popularity women contributed poems ballads essays and fiction often using their characters to report on conditions and situations in their lives 4 The Offering s contents were by turns serious and farcical In a letter in the first issue A Letter about Old Maids the author suggested that sisters spinsters lay nuns amp c were an essential component of God s wise design 15 Later issues particularly in the wake of labor unrest in the factories included an article about the value of organizing and an essay about suicide among the Lowell girls 16 Strikes of 1834 and 1836 EditThe initial effort of the investors and managers to recruit female textile workers brought generous wages for the time three to five dollars per week but with the economic depression of the early 1830s the Board of Directors proposed a reduction in wages This in turn led to organized turn outs or strikes citation needed In February 1834 the Board of Directors of Lowell s textile mills requested a 15 wage reduction to go into effect on March 1 After a series of meetings the female textile workers organized a turn out or strike The women involved in turn out immediately withdrew their savings causing a run on two local banks 17 The strike failed and within days the protesters had all returned to work at reduced pay or left town but the turn out or strike was an indication of the determination among the Lowell female textile workers to take labor action This dismayed the agents of the factories who portrayed the turnout as a betrayal of femininity William Austin agent of the Lawrence Manufacturing Company wrote to his Board of Directors notwithstanding the friendly and disinterested advice which has been on all proper occassions sic communicated to the girls of the Lawrence mills a spirit of evil omen has prevailed and overcome the judgment and discretion of too many 4 Again in response to severe economic depression and the high costs of living in January 1836 the Board of Directors of Lowell s textile mills absorbed an increase in the textile workers rent to help in the crisis faced by the company boarding housekeepers As the economic calamity continued in October 1836 the Directors proposed an additional rent hike to be paid by the textile workers living in the company boarding houses 18 The female textile workers responded immediately in protest by forming the Factory Girls Association and organizing a turn out or strike citation needed Harriet Hanson Robinson an eleven year old doffer at the time of the strike recalled in her memoirs One of the girls stood on a pump and gave vent to the feelings of her companions in a neat speech declaring that it was their duty to resist all attempts at cutting down the wages This was the first time a woman had spoken in public in Lowell and the event caused surprise and consternation among her audience 5 This turn out or strike attracted over 1 500 workers nearly twice the number two years previously causing Lowell s textile mills to run far below capacity 4 Unlike the turn out or strike in 1834 in 1836 there was enormous community support for the striking female textile workers The proposed rent hike was seen as a violation of the written contract between the employers and the employees The turn out persisted for weeks and eventually the Board of Directors of Lowell s textile mills rescinded the rent hike Although the turn out was a success the weakness of the system was evident and worsened further in the Panic of 1837 citation needed Lowell Female Labor Reform Association Edit nbsp 1836 Constitution of the Lowell Factory Girls AssociationSee also Sarah Bagley The sense of community that arose from working and living together contributed directly to the energy and growth of the first union of women workers the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association Started by 12 operatives in January 1845 its membership grew to 500 within six months and continued to expand rapidly The Association was run completely by the women themselves they elected their own officers and held their own meetings they helped organize the city s female workers and set up branches in other mill towns They organized fairs parties and social gatherings Unlike many middle class women activists the operatives found considerable support from working class men who welcomed them into their reform organizations and advocated for their treatment as equals citation needed One of its first actions was to send petitions signed by thousands of textile workers to the Massachusetts General Court demanding a ten hour workday In response the Massachusetts Legislature established a committee chaired by William Schouler Representative from Lowell to investigate and hold public hearings during which workers testified about conditions in the factories and the physical demands of their twelve hour days These were the first investigations into labor conditions by a governmental body in the United States 19 The 1845 Legislative Committee determined that it was not state legislature s responsibility to control the hours of work The LFLRA called its chairman William Schouler a tool 4 and worked to defeat him in his next campaign for the State Legislature 4 A complex election 20 Schouler lost to another Whig candidate over the issue of railroads The impact of working men Democrats and working women non voting was very limited The next year Schouler was re elected to the State Legislature 21 The Lowell female textile workers continued to petition the Massachusetts Legislature and legislative committee hearings became an annual event Although the initial push for a ten hour workday was unsuccessful the LFLRA continued to grow affiliating with the New England Workingmen s Association and publishing articles in that organization s Voice of Industry a pro labor newspaper 4 This direct pressure forced the Board of Directors of Lowell s textile mills to reduce the workday by 30 minutes in 1847 The FLRA s organizing efforts spilled over into other nearby towns 4 In 1847 New Hampshire became the first state to pass a law for a ten hour workday although there was no enforcement and workers were often requested to work longer days By 1848 the LFLRA dissolved as a labor reform organization Lowell textile workers continued to petition and pressure for improved working conditions 4 and in 1853 the Lowell corporations reduced the workday to eleven hours citation needed The New England textile industry was rapidly expanding in the 1850s and 1860s Unable to recruit enough Yankee women to fill all the new jobs to supplement the workforce textile managers turned to survivors of the Great Irish Famine who had recently immigrated to the United States in large numbers During the Civil War many of Lowell s cotton mills closed unable to acquire bales of raw cotton from the South After the war the textile mills reopened recruiting French Canadian men and women Although large numbers of Irish and French Canadian immigrants moved to Lowell to work in the textile mills Yankee women still dominated the workforce until the mid 1880s 22 Political character of labor activity EditThe Lowell girls organizing efforts were notable not only for the unfeminine participation of women but also for the political framework used to appeal to the public Framing their struggle for shorter workdays and better pay as a matter of rights and personal dignity they sought to place themselves in the larger context of the American Revolution During the 1834 turn out or strike they warned that the oppressing hand of avarice would enslave us 4 the women included a poem which read 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 O er our noble nation flies 23 In the 1836 strike this theme returned in a protest song Oh isn t 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 I m so fond of liberty That I cannot be a slave 23 The most striking example of this political overtone can be found in a series of tracts published by the Female Labor Reform Association entitled Factory Tracts In the first of these subtitled Factory Life As It Is the author proclaims that our rights cannot be trampled upon with impunity that we WILL not longer submit to that arbitrary power which has for the last ten years been so abundantly exercised over us 11 This conceptualization of labor activity as philosophically linked with the American project in democracy has been instrumental for other labor organizing campaigns as noted frequently by MIT professor and social critic Noam Chomsky 24 who has cited this extended quote from the Lowell mill girls on the topic of wage slavery When you sell your product you retain your person But when you sell your labour you sell yourself losing the rights of free men and becoming vassals of mammoth establishments of a monied aristocracy that threatens annihilation to anyone who questions their right to enslave and oppress Those who work in the mills ought to own them not have the status of machines ruled by private despots who are entrenching monarchic principles on democratic soil as they drive downwards freedom and rights civilization health morals and intellectuality in the new commercial feudalism 25 Notable people EditSarah Bagley Eliza Jane Cate Betsey Guppy Chamberlain Harriet Farley Margaret Foley Adelia Sarah Gates Abba Goddard Lucy Larcom Francis Cabot Lowell Harriet Hanson RobinsonSee also EditList of mill towns in Massachusetts Lowell mills Mill towns Waltham Lowell systemReferences Edit Brooks Rebecca Beatrice 25 January 2017 What Was the Lowell System Used in the Lowell Mills History of Massachusetts Blog Retrieved 27 January 2018 a b Bergquist H E January 1973 The Boston Manufacturing Company and Anglo American Relations 1807 1820 Business History 15 1 45 doi 10 1080 00076797300000003 The Myth of the Mill Girls The Attic Retrieved 3 September 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dublin Thomas 2019 Women Work and Protest in the Early Lowell Mills The Oppressing Hand of Avarice would Enslave Us The Working Class and its Culture pp 127 144 doi 10 4324 9781315050430 7 ISBN 978 1 315 05043 0 a b c d Robinson Harriet 1883 Early Factory Labor in New England Internet History Sourcebooks Project retrieved on August 27 2007 Lowell Mass Trades and Labor Council Lowell A City of Spindles retrieved on November 8 2018 Robinson Harriet THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE EARLY FACTORY GIRLS Archived from the original on 29 May 2006 A Description of Factory Life by an Associationist in 1846 Archived 2009 04 16 at the Wayback Machine Online at the Illinois Labor History Society Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on August 27 2007 Dickens Charles 1842 American Notes New York The Modern Library ISBN 0 679 60185 6 National Council for Historical Education New England Mill Girls https www backstoryradio org wp content uploads sites 13 2015 02 Mill Girls Sources pdf accessed November 30 2018 a b An Operative 1845 Some of the Beauties of our Factory System Otherwise Lowell Slavery In Factory Tracts Factory Life As It Is Number One Lowell Online at the Center for History and New Media retrieved August 27 2007 a b Rights of Women The Voice of Industry http www industrialrevolution org rights of women html accessed November 30 2018 Hamilton Manufacturing Company 1848 Factory Rules in The Handbook to Lowell Online at the Illinois Labor History Society Archived 2009 04 16 at the Wayback Machine retrieved March 12 2009 Working Class Intellectual Culture The Voice of Industry retrieved November 8 2018 Betsy 1840 A Letter about Old Maids Lowell Offering Series 1 No 1 Online at the On Line Digital Archive of Documents on Weaving and Related Topics Retrieved on August 27 2007 Farley Harriet 1844 Editorial Two Suicides Lowell Offering Series 4 No 9 Online at Primary Sources Workshops in American History Retrieved on August 27 2007 Boston Transcript 1834 Online at Liberty Rhetoric and Nineteenth Century American Women Archived 2012 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on August 27 2007 Faragher John Mack et al Out Of Many Upper Saddle River Prentice Pearson Hall 2006 Pg 346 Zinn Howard 1980 A People s History of the United States p 225 New York HarperPerennial ISBN 0 06 092643 0 Wallis W D 2014 10 08 The Mathematics of Elections and Voting ISBN 9783319098104 Charles Cowley Illustrated History of Lowell Boston Lee and Shepard 1868 Robert G Layer Earnings of Cotton Mill Operatives 1825 1914 Cambridge Harvard University Press 1955 a b Quoted in Liberty Rhetoric and Nineteenth Century American Women Archived 2012 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on August 27 2007 See for example Activism Anarchy and Power Interview by Harry Kreisler 22 March 2002 Chomsky quoting Lowell Mill Girls from p 29 Chomsky on Democracy and Education edited by C P OteroFurther reading EditAlcott Kate The Daring Ladies of Lowell Anchor Books 2014 Historical fiction based the actual murder of a mill girl and the subsequent trial in 1833 Cook Sylvia Jenkins Oh Dear How the Factory Girls Do Rig Up Lowell s Self Fashioning Workingwomen New England Quarterly 2010 83 2 pp 219 249 in JSTOR Dublin Thomas Lowell Millhands in Transforming Women s Work New England Lives in the Industrial Revolution 1994 pp 77 118 Dublin Thomas 2019 Women Work and Protest in the Early Lowell Mills The Oppressing Hand of Avarice would Enslave Us The Working Class and its Culture pp 127 144 doi 10 4324 9781315050430 7 ISBN 978 1 315 05043 0 Mrozowski Stephen A et al eds Living on the Boott Historical Archeology at the Boott Mills Boardinghouses Lowell Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press 1996 Ranta Judith A Women and Children of the Mills An Annotated Guide to Nineteenth Century American Textile Factory Literature Greenwood Press 1999 Zonderman David A Aspirations and Anxieties New England Workers and the Mechanized Factory System 1815 1850 Oxford University Press 1992 Kirschbaum S March 2005 Mill Girls and Labor Movements Integrating Women s History into Early Industrialization Studies OAH Magazine of History 19 2 42 46 doi 10 1093 maghis 19 2 42 ProQuest 213748603 Primary sources Edit Eisler Benita 1998 The Lowell Offering Writings by New England Mill Women 1840 1845 W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 31685 8 External links EditBringing History Home Lowell Mill Girl Game University of Massachusetts Lowell Center for Lowell History Documents from Lowell 1845 1848 Illinois Labor History Society Lowell Mill Girl Letters University of Massachusetts Lowell Center for Lowell History Mill Life in Lowell Website University of Massachusetts Lowell Center for Lowell History The Lowell Offering University of Massachusetts Lowell Center for Lowell History The Voice of Industry Lowell National Historical Park Lowell Massachusetts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lowell mill girls amp oldid 1176107044, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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