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The Changing Workplace Chapter 8-4.  Women work in homes  Cottage industry: goods produced at home  finished goods brought to manufacturer  Replaced.

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Presentation on theme: "The Changing Workplace Chapter 8-4.  Women work in homes  Cottage industry: goods produced at home  finished goods brought to manufacturer  Replaced."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Changing Workplace Chapter 8-4

2  Women work in homes  Cottage industry: goods produced at home  finished goods brought to manufacturer  Replaced by power looms (decreased time and lowered costs) Early 19 th century work

3  Artisans worked in shops attached to homes  Master: most experienced artisan  Journeyman: skilled worker – master’s assistant  Apprentice: young worker learning skills  Factories lowered costs & let unskilled workers make goods rather than trained artisans

4  “mill girls” = unmarried farm girls who worked in textile factories  Lowell Mill:  Women were paid less than men – but working in a mill paid more than other careers for women  5am- 7:30pm work day  Factories badly ventilated = illness & discomfort Farm to Factory

5  Strike: a work stoppage designed to force an employer to respond to workers’ demands  Lowell strikes: mainly because of wage cuts  1834: 800 mill girls  1836: 1,600+ mill girls  1845: Lowell Female Labor Reform Association founded Strikes

6  Employers won most strikes in 1830s and 1840s – could easily replace unskilled workers  Strikebreakers: mostly immigrants who worked long hours for low wages

7  Trades unions designed to standardize wages and conditions in each industry  National Trades’ Union: largest union formed by trade unions that united to form federations (lasted until 1837)  Fought for common goals  Hard to organize together because courts said strikes were illegal Unions

8  1830-1860: increase in European immigration  1845-1854: 3 million immigrants came to US (mostly German & Irish)  1815-1844: almost1 million Irish immigrants  Great Potato Famine 1845-1854: killed 1 million Irish and caused another million to come to US  Irish were hated (Catholic, poor, worked for extremely low wages and horrible conditions) Immigration Increases

9  Supported workers’ rights to strike (upheld rights of labor)  20,000+ workers were involved in strikes for better working conditions and wages by 1860 Commonwealth v. Hunt 1842


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