Labor And Women

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I.  THE EARLY YEARS

The history of trade union go back into the early history of America.  When the Pilgrims arrived

at Plymouth Rock in 1620, they had with them three craftsmen.  Unions of carpenters, cabinet

makers and cobblers formed along the Atlantic seaboard.  Workers played a bigt role in

the struggle for independence in America.  Their efforts in demanding higher pay and shorter

working hours by going on strike during the 18th century led to the beginning of the organized

labor movement.

From the late colonial period through the America Revolution, a woman's work was usually

centered on the home.  In Early America, the work of a wife was often along side of her husband,

running the household, farm or plantation.  Cooking, making garments, spinning yarn, sewing

and mending clothes took much of her time.  After the Revolution to the early 19th century, the

education of a child was put on the mother.  Widows and the wives of men off fighting in the war

or on business, were often left to tend to large farms or plantations.  Other women worked as

servants or slaves, helping out with household chores of other wives or substituting for the wife

if there was not one in the family.

In the 1840's and 50's, as the Industrial Revolution and factory labor began in the US, more

women went to work outside the home.  By 1840 ten percent of women held jobs outside the

home and ten years later this number had risen to fifteen percent.  Factory owners hired women

and children where they could because they would accept lowe ...
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