The Trade Union Woman by Alice Henry
page 255 of 349 (73%)
page 255 of 349 (73%)
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We have traveled a long way during the last hundred and fifty years
or so, and in that time have witnessed the complete transference from home to factory of many home industries, notably spinning and weaving, and soap-and candle-making. Others like the preparation of food are still in process of transference. The factory industries are the direct and legitimate offspring of the primitive home industries, and their growth and development are entirely on the lines of a normal evolution. [Illustration: _Courtesy of The Pine Mountain Settlement_ Primitive Industry. Kentucky mountain woman at her spinning-wheel. 1913] [Illustration: _Courtesy of The Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy_ Italian Woman Home Finisher] But there is another form of industry that is a ghastly hybrid, the "home-work" that has been born of the union of advanced factory methods and primitive home appliances. Such a combination could never have come into existence, had the working classes at the time of the inception of machine-driven industry possessed either an understanding of what was happening, or the power to prevent their own exploitation. The effects of this home-work are in every way deadly. There is not a single redeeming feature about the whole business. Like the spinner or the weaver of olden times, the sewing-machine operator or the shirt-finisher of the present day provides her own workroom, lighting and tools, but unlike her, she enjoys no freedom in their use, nor has she any control over the hours she works, the prices she asks or the class of work she undertakes. With the home-worker hard-driven by her sister in poverty, and driving |
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