Working conditions
during the Industrial Revolution
(1) William Hutton, The Life of William Hutton (1816)
In the Christmas holidays of 1731 snow
was followed by a sharp frost. A thaw came on in the afternoon of the 27th, but
in the night the ground was again caught by a frost, which glazed the streets.
I did not awake, the next morning, till daylight seemed to appear. I rose in
tears, for fear of punishment, and went to my father's bedside, to ask the
time. He believed six; I darted out in agonies, and from the bottom of Full
Street, to the top of Silk mill Lane, not 200 yards, I fell nine times!
Observing no lights in the mill, I knew it was an early hour, and the
reflection of the snow had deceived me. Returning, the town clock struck two.
(2) Elizabeth Bentley, interviewed by Michael
Sadler's Parliamentary Committee on 4th June, 1832.
I worked from five in the morning till
nine at night. I lived two miles from the mill. We had no clock. If I had been
too late at the mill, I would have been quartered. I mean that if I had been a
quarter of an hour too late, a half an hour would have been taken off. I only
got a penny an hour, and they would have taken a halfpenny.
(3) Frank Forrest, Chapters in the Life of a Dundee Factory Boy
(1850)
In reality there were no regular hours,
masters and managers did with us as they liked. The clocks in the factories
were often put forward in the morning and back at night. Though this was known
amongst the hands, we were afraid to speak, and a workman then was afraid to
carry a watch.
(4) James Patterson, interviewed
by Michael Sadler's Parliamentary Committee, 30th June, 1832.
I worked at Mr. Braid's Mill at Duntruin. We worked as long as we could see. I
could not say at what hour we stopped. There was no clock in the mill. There
was nobody but the master and the master's son had a watch and so we did not
know the time. The operatives were not permitted to have a watch. There was one
man who had a watch but it was taken from him because he told the men the time.
(5) Lord Ashley, speech in the House of
Commons, 9th May, 1836
Of the thirty-one medical men who were examined, sixteen gave it as their most decided opinion that ten hours is the utmost quantity of labour which can be endured by the children, with the slightest chance of preserving their health. Dr. Loudon reports, "I am of the opinion no child under fourteen years of age should work in a factory of any description more than eight hours a day." Dr. Hawkins reports, "I am compelled to declare my deliberate opinion, that no child should be employed in factory labour below the age of ten; that no individual, under the age of eighteen, should be engaged in it longer than ten hours daily."