http://www.ducksters.com/history/us_1800s/child_labor_industrial_revolution.php
Why did employers prefer to hire children than adults?
Employers loved to hire children for many factors. Children did not have to get a lot pay. They were cheap labor and there was plenty of them, and sometimes they weren’t paid any currency at all, instead their payment being “shelter and being kept away from starvation”. Furthermore, they worked hard and for long amounts of time, typically for 19 hours a day with …show more content…
a 1 hour break. They could do some jobs that adults couldn't do, like pushing wagons full of coal in tunnels that were only a few feet in height, and could collapse at any time with intoxicating chemicals. In some cases, the businesses treated the children in very similar ways to slaves, treating them no better than one.
What were some of the jobs that the kids worked?
Children performed all sorts of jobs including working on machines in factories, selling newspapers on street corners, breaking up coal at the coal mines, and as chimney sweeps. Sometimes children were preferred to adults because they were small and could easily fit between machines and into small spaces. Kids would work with mills, newspaper companies, in mines, factories, food markets, farms, sales companies, and a large variety of jobs.
What were the casualties that kids suffered?
The kids suffered physical abuse, particularly in the coal mines and textile factories.
Many children were forced to work in relatively bad conditions for much lower pay than their elders, earning 10–20% of an adult male's wage. Children as young as 4 years old were employed. Beatings and long hours were common, with some child coal miners and hurriers working from 4 am until 5 pm.Conditions were dangerous, with some children killed when they dozed off and fell into the path of the carts, while others died from gas explosions. Many children developed lung cancer and other diseases and died before the age of 25. Workhouses would sell orphans and abandoned children as "pauper apprentices", working without wages for board and lodging.Those who ran away would be whipped and returned to their masters, with some masters shackling them to prevent escape. Children employed as mule scavengers by cotton mills would crawl under machinery to pick up cotton, working 14 hours a day, six days a week. Some lost hands or limbs, others were crushed under the machines, and some were decapitated. Young girls worked at match factories, where phosphorus fumes would cause many to develop phossy jaw.Children employed at glassworks were regularly burned and blinded, and those working at potteries were vulnerable to poisonous clay
dust.