Child Labor In The 1800s

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Child Labor has been something that we compress and do not talk about a lot and it was a prevalent and reoccurring action that happened during the industrial revolution. However, we been able to make major strides in the fight against it and in the United States it is nearly eliminated. Some of those changes include minimum age requirements, working conditions, hours you can work , overall pay, and the allowance for education. Back in the 1800s children got jobs out of necessity for money due to their families being extremely poor and unable to provide. Nowadays children get jobs to prove to others that they are maturing or earn money for themselves for either future endeavors or personal use. As many know the working conditions were nowhere near where they are today and in some cases they were so bad that some accidents became fatal. In some cases, children began to work at the age of 8 which prevented them from getting a proper education where all they knew how to do was one job. This prevented them from ending the cycle of their families being poor and not being able support themselves. On top of that they would work 12 hours a day and get minimal payment. As time went on children were able to start to get an education …show more content…

Now children can have jobs starting at the age of 12, but from 12-16 they may only work limited hours where their education does not get back logged and not put first. They can also only work non-hazardous jobs and can only work two times a week during a normal work week (Mon - Fri). Past the age of 16 children may be able to work for as many hours as they want in a week. This being that they are more mature and it allows them to learn valuable skills in which they can use in life later down the line. With all the child labor laws put into place, children are able get a better education and at the same time make some real

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