Yes
yes
No. Women weren't allow to work when the lamplighters existed.
Most actually were afraid of the thought of trying to get the privilege to work. The majority wanted to, but many women could be put to prison if they went on strike. There also were suffragettes who were the ones that did all they could to vote. So, as a conclusion, nearly all women wanted to work, but not all would do what they could.
At your fathers house
The factories could pay women lower wages than they could pay men.
in the 1700- 1840s women could work in cotton factories along with men and children.
The Roman women who actually worked at a job were of the lower classes. If she had a husband or family who had a business, such as a snack bar or bakery, she would work helping the family. She could own or work at a laundry. She could own a shop. If she were skilled in sewing, she could do embroidery. Some women were even carpenters or woodworkers. They did just about the same types of work that women do today.
yes
It was scary because you would never know what they could do
Amelia Earhart.
There are many stores one could visit to purchase women's work gloves or buy them online. They are available from Macy's, Gempler's, Charm and Hammer and Amazon.
Women did not have the same rights as men in the 1800s. They did not have the same opportunities to an education, they could not vote, and when they could find work they were paid very little