Today, they wear "ear muffs" that cut about 90% of the noise. In this day and age, it is required by law. Note that I am speakng of well -developed countries here. In foundries in countries known more for "sweatshops", noise pollution in the workplace is still probably a severe problem.
Garment workers worked in factories.
Early factories obtained their workers through bribes and smuggling. Some factories also took children from schools as early as 8 years of age.
They worked at factories.
Pakistan has a large number of factories .But most of factories are closed due to power shortage and workers are unemployed .
workers
no
the answer is that they had light bulbs to light the factories and workers working on the items
Factory workers had to face the huge dumps other workers made, since there was no bathrooms located in the the factories. So it often smelled pretty bad. Workers hated the awful smell, they went on "Duty strike" around 1875.
Make things. Depends on what the factory makes.
Condition lives of workers in factories in 1907's was horrible.
the problam was that children had to wok in the factories instead of going to school.
There was a legislation limiting the number's of the factory workers in the nineteenth century. This hurt then as they were growing in nos.