2-4 dollars a week
Lowell mill girls went out to plays they went shopping or just relaxed
"Another of Lowell's innovations was in hiring young farm girls to work in the mill. He paid them lower wages than men, but offered benefits that many girls, some as young as 15, were eager to earn. Mill girls lived in clean company boardinghouses with chaperones, were paid cash, and benefitted from religious and educational activities. Waltham boomed as workers flocked to Lowell's novel enterprise."
An advantage is you get paid. A disadvantage is you can get your hair stuck in a machine.
Girls did a lot of different thing like, 10 mile walks everyday, went into war, and Hitler paid some of the girls to have babies
they get paid 200,000
Lowell mill girls went out to plays they went shopping or just relaxed
"Another of Lowell's innovations was in hiring young farm girls to work in the mill. He paid them lower wages than men, but offered benefits that many girls, some as young as 15, were eager to earn. Mill girls lived in clean company boardinghouses with chaperones, were paid cash, and benefitted from religious and educational activities. Waltham boomed as workers flocked to Lowell's novel enterprise."
these girls worked very long hours, and were only paid very little,
An advantage is you get paid. A disadvantage is you can get your hair stuck in a machine.
Children get paid- 33- 67 cents per week. Women- 67, 73 cents or more. Hash tag #Julie Maee ;) 4/4/2013 -Hope that helps-
I believe you are referring to Lowell, a city about 45 minutes from Boston. Neither Lowell nor the mills were specifically made for girls, but factory owners recruited females, especially young females, most often; girls and young women could be paid less money than men, and they had excellent manual dexterity. While some owners were reasonably humane towards their young female workers, others were harsh and cruel, pressuring the girls to do more, yet paying them lower and lower wages. Ultimately, there were several labor strikes in Lowell over pay and working conditions. Today, Lowell has several tourist attractions where the original mills have been re-opened as museums, and you can see first-hand what the young women did there and the conditions they worked under.
Lowell hired young girls as employees in his textile mills because they could be paid lower wages than adult workers, and they were thought to be more dexterous and easier to manage in the factory setting. Additionally, young girls were seen as a source of cheap and flexible labor due to their availability and vulnerability to exploitation.
1 mill every day or 500,000 every day
6,000 an episode.
100000
They received high wages between 2 and 4 dollars a week, so they stayed. hope this helps :-)
91 lakhs is theanswer