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Francis Cabot Lowell established several mills at Waltham, Massachusetts, in 1813, and founded the town of Lowell in 1826. Lowell needed workers for his expanding mills so he sent out agents to scour the country side of rural New England for "farmer's daughters." The girls were boarded in secure, company supervised lodging houses in Lowell and received $3 for 70 hours of work in the mills per week. It may seem like low wages and long hours, but at the time it was a reasonable wage for women and the girls from the rural areas were used to hard, physical labor on the family farms. The girls were also schooled, attended church, and given a variety of educational and cultural programs. They usually started as "Lowell's girls" at 16 or 17 years old and soon would have a dowry large enough to attract a suitable husband.
Northerners did not want the slaves to worry about unemployment like factory workers from the North.
slavery and the issues that it brougt
Maryland has the most slavery torture than any other eastern coast states in 1600s.
Slavery had been abolished in the British Empire since The Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, and 13th Amendment to the constitution abolished slavery in the United States in 1864. Therefore in answer to your question, there was no slavery in 1870.
Lowell Textile Mills is the name of a factory. You'd use it like you would any other place name.We visited Lowell Textile Mills yesterday.Lowell Textile Mills is the biggest factory in our state.
mostly textile industries like mirror factory
If slavery spread then they would have a better chance of keeping slavery in the united states. They wanted to keep slavery in the south because they did not have to pay their workers like the factory workers in the North did. "Free" labor.
Francis Cabot Lowell established several mills at Waltham, Massachusetts, in 1813, and founded the town of Lowell in 1826. Lowell needed workers for his expanding mills so he sent out agents to scour the country side of rural New England for "farmer's daughters." The girls were boarded in secure, company supervised lodging houses in Lowell and received $3 for 70 hours of work in the mills per week. It may seem like low wages and long hours, but at the time it was a reasonable wage for women and the girls from the rural areas were used to hard, physical labor on the family farms. The girls were also schooled, attended church, and given a variety of educational and cultural programs. They usually started as "Lowell's girls" at 16 or 17 years old and soon would have a dowry large enough to attract a suitable husband.
There is still plenty of slavery. Look at people-traffickers, drug mules, girls sold into vice...
Northerners did not want the slaves to worry about unemployment like factory workers from the North.
The working conditions of Lowell mills were very poor.
No. It is nothing at all like slavery.
The machines in the factory.
slavery is like your just being used by owners.
It is a free STATE that is closed by slavery. You know..... like when there is a free state, there is NO slavery. Therefore, it is like slavery is closed, that is way it is called closed to slavery.
he did not like slavery. let it be known though that slavery was not why Lincoln had the war. it was to stop the south fromm seceding. but to answer your question, no, he did not like slavery.