Charles Dickens' wife was a tailor.
Charles Dickens first job was working in Warren's Blacking Factory
a reporter
he was a clerk in civil service
He was a amatuer play writer
Warren Blacking Factory
Charles Dickens worked as a law clerk and learned about legal procedures while working at Doctors' Commons. This experience influenced his writing, as he often included legal themes in his novels.
Charles Dickens took his first job at the age of 12. He worked in a factory labeling jars of shoe polish.
His full name was Charles John Huffam Dickens
In 1833, Charles Dickens began working as a parliamentary reporter for the newspaper 'Mirror of Parliament'. This job provided him with valuable writing experience that later helped him in his career as a novelist.
Charles Dickens' father, John Dickens, was a clerk in the Navy Pay Office. He also struggled with finances and was eventually imprisoned for debt, which greatly influenced Charles' later writings about social issues and poverty.
Dickens was prompted to search for a job when his father was imprisoned for debt, forcing the young Charles Dickens to leave school and work in a blacking factory to help support his family.