Mill workers had the worst and most deplorable living conditions. They were forced to live underground for up to 6 months. Most of them died when coming back up to the surface.
It was hellish, working soo hard for little to no pay.
they had a sewar system and lots of animals to maintain
Three-Field System
the feudal system for serfs was a bad thing because they always had to do work for the kings,lord and/or knights.
Like Slaves
life was hard, the worked in these terable conditions there were young girls working in the mills. at times it was hard you had to pull your hair back so it would not get caught in the machine and also sometimes they could loose their hands or fingers.
Like most workers, a working life.
Its a hard and rough life.
The life for migrant workers in California was not easy. They were commonly subjected to heavy workloads and meagre pay rates.
The working conditions of Lowell mills were very poor.
Hard and under payed.
the pits
life was hard, the worked in these terable conditions there were young girls working in the mills. at times it was hard you had to pull your hair back so it would not get caught in the machine and also sometimes they could loose their hands or fingers.
It was hellish, working soo hard for little to no pay.
The life of workers are different in tea or coffee and indigo plantation in India because in indigo plantation the workers works like a servant but in tea or coffee plantation the workers had no force to work. thank you and have a nice day.
Life was bad in the 1930's. This is because of the great depression. Jobs were cut and 29% of South Americans lost their jobs.
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.