children were forced to work because there parents either got hurt or couldn't get a job and they got to support their family. Or they are either sold out by their family in the first place as parents are in great need of money.
bom chic hom
Workhouses were where poor people who had no job or home lived. They earned their keep by doing jobs in the workhouse. Also in the workhouses were orphaned (children without parents) and abandoned children, the physically and mentally sick, the disabled, the elderly and unmarried mothers.
None whatsoever. You had to be completely destitute, to have no place to live, no job, no family. Sometimes a whole family were forced to enter a workhouses, but the relatives were split up and put to work extremely hard. Their work was free, in exchange for some rags, 1-2 bowls of gruel per day and a bed covered with straw in an unheated room.
for laundry work picking oakim and making mail bags
In a Victorian work house children, adults and elderly went to work in a workhouse if they were poor or badly ill. If they broke the rules then they would be put in a cage in a dark room, fined of even put into prison!
bom chic hom
Victorians had workhouses as a solution for poverty relief and a way to provide work and shelter to the poor. However, they were also seen as a deterrent to idleness and were designed to be harsh to discourage people from seeking assistance unless absolutely necessary.
no
Workhouses were where poor people who had no job or home lived. They earned their keep by doing jobs in the workhouse. Also in the workhouses were orphaned (children without parents) and abandoned children, the physically and mentally sick, the disabled, the elderly and unmarried mothers.
where children forced to work is called childlabour
Chlidren were forced to work in the 1800's because they were poor, and they needed to take care of their families
None whatsoever. You had to be completely destitute, to have no place to live, no job, no family. Sometimes a whole family were forced to enter a workhouses, but the relatives were split up and put to work extremely hard. Their work was free, in exchange for some rags, 1-2 bowls of gruel per day and a bed covered with straw in an unheated room.
Because the greed of men knows no bounds.
Chlidren were forced to work in the 1800's because they were poor, and they needed to take care of their families
Because they were made to be slaves or threatened to be killed
for laundry work picking oakim and making mail bags
In a Victorian work house children, adults and elderly went to work in a workhouse if they were poor or badly ill. If they broke the rules then they would be put in a cage in a dark room, fined of even put into prison!