The closest to a specfic date is Wikipedia, who says it was right before his father was arrested for debt (John Dickens certain saw it coming). Charles was 12 at the time, which would make the year 1824.
He worked for 8 months in a blacking (shoe polish) factory, attaching labels to bottles of blacking.
Warren's Blacking Factory was a factory where Charles Dickens worked as a child, pasting labels on bottles of boot blacking. This experience had a profound impact on Dickens and influenced his writing, including themes of poverty, class struggle, and social injustice in his novels.
Charles Dickens worked in a shoe polish factory in Warren's Blacking Warehouse in London. The factory was located on Hungerford Stairs, near the Thames River. Dickens worked there as a young boy to help support his family during a difficult financial time.
Charles Dickens first job was working in Warren's Blacking Factory
At the age of 12, Charles Dickens worked in a blacking factory where he pasted labels onto pots of boot blacking. This experience marked him deeply and influenced much of his writing later on.
stuck price labels on bottles of blacking ( polish)
After his father was released from prison, Charles Dickens experienced financial stability and was able to focus on his education and pursue a career as a writer. His father's release allowed Dickens to move past the stigma of having a parent in prison and gave him greater freedom to explore his literary talents.
When Charles Dickens was a child he enjoyed being outside and reading.When he was 12 his father went to jail because he was in dept so Charles worked inWarren's boot- blacking factory for the white.
At age 12, Charles Dickens worked at Warren's boot-blacking factory to help support his family while his father was in debtors' prison. He worked 10-hour days pasting labels on pots of "blacking," a type of shoe polish, in a job that deeply influenced his views on social inequality and mistreatment of the poor.
His father had been imprisoned in Marshallsea Debtors Prison and, at twelve, he was considered old enough to work at Warren's Blacking Company, applying labels to bottles of blacking (shoe polish).
As a child, Charles Dickens worked in a boot-blacking factory to help support his family after his father was imprisoned for debt. This experience deeply impacted him and influenced his writing, as themes of poverty and social injustice often appear in his novels.
Dickens was actually a good student. He loved school and worked hard, especially after his experience working at the blacking factory while his father was in debtors prison.