The Merimack River,mill owners dammed it.
Lowell Facts:The factory owners relied on Lowell girls to work for them (the Lowell girls were nearby farm girls)The Lowell girls relied on factory owners to give them jobsthey lived in town near their job with "___mothers"(i cant think of the ___ name -sorry)they sent the money home to their familythe conditions weren't so bad
they fired the girls
Business owners made profits and benefited from new industrial technologies, while laborers were paid little and rarely had access to new products resulting from industrial advances.
Slave owners would punish them by whipping them.
workers who were "Reds" or communists
Lowell Facts:The factory owners relied on Lowell girls to work for them (the Lowell girls were nearby farm girls)The Lowell girls relied on factory owners to give them jobsthey lived in town near their job with "___mothers"(i cant think of the ___ name -sorry)they sent the money home to their familythe conditions weren't so bad
C. Lowell Harriss has written: 'History and policies of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation'
arent plantation owners farmers?
The owners of the animal.
they fired the girls
Factory owners housed and protected women employees.
slaves and slave owners.
The civil war affected many people. It affected slave owners, they were worried they were gonna loose their slaves. It affected the south, They seperate from the union and they made thier own country called the Confederate States of America.
Owners Drawing account, which is owners equity and is debited. Cash, which is an asset and thats credited.
Assets are affected such as supplies are increased on debit side. Accounts payable is affected by being credited or increased. Owners equity is also affected by being credited or lowered on the balance sheet.
Yes, they are not native, but they are sometimes found where irresponsible pet owners introduced them into the environment.
I believe you are referring to Lowell, a city about 45 minutes from Boston. Neither Lowell nor the mills were specifically made for girls, but factory owners recruited females, especially young females, most often; girls and young women could be paid less money than men, and they had excellent manual dexterity. While some owners were reasonably humane towards their young female workers, others were harsh and cruel, pressuring the girls to do more, yet paying them lower and lower wages. Ultimately, there were several labor strikes in Lowell over pay and working conditions. Today, Lowell has several tourist attractions where the original mills have been re-opened as museums, and you can see first-hand what the young women did there and the conditions they worked under.