A few global problems affecting factory workers are long hours, physical stress and danger of injury, and workplace safety in general. In 3rd world and developing nations, problems like low wages and poor working conditions can further complicate the life of an industrial worker.
yes
Factory system
no
factory system.
Northern factory workers worked with dangerous materials and in high heat. Also factory workers rarely got to spend time with their families because they worked 13-15 hour days and when they were not working they were sleeping to prepare for work the next day. children worked for .30-.60 cents a week and adults worked for .75-1.00 a week there were tenements that the factory workers lived in and for an entire tenement building there were about three times the amount of rooms as an apartment building and about 1/4 the size of one.
Factory workers had to face the huge dumps other workers made, since there was no bathrooms located in the the factories. So it often smelled pretty bad. Workers hated the awful smell, they went on "Duty strike" around 1875.
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Factory workers had to face the huge dumps other workers made, since there was no bathrooms located in the the factories. So it often smelled pretty bad. Workers hated the awful smell, they went on "Duty strike" around 1875.
Factory workers had minimal working space so if there was a fire you had to be in a single file line, two, there were no laws so if there was a fire there were no sprinklers or smoke detector's, and third there were guards at each exit so you couldn't still from the factory's so some doors were locked.
animals eating their crops and hoodlums robbing them
they had to face snowstorms and avalanches killed workers and slowed progress
is this ur SS hw lol
Low wages and dangerous working conditions
Factory workers
Child factory workers, like all workers, were supervised.
Greed of corporations and lack of laws at the time to protect human rights.
just divide 1,160 by by 4 and you get ur answer 290