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Bot identified the article as needed cleanup and put the relevant maintenance tags. Please fix the identified problems. If you think the maintenance tags were put in error then just revert the bot's edits. If you have any questions please contact the bot owner.
Yours truly AlexNewArtBot 15:08, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
Okay you guys. I did not create this article but I edited and wrote most of it. First I would like to say that this is for my class, and I am not an experienced editor. Second, if there is anything I need to fix please let me know. Third I am not done yet so I would really appreciate the help. Kiara11591
Parking this here for now- it doesn't really fit into the article
The Morning Post of 17 January 1833 printed the following information on "Hours of labour of other trades than the cotton, in which children are employed in conjunction with adults (delivered in and proved on oath, and inserted in Appendix to the Evidence on the Factory System, No 34)"
Trade | Location | Hour/day | Starting age | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Earthenware & Porcelain | Staffordshire & Derby | 12 - 15 | ||
File Cutters | Warrington | 72/week | ||
Nail-makers | Birmingham | 12 | ||
Iron Works, Forges & Mills | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 (night working alternate weeks) | 8 | |
Iron Founders | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 | 8 | |
Collieries | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 including under ground | 8 | |
Collieries | Lancashire | 11 under ground; 12 - 13 above ground | 8 | |
Glass trade | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 (night working) | 9 - 10 | |
Wire card-makers | Halifax | 12 - 13 | ||
Watch-makers | Coventry | 12 in winter; 14 in summer | ||
Pinmakers | Warrington | 14 | younger than the cotton mills of that place | |
Needlemakers | Gloucester | 13 | ||
Manufacturers of Arms | Birmingham | 13 | 7-9 | |
Calico Printing | Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire etc | 12-16 ; sometimes all night | 8 | |
Worsted Mills | Leeds | 13 | ||
Worsted Mills | Halifax | 12 -16 - sometimes all night | ||
Worsted Mills | Keighly | some of them all night | ||
Worsted Mills | Exwick | 12 | ||
Worsted Mills | Norwich | 14 (part of the people all night) | 10 | |
Worsted Mills | Manchester | 14 | ||
Flax Mills | Leeds | 13 | ||
Flax Mills | Halifax | 14 - 16 several of them all night | ||
Flax Mills | Shrewsbury | 71 / week | ||
Hosiery | Leicester | 12 in winter ; 13 in summer | ||
Hosiery | Nottingham | 15 | ||
Hosiery | Mansfield | Longer than at any cotton-mill in that neighbourhood | ||
Lace manufactory | Mansfield | Longer than at any cotton-mill in that neighbourhood | Children employed as soon as they can use the needle | |
Lace manufactory | Nottingham | 12 | 7 | |
Lace manufactory | Tiverton | 14 | ||
Silk mill | Derby | 72 / week | ||
Silk mill | Macclesfield | 76 / week | ||
Silk mill | Nottingham | 13 | 8 | |
Silk mill | Congleton | 12 | 5 | |
Silk mill | Stockport | as in cotton factories | as in cotton factories | |
Power loom weaving | Stockport | as in cotton factories | as in cotton factories | |
Cotton Weavers by Hand | Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire etc | 14 - 16 | Children of all ages | |
Cotton Weavers by Hand | Paisley | 15 | 7 | Children used as drawers to weavers |
Rjccumbria ( talk) 00:03, 19 August 2014 (UTC)
What does this sentence mean?
"The following provides an in-depth view of the history of the report and of Michael Sadler as well as how the report was related to the labour of women and children."
This sounds like something from a source with an ax to grind? It makes me think the whole thing, or at least big parts of it, is copied from somewhere else. it certainly isn't the language of a typical encyclopedia article. AnthroMimus ( talk) 23:35, 15 November 2014 (UTC)
This whole article is not only argumentative, it is based exclusively on Austrian School Economic arguments and cites. All of the "economic historians" are libertarian-Mises Institute types. There are no citations to historians of British political history at all.
Moreover, it is not written like an encyclopedia article. It is shaped solely to agree with a certain view of political economy. AnthroMimus ( talk) 13:07, 9 December 2014 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
![]() | This article was the subject of an educational assignment that ended on 1 July 2009. Further details are available here. |
Bot identified the article as needed cleanup and put the relevant maintenance tags. Please fix the identified problems. If you think the maintenance tags were put in error then just revert the bot's edits. If you have any questions please contact the bot owner.
Yours truly AlexNewArtBot 15:08, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
Okay you guys. I did not create this article but I edited and wrote most of it. First I would like to say that this is for my class, and I am not an experienced editor. Second, if there is anything I need to fix please let me know. Third I am not done yet so I would really appreciate the help. Kiara11591
Parking this here for now- it doesn't really fit into the article
The Morning Post of 17 January 1833 printed the following information on "Hours of labour of other trades than the cotton, in which children are employed in conjunction with adults (delivered in and proved on oath, and inserted in Appendix to the Evidence on the Factory System, No 34)"
Trade | Location | Hour/day | Starting age | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Earthenware & Porcelain | Staffordshire & Derby | 12 - 15 | ||
File Cutters | Warrington | 72/week | ||
Nail-makers | Birmingham | 12 | ||
Iron Works, Forges & Mills | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 (night working alternate weeks) | 8 | |
Iron Founders | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 | 8 | |
Collieries | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 including under ground | 8 | |
Collieries | Lancashire | 11 under ground; 12 - 13 above ground | 8 | |
Glass trade | Warwickshire & Staffordshire | 12 (night working) | 9 - 10 | |
Wire card-makers | Halifax | 12 - 13 | ||
Watch-makers | Coventry | 12 in winter; 14 in summer | ||
Pinmakers | Warrington | 14 | younger than the cotton mills of that place | |
Needlemakers | Gloucester | 13 | ||
Manufacturers of Arms | Birmingham | 13 | 7-9 | |
Calico Printing | Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire etc | 12-16 ; sometimes all night | 8 | |
Worsted Mills | Leeds | 13 | ||
Worsted Mills | Halifax | 12 -16 - sometimes all night | ||
Worsted Mills | Keighly | some of them all night | ||
Worsted Mills | Exwick | 12 | ||
Worsted Mills | Norwich | 14 (part of the people all night) | 10 | |
Worsted Mills | Manchester | 14 | ||
Flax Mills | Leeds | 13 | ||
Flax Mills | Halifax | 14 - 16 several of them all night | ||
Flax Mills | Shrewsbury | 71 / week | ||
Hosiery | Leicester | 12 in winter ; 13 in summer | ||
Hosiery | Nottingham | 15 | ||
Hosiery | Mansfield | Longer than at any cotton-mill in that neighbourhood | ||
Lace manufactory | Mansfield | Longer than at any cotton-mill in that neighbourhood | Children employed as soon as they can use the needle | |
Lace manufactory | Nottingham | 12 | 7 | |
Lace manufactory | Tiverton | 14 | ||
Silk mill | Derby | 72 / week | ||
Silk mill | Macclesfield | 76 / week | ||
Silk mill | Nottingham | 13 | 8 | |
Silk mill | Congleton | 12 | 5 | |
Silk mill | Stockport | as in cotton factories | as in cotton factories | |
Power loom weaving | Stockport | as in cotton factories | as in cotton factories | |
Cotton Weavers by Hand | Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire etc | 14 - 16 | Children of all ages | |
Cotton Weavers by Hand | Paisley | 15 | 7 | Children used as drawers to weavers |
Rjccumbria ( talk) 00:03, 19 August 2014 (UTC)
What does this sentence mean?
"The following provides an in-depth view of the history of the report and of Michael Sadler as well as how the report was related to the labour of women and children."
This sounds like something from a source with an ax to grind? It makes me think the whole thing, or at least big parts of it, is copied from somewhere else. it certainly isn't the language of a typical encyclopedia article. AnthroMimus ( talk) 23:35, 15 November 2014 (UTC)
This whole article is not only argumentative, it is based exclusively on Austrian School Economic arguments and cites. All of the "economic historians" are libertarian-Mises Institute types. There are no citations to historians of British political history at all.
Moreover, it is not written like an encyclopedia article. It is shaped solely to agree with a certain view of political economy. AnthroMimus ( talk) 13:07, 9 December 2014 (UTC)