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Effects Of Child Labor In The Early 1900s

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Ilsa Lohja
Mrs. Miller
U.S. History CP 1 Period H
16 November 2017
Child Labor in 1900s of America: The Devastating effects on poor and rural children The practice of Child Labor in America in the early 1900s had a devastating impact on generations of children. This mainly impacted children of poor and disadvantaged families; these families tended to suffer from generations of debt or were new immigrants to America. These children worked long hours which they did not get paid nearly enough for. They worked hard, dangerous jobs daily. In the 1900s, children chose to support their families in times of need rather than furthering their education, for which they did not get paid nearly enough. These jobs affected their health poorly and had a negative impact on their childhood and development. Children of poor families in cities suffered the most during the Industrial Revolution, because they had to work long hours, did hard jobs, and often sacrificed their health and education to support their struggling families.
At this time children started working at a young age. The necessity of supporting their families, which caused child labor, forced children to start working at a very young age. In rural America, it was such a common practice for children to start working on farms at such a young age, that they picked up the trade before they became teenagers. According to Rosenberg, “by the age of ten, the farm boy began to acquire a workmen's identity of his own. He was capable

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