أنت هنا

قراءة كتاب Child Labor in City Streets

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
Child Labor in City Streets

Child Labor in City Streets

تقييمك:
0
لا توجد اصوات
المؤلف:
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 8

filthy rooms; here they are crowded two, three and sometimes four in one bed, with windows shut tight so as to avoid catching cold. The fruit and vegetables still on hand are stored for the night in these bedrooms and in the kitchen. In each peddling company there are usually three or four wagons and from four to eight boys.[26]

Minor Street Occupations

There are a few so-called street trades in which a relatively small number of children are engaged which so far have not been mentioned in this volume. These are the leading of blind persons and the accompanying of beggars in general, little children being found valuable for such work because they help to excite the sympathy of passers-by. A few children also are employed as lamplighters to go about towns lighting street lamps in the evening and extinguishing them in the early morning. A class of street boys who have as yet received no name in this country, but in England are called "touts," haunt the neighborhood of railroad depots and lie in wait for passengers with hand baggage, offering to carry it to the train for a small fee.

Some children are used as singers or performers upon musical instruments, but this is in reality only another form of begging. The writer found one instance of a young boy who was employed by the public library of one of our large cities to gather up overdue books about the city and to collect the fines imposed for failure to return the same. Very frequently in the course of his work this boy had to enter houses of prostitution, as the inmates are steady patrons of the public library, reading light literature, and are quite negligent in the matter of returning the books within the prescribed time. Immediately upon the librarian's learning of the situation, he was relieved of this duty, and a man was detailed to perform the task. Such special occupations as these do not constitute a real factor in the problem because of the small number of children involved, and hence they are omitted from consideration.

Conditions in Great Britain

Turning to Europe we find much more information on this subject. In Great Britain the House of Commons in 1898 ordered an inquiry to be made into the extent of child labor among public school pupils, and the education department sent schedules to the 20,022 public elementary schools in England and Wales for the purpose of determining the facts. A little more than half of the schools returned the schedules blank, stating that no children were employed; this introduced a large element of error into the return, as many of the schoolmasters misunderstood the meaning of the schedules, and consequently quite a number of children who should have been included were omitted from the total. The 9433 schedules which were filled and returned showed that 144,026 children (about three fourths boys and one fourth girls) were in attendance full time at the public elementary schools of England and Wales and known to be employed for profit outside of school hours.

The ages of these children reported as employed were as follows:[27]

Under 7 years 131
7 years 1,120
8 years 4,211
9 years 11,027
10 years 22,131
11 years 36,775
12 years 47,471
13 years 18,556
14 and over 1,787
Not given 817
Total 144,026

The standards or school grades in which these working children were enrolled and the total enrollment for the year ended August 31, 1898, were as follows:[28]

Working Children Total Enrollment
No Standard 329  
1st standard 3,890 2,875,088
2d standard 11,686 723,582
3d standard 24,624 679,096
4th standard 36,907 590,850
5th standard 37,315 421,728
6th standard 21,975 212,546
7th standard 6,382 66,442
Ex-7 standard 382 7,534
Not stated 536  
Total 144,026 5,576,866

The occupations followed by these children were divided into three main groups, and each of these groups was further divided into three classes. These divisions and the number of children in each were as follows:[29]

Piecework, chiefly Boys Time-work, chiefly Boys Domestic Employment, girls only, with One or Two Exceptions
Selling newspapers 15,182 In shops or running errands for shopkeepers 76,173 Minding babies 11,585
Hawking goods 2,435 Agricultural occupations 6,115 Other housework, including laundry work, etc. 9,254
Sports, taking dinners, knocking-up, etc. 8,627 Boot and knife

الصفحات