Women and the Early Industrial
Revolution in the United States
by Thomas Dublin
Professor of History, State University of New York at Binghamton
The industrial revolution that transformed Western Europe and the United
States during the course of the nineteenth century had its origins in
the introduction of power-driven machinery in the English and Scottish
textile industries in the second half of the eighteenth century. But far
more than the cotton textile industry was transformed in the course of
that revolution. Non-industrial wage labor increased; urban centers grew;
and in farming areas, outwork occupations and commercial agriculture transformed
the rural labor market. Finally, these economic developments coincided
with dramatic changes in family life, particularly declining family size
and increasing life expectancy. A greater role for women in the labor
force, contemporary politics, and reform activities was certainly one
of the unintended consequences of technological change in nineteenth-century
America.
The industrial revolution in the United States was dependent from the
outset on the transatlantic movement of British immigrants and British
technology, including the adoption of the spinning jenny, water frame,
and spinning mule that made the textile industry possible. The flood of
British exports to the United States after the American Revolution stimulated
efforts to replicate the inventions that gave English manufacturers such
an advantage in the American marketplace. Out of these efforts emerged
the first permanent cotton spinning mill in the United States in Pawtucket,
R.I. English emigrant Samuel Slater--himself a former apprentice at the
English textile firm of Arkwright & Strutt--reconstructed an Arkwright
waterframe under the sponsorship of Providence merchants, William Almy
and Moses Brown. The firm of Almy, Brown, & Slater pioneered in the
machine production of cotton yarn between 1790 and 1840. This company
expanded, gave rise to a number of other firms, and established the basic
set of business practices that came to be called the Rhode Island system.
These southern New England textile firms followed British practices, employing
entire families, with children comprising the vast majority of the mill
workforce. While the mills focused on carding and spinning, they relied
on rural and urban hand weavers to finish the cloth. Thus the first cotton
textile mills were very much a part of the region's rural landscape.
The success of these first factories spawned new competitors, however,
and the new factories contributed to a wave of urbanization in northern
New England. The new wave of textile investment followed on the heels
of a famous bit of industrial espionage by Boston merchant Francis Cabot
Lowell. Lowell visited mills in Great Britain and, on his return to Massachusetts,
began efforts to reconstruct the power loom he had seen there. By 1814
he had succeeded and, armed with a charter of incorporation from the state
legislature, he established the Boston Manufacturing Company in Waltham,
Massachusetts.
Textile mills of the Waltham-Lowell system sprang up across the northern
New England countryside between 1814 and 1850 and grew steadily across
the second half of the century. Mills of the Rhode Island variety expanded
as well, and the earlier regional differences faded over time. At mid-century,
New England's textile workforce had grown to number 85,000 producing cloth
goods valued at $68 million annually. Adding in a substantial textile
industry in the Philadelphia area, cotton and woolen textile mills were
the nation's leading industrial employers at this date.
The adoption of the power loom permitted the vertical integration of all
steps in the cloth manufacturing process under a single roof. From opening
the bales, to carding, spinning, dressing the warp yarn, and finally weaving
the cloth, all production steps were conducted within the mill. This change
led to a change in the labor force as well. Both the power loom and the
dressing frame required fairly tall workers and children simply wouldn't
do as they had for the mills in southern New England. Thus, the Waltham
company depended from the outset on a workforce of young, single women
recruited from the countryside. The firm reached far into the countryside
for this workforce, and had to construct boardinghouses to accommodate
the rural women recruited from the surrounding countryside. Finally, to
entice this new pool of labor, management offered monthly cash wages,
a definite competitive advantage in comparison to practices in the family-style
Rhode Island mills.
Between 1830 and 1860, women remained a key labor force for this growing
industry. Mill superintendents paid recruiters to circulate through northern
New England and to bring suitable young women to work in their mills.
The wages, typically set at $3.00 to $3.50 per week, were much higher
than anything farm daughters could earn in their hometowns and proved
a strong attraction.
What motivated young women to leave their families in the countryside
to work in the mills of New England's growing urban centers? Between analysis
of the economic backgrounds of the families of mill women and what they
had to say in their correspondence it is clear that mill employment permitted
young women to earn their own support without depending on their families;
second, the wages permitted young women to save something for their future
marriages; finally, some mill daughters used their earnings to assist
their families.
On the whole, a mix of personal and familial motivations led daughters
to leave their farming homes and take up mill employment. There was, in
fact, a continuum stretching from those who went to the mills for entirely
personal reasons, and those who went to earn money to help support their
families. Long-term economic considerations--particularly how to save
in anticipation of marriage--had more to do with the migration than the
short-term consideration of immediate self support. Women came from farming
families that were able to maintain a modest standard of living. So it
was not poverty, per se, but the lack of future opportunities that pushed
young women into the mills. And while young women were attending to their
futures, and supporting themselves in mill towns, they achieved a measure
of economic and social independence not possible while living under the
parental roof.
Beyond the economic consequences of the growth of factory employment,
significant cultural changes accompanied women's work in the early mills.
Contemporaries repeatedly expressed concern that the mills were making
young women unfit in a variety of ways for what was expected of them as
nineteenth-century women. Some were concerned that mill employment made
farmers' daughters less fit for marriage because they had become citified.
They argued that the urban mill experience made young women dissatisfied
with the country life of their parents. Thus one writer complained in
1858 that young working women no longer wanted a farm life. "They
contemn," he wrote, “the calling of their father, and will,
nine times out of ten, marry a mechanic in preference to a farmer."
And this perception was based to a considerable degree on reality. Tracing
a sample of mill women over their lifetimes reveals that only about a
third married men who were farmers or farm laborers and only a quarter
of those who married lived the rest of their lives in their hometowns.
Mill employment led many rural women to marry artisans or other urban
workers and to migrate from the farming homes of their youth to New England's
growing cities. Young people voted with their feet and their elders did
not approve.
Mill employment also led some farmers' daughters to become engaged in
the reform movements of the antebellum decades. There were labor protests
in Lowell and other New England mill towns in the 1830s and 1840s and
the women who became involved in these struggles were active across a
wide range of reform activity.
The height of labor protest in the New England mills before the Civil
War came with the emergence in the 1840s of a Ten Hour Movement aiming
for reduction in the hours of labor in the mills. The mills ran for 73
hours a week in this period, averaging slightly more than twelve hours
a day. As the pace of work in the mills increased without any wage gains,
millworkers came to demand a ten-hour workday, giving them time to relax,
attend meetings and lectures, and participate in the urban cultural scene
around them. These protests built on earlier strikes, known as "turn-outs"
in the language of the time, reveal much about the sensibility that New
England women brought to the mill experience. In October 1836, on the
occasion of the second turn-out in Lowell, women founded the Lowell Factory
Girls Association to organize their protest. The preamble to the association's
constitution reveals mill women's sense of themselves as "daughters
of freemen" and their connection to the young nation's republican
tradition. The mill women, some 2,500 in number, left the mills to protest
an increase in charges at company boardinghouses unaccompanied by a corresponding
increase in their wages. The women held out for several months and displayed
a keen sense of tactics in their struggle with the mill agents. In the
end, the companies reduced boardinghouse charges for a good proportion
of their workers, and the mill women returned to work.
Ten years later, women organized the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association
with a view to restricting the hours of labor. The Association survived
for two and a half years and organized petition campaigns calling on the
state legislature to set ten hours as the legal limit for the working
day. Republicanism from the revolutionary tradition and perfectionism
from evangelical Protestantism were two major threads that both workingmen
and working women drew upon to protest the new impositions of industrial
capitalism in nineteenth-century America.
These traditions also led mill women to become involved in a variety of
other reform movements. Antislavery was strong in Lowell and mill women
sent several petitions to Washington opposing slavery in the District
of Columbia and opposing war with Mexico which might contribute to an
expansion of slavery into the Southwest. Women reformers came to see opposition
to black slavery and wage slavery as related causes. Some also participated
in the women's rights conventions that mushroomed after the first one
was held in Seneca Falls, New York in July 1848. Mary Emerson, a leader
in Lowell's ten hour movement, attended a woman's rights convention in
Worcester, Massachusetts in October 1851. She shared the broad reform
perspective that launched women mill workers into labor protest in these
two decades and contributed to the widening perspectives of American women
in politics and social reform in the mid-nineteenth century.
The experiences of mill women demonstrate that factory employment not
only brought women's work out of the home but also provided women a collective
experience that supported their participation in the world of broader
social reform. Lowell women became involved in antislavery, moral reform,
peace, labor reform, prison reform, and women's rights campaigns. Furthermore,
working women, like workingmen in this period, drew initially on republican
traditions to defend their rights and interests but ultimately came to
justify their concern for social justice on a combination of religious
and rationalist grounds. They came to oppose the growing inequality evident
in American society and to demand for themselves as workers and as women
greater rights and rewards in that society.
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