During the Industrial Revolution, women did not have equal work rights to men. In the book Lyddie, by Katherine Paterson, Lyddie is a young girl that needs to find work to help her family. Lyddie’s father is still away on his odyssey, and the family farm is in debt. Therefore, her mother essentially sells Lyddie and her brother to work in places with incredibly rare and low pay. The mistress Lyddie is working for fires her, so she seizes the opportunity and travels to Lowell to work as a factory girl. Then there is a girl Lyddie meets named Diana Goss during her inauguration as a factory worker, who helps her adjust to factory life and teaches her how to work, helps her study because she cannot attend school, and allows Lyddie to send letters …show more content…
They were treated worse as well. Harassment to girls often occurred in the factory and girls couldn’t do anything about it, the most significant reason being they could be fired and blacklisted, some were forced to leave work because of their illness, and others couldn’t keep up their production rate because of injuries and were fired. Nevertheless, the living quarters were tiny and often hazardous to their health, “She slept under the eaves in a windowless passage, which was hot and airless even in late spring”(24). Female workers commonly had unfair living spaces that would take from their pay, even though they were not suitable for living quarters. Nevertheless, pay had been most often inconsistent for workers, but they won’t be able to get paid anywhere else, so they can’t complain, “Why she sends your mother fifty cents a week,and then, only if I remind her”(45). The average pay for girls was barely able to pay for one person, let alone an entire family including a debt. Even in factories that were the highest pay you’d find for women, they were still at a lower level to that of men’s, “...$1.75 board. While the other girls grumbled that their price rates had dropped…”(86). Even though Lyddie had high pay as an incredibly hard worker, pays still continued to drop for most, if not all girls working in a factory. A male worker’s average pay was higher and often more consistent, even …show more content…
Lyddie should sign Diana Goss’ petition because it could undoubtedly improve her life. She would be more free to do what she wants, so she can see her family more often to care for them. Her whole family will be able to stay healthy and together, along with other bare necessities. They’d be able to pay for medicine and a doctor if Lyddie had a higher pay, so that a family wouldn’t have to die like Lyddie’s little sister. Other women and families would be able to get the same care and help that they need. Women would be treated fairly and would have a better life. All women would be equal to men when it comes to working conditions, and it would help most if not all
In the quote, Lyddie’s friend, Betsy, is sent away with her uncle to Maine for being too weak to work at the factory due to being sick. Her illness was caused by all the dust and lint in the factories. The factory takes in workers when they are young and strong, and when they can’t work anymore, they fire them without another thought. If Lyddie
In Katherine Paterson's novel, Lyddie, Lyddie the main character is forced to move away from her farm, and her life changes because of it. Before Lyddie started working in a textile mill in Massachusetts, she lived with her family her mom hired her out to work at a tavern and she got fired shortly after. She moved away to Lowell, Massachusetts with the help of other people she started living and working in a textile mill, so she can pay off the debts at the farm. Which changed her life forever. Lyddie should leave the factory, despite getting free shelter, and making lots of money.
Within the 1880's there was a woman named Leonora M. Barry. She was no average women. As times were inhuman and cruel for women workers she experienced how hard it was to work as women. But, she just did not continue to face the cruel treatment. Joining the Knights of Labor, she wrote Organizing Women Workers to open societies and the Order's minds about the oppressed women within America.
The female wage earners were often white, young, and unmarried. Most young women would expect to spend their money on things that are enticing to them (makeup, clothing, etc.). However, they were expected to contribute to their households with sharing their wages. They were not permitted to spend their paychecks frivolously and expected to pitch in to help with their families’ costs. Though there were 3.6 million women working in nonagricultural jobs, their pay was a “third to half of the pay for men” (Dubois, 295).
Therefore Lyddie realizes she has nothing to lose anymore so she starts to think about the factory and the working
Lyddie by Katherine Paterson is about a girl that works in a mill. The working conditions at the mill are not very good. There is a petition going around for girls to sign that work at the mill for better working conditions. While some people think that Lyddie shouldn’t sign the petition because she could lose her job, Lyddie should sign the petition that Diana Goss Circulates because of the dangerous conditions and bad conditions at the boarding house. Lyddie should sign the petition because they need better working conditions.
Civil War or Gilded Age: which era saw more change for women? Explain. “The Civil War afforded an opportunity to many women from the South to get involved in the public life.” (188). Women were extremely patriotic and supportive of the cause of their husbands who left to fight in The Civil War.
These women worked very hard, but sometimes weren’t being treated fairly enough. “There were more females (12,519 women) than males (1,109 males) working in the factory” (Doc A). This means that women had to do most of the work. A worker’s day at work was another hardship. “They would commence their work at 4:05 am and end at 7:30 pm.
American women in the late 1800’s received unequal treatment, even more so than in today’s society. Not only were they treated unfairly, they could not even vote until 1920. Moreover, they were unable to obtain certain jobs, and if they did get a job it was from the home. Furthermore, women had little to no say in their decisions. They often had their husbands either picked for them, or mutually agreed upon.
Women in the 1600s to the 1800s were very harshly treated. They were seen as objects rather than people. They were stay-at-home women because people didn’t trust them to hold jobs. They were seen as little or weak. Women living in this time period had to have their fathers choose their husbands.
The Unnamed Woman Up until the 1900’s woman had few rights, thus they relied heavily on men. Women could not vote, they could not own their own property, and very few worked. Women’s jobs were solely to care for children and take care of the home. Women during this time, typically accepted their roles in society and the economy ( “Progressive Era to New Era, 1900-1909”).
The life of Women in the late 1800s. Life for women in the 1800s began to change as they pushed for more rights and equality. Still, men were seen as better than women, this way of thinking pushed women to break out from the limitations imposed on their sex. In the early 1800s women had virtually no rights and ultimately were not seen as people but they rather seen as items of possession, it wasn’t until the late 1800s that women started to gain more rights. The Civil War actually opened opportunities for women to gain more rights, because with many of the men gone to war women were left with the responsibilities that men usually fulfilled during that time period.
In “The Pastoralization of Housework” by Jeanne Boydston, Boydston explores the effect of the romanization of housework. The pastoralization of housework that occurred during the Antebellum period was the result of the development of early industrialization. In order to have something remain constant in the changing times the formation of two separate gender spheres allowed a routine to an ever changing society. A result of these two spheres was the pastoralization of domestic labor in the early 1800s that made labor ‘invisible’ and began to discredit the women’s work at home, but also raised them to a higher pedestal in the family dynamic. By embracing the idea of True Motherhood women were able to flourish by the naturalization of the social
Misogyny is the dislike of, contempt for, or prejudice of women; Washington Irving has been accused of misogyny because of the treatment of women in his stories and their content. Washington Irving was a writer during the 1800’s, and some of his most popular works include “Rip Van Winkle” and “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” Within these tales and other works of Irving’s, aspects of misogyny is discernible, though there is debate about whether the author himself was a misogynist. I believe that the misogyny that is shown throughout a select few of Irving’s works is due in part to the time period, not entirely Irving, himself.
Women would have the right to walk down the street without being the target of a “cat call “, or whistling. Women would have the right to equal pay. Women would have the right to their body and the choice to choose what to do in terms of an abortion or in anything relating to their body. Women would be treated equally by their husbands and or wives.