The number of books on the labor problem
is indeed legion. The tragedy of the literature
on any dynamic subject is that most of it is written
by people who have time to do little else. Perhaps
the best books on many subjects will never be written
because those folk, who would be most competent to
do the writing, through their vital connection with
the problem at hand, never find the spare minutes to
put their findings down on paper.
There could be no more dynamic subject
than labor, since labor is nothing less than human
beings, and what is more dynamic than human beings?
It is, therefore, the last subject in the world to
be approached academically. Yet most of the approach
to the problems of labor is academic. Men in
sanctuaries forever far removed from the endless hum
and buzz and roar of machinery, with an intellectual
background and individual ambitions forever far removed
from the interests and desires of those who labor
in factory and mill, theorize-and another
volume is added to the study of labor.
But, points out some one, there are
books on labor written by bona-fide workers.
First, the number is few. Second, and more important,
any bona-fide worker capable of writing any kind of
book on any subject, puts himself so far above the
rank and file that one is justified in asking, for
how many does he speak?
Suppose that for the moment your main
intellectual interest was to ascertain what the average
worker-not the man or woman so far advanced
in the cultural scale that he or she can set his ideas
intelligently on paper-thought about his
job and things in general. To what books could
you turn? Indeed I have come to feel that in the
pages of O. Henry there is more to be gleaned on the
psychology of the working class than any books to
be found on economic shelves. The outstanding
conclusion forced upon any reader of such books as
consciously attempt to give a picture of the worker
and his job is that whoever wrote the books was bound
and determined to find out everything that was wrong
in every investigation made, and tell all about the
wrongs and the wrongs only. Goodness knows, if
one is hunting for the things which should be improved
in this world, one life seems all too short to so
much as make a start. In all honesty, then, such
books on labor should be classified under “Troubles
of Workers.” No one denies they are legion.
Everybody’s troubles are, if troubles are what
you want to find.
The Schemer of Things has so arranged,
praise be, that no one’s life shall be nothing
but woe and misery. Yea, even workers have been
known to smile.
The experiences lived through in the
following pages may strike the reader as superficial,
artificial. In a way they were. Yet, they
fulfilled their object in my eyes, at least. I
wanted to feel for myself the general “atmosphere”
of a job, several jobs. I wanted to know the
worker without any suspicion on the part of the girls
and women I labored among that they were being “investigated.”
I wanted to see the world through their eyes-for
the time being to close my own altogether.
There are no startling new facts or
discoveries here recorded. Nothing in these pages
will revolutionize anything. To such as wish the
lot of the worker painted as the most miserable on
earth, they will be disappointing.
Yet in being as honest as I could
in recording the impressions of my experiences, I
am aware that I have made possible the drawing of false
conclusions. Already such false conclusions have
been drawn. “See,” says an “old-fashioned”
employer, “the workers are happy-these
articles of Mrs. Parker’s show it. Why should
they have better conditions? They don’t
want them!”
A certain type of labor agitator,
or a “parlor laborite,” prefer to see
only the gloomy side of the worker’s life.
They are as dishonest as the employer who would see
only the contentment. The picture must be viewed
in its entirety-and that means considering
the workers not as a labor problem, but as a social
problem. Workers are not an isolated group, who
keep their industrial adversities or industrial blessings
to themselves. They and their families and dependents
are the majority of our population. As a nation,
we rise no higher in the long run than the welfare
of the majority. Nor can the word “welfare,”
if one thinks socially, ever be limited to the word
“contentment.” It is quite conceivable-nay,
every person has seen it in actuality-that
an individual may be quite contented in his lot and
yet have that lot incompatible with the welfare of
the larger group.
It is but as a part of the larger
group that worker, employer, and the public must come
to view the labor problem. When a worker is found
who appears perfectly amenable to long hours, bad
air, unhygienic conditions in general-and
many are-somebody has to pay the price.
There are thousands of contented souls, as we measure
contentment, in the congested tenement districts of
East Side New York. Does that fact add to our
social welfare? Because mothers for years were
willing to feed their children bad milk, was then
the movement to provide good milk for babies a waste
of time and money? Plenty of people always could
be found who would willingly drink impure water.
Society found that too costly, and cities pride themselves
to-day on their pure water supply and low typhoid
rate.
There are industrial conditions flourishing
which insidiously take a greater toll of society than
did ever the death of babies from unclean milk, the
death of old and young from impure water. The
trouble is that their effects permeate in ways difficult
for the unwilling eye to see.
Perhaps in the long run, one of the
most harmful phases of modern civilization is this
very contentment of not only the workers, but the
employer and society at large, under conditions which
are not building up a wholesome, healthy, intelligent
population. Indeed, it is not so much the fault
of modern industrialism as such. Perhaps it is
because there are so many people in the world and
the ability of us human beings, cave men only ten
thousand years ago, to care for so many people has
not increased with the same rapidity as the population.
Our numbers have outrun our capacities. Twentieth
century development calls for large-scale organization
for which the human mind has shown itself inadequate.
It is well to keep in mind that no
situation is the product of its own day. The
working woman, for instance, we have had with us since
the beginning of women-and they began a
good spell ago. The problem of the working woman,
as we think of it to-day, began with the beginning
of modern industry. Nor is it possible to view
her past without realizing that the tendency has ever
been, with but few interruptions, toward improvement.
In the early factory days in our country
it is known that women rose at four, took their breakfast
with them to the mills, and by five were hard at work
in badly constructed buildings, badly heated, badly
lighted. From seven-thirty to eight-thirty there
was an hour for breakfast, at noon half an hour, and
from then on steady work until half past seven at
night. It would be perhaps eight o’clock
before the mill girls reached home, sometimes too
tired to stay awake till the end of supper. Later,
hours were more generally from five in the morning
until seven at night. In Lowell the girls worked
two hours before breakfast and went back to the mills
again in the evening after supper. By 1850 twelve
hours had come to be the average working day.
Wages were very low-around
seventy-five cents or a dollar a week with board.
Mills and factories were accustomed to provide room
and board in the corporation boarding houses, poorly
constructed, ill-ventilated buildings, girls often
sleeping six and eight in a room. In 1836 it
was estimated that the average wage for women in industry
(excluding board) was thirty-seven and one-half cents
a day, although one thousand sewing women investigated
received on an average twenty-five cents a day.
In 1835 the New York Journal of Commerce estimated
that at the beginning of the century women’s
labor brought about fifty cents a week, which was
equivalent to twenty-five cents in 1835. In 1845
the New York Tribune reported fifty thousand
women averaging less than two dollars a week wages,
and thousands receiving one dollar and fifty cents.
Another investigation in 1845 found “female labor
in New York in a deplorable degree of servitude, privation
and misery, drudging on, miserably cooped up in ill-ventilated
cellars and garrets.” Women worked fifteen
to eighteen hours a day to earn one to three dollars
a week.
And yet authorities tell us that some
of the mill towns of New England, Lowell in particular,
are looked back upon as being almost idyllic as regards
the opportunities for working women. On examination
it is found that what was exceptional from our point
of view was not the conditions, but the factory employees.
In those days work in the mills was “socially
permissible.” Indeed there was practically
no other field of employment open to educated girls.
The old domestic labors had been removed from the
household-where could a girl with spirit
and ability make the necessary money to carry out her
legitimate desires? Her brothers “went west”-she
went into the factories-with the same spirit.
Ambitious daughters of New England farmers formed
the bulk of cotton mill employees the first half of
the nineteenth century. Their granddaughters
are probably college graduates of the highest type
to-day. After the long factory hours they found
time for reading, debating clubs, lectures, church
activities, French, and German classes. Part of
the time some of the mill operatives taught school.
Many of them looked forward to furthering their own
education in such female seminaries as existed in
those days, the expense to be met from their mill earnings.
Poorly paid as mill hands were, it was often six to
seven times what teachers received.
“The mills offered not only
regular employment and higher wages, but educational
advantages which many of the operatives prized even
more highly. Moreover, the girl who had worked
in Lowell was looked upon with respect as a person
of importance when she returned to her rural neighborhood.
Her fashionable dress and manners and her general air
of independence were greatly envied by those who had
not been to the metropolis and enjoyed its advantages."
By 1850 the situation had altered.
With the opening of the west, opportunities for women
of gumption and spirit increased. The industrial
depression of 1848-49 lowered wages, and little by
little the former type of operative left the mill,
her place being filled largely by Irish immigrants.
The Civil War saw a great change in
the world of working women. Thousands of men
were taken from industry into war, and overnight great
new fields of opportunity were opened to women.
The more educated were needed as nurses, for teaching
positions, and for various grades of clerical work
deserted by men. After the close of the war farmers
became more prosperous and their daughters were not
forced to work for the wherewithal to acquire advantages.
Add to all this the depression caused in the cotton
industry due to the war-and the result
of these new conditions was that when the mills reopened
it was with cheap immigrant labor. What then
could have been considered high wages were offered
in an attempt to induce the more efficient American
women operatives back to the mills, but the cost of
living had jumped far higher even than high wages.
The mills held no further attractions. Even the
Irish deserted, their places being filled with immigrants
of a lower type.
Since the Civil War look at us-8,075,772
women in industry, as against 2,647,157 in 1880.
Almost a fourth of the entire female population over
ten years of age are at work, as against about one-seventh
in 1880. The next census figures will show a still
larger proportion. Those thousands of women the
World War threw into industry, who never had worked
before, did not all get out of industry after the
war. Take just the railroads, for example.
In April, 1918, there were 65,816 women employed in
railroad work; in October, 1918, 101,785; and in April,
1919, 86,519. In the 1910 census, of all the
kinds of jobs in our country filled by men, only twelve
were not also filled by women-and the next
census will show a reduction there: firemen (either
in manufacturing or railroads), brakemen, conductors,
plumbers, common laborers (under transportation), locomotive
engineers, motormen, policemen, soldiers, sailors,
and marines. The interesting point is that in
only one division of work are women decreasing in
proportion to men-and that was women’s
work at the beginning-manufacturing.
In agriculture, in the professions, in domestic and
personal service, in trade and transportation, the
number of women is creeping up, up, in proportion
to the number of men. From the point of view
of national health and vitality for this and the next
generation, it is indeed a hopeful sign if women are
giving way to men in factories, mills, and plants,
and pushing up into work requiring more education
and in turn not demanding such physical and nervous
strain as does much of the machine process. Also,
since on the whole as it has been organized up to
date, domestic service has been one of the least attractive
types of work women could fill, it is encouraging
(though not to the housewife) to find that the proportion
of women going into domestic and personal service has
fallen from forty-four and six-tenths per cent, in
1880, to thirty-two and five-tenths per cent, in 1910.
Women working at everything under
the sun-except perhaps being locomotive
engineers and soldiers and sailors. Why?
First, it is part of every normal
human being to want to work. Therefore, women
want to work. Time was when within the home were
enough real life-sized jobs to keep a body on the jump
morning and night. Not only mother but any other
females handy. There are those who grumble that
women could find enough to do at home now if they
only tried. They cannot, unless they have young
children or unless they putter endlessly at nonessentials,
the doing of which leaves them and everybody else
no better off than before they began. And it is
part of the way we are made that besides wanting to
work, we need to work at something we feel “gets
us some place.” We prefer to work at something
desirable and useful. Perhaps what we choose is
not really so desirable and useful, looked at in the
large, but it stacks up as more desirable and more
useful than something else we might be doing.
And with it all, if there is to be any real satisfaction,
must go some feeling of independence-of
being on “one’s own.”
So, then, women go out to work in
1921 because there is not enough to do to keep them
busy at home. They follow in part their age-old
callings, only nowadays performed in roaring factories
instead of by the home fireside. In part they
take to new callings. Whatever the job may be,
women want to work in preference to the nonproductiveness
of most home life to-day.
Graham Wallas, in his Great Society,
quotes the answers given by a number of girls to a
woman who held their confidence as to why they worked.
He wished to learn if they were happy. The question
meant to the girls evidently, “Are you happier
than you would have been at home?” and practically
every answer was “Yes.”
In a “dismal and murky,”
but fairly well-managed laundry, six Irish girls all
answered they were happy. One said the work “took
up her mind, she had been awfully discontented.”
Another that “you were of some use.”
Another, “the hours went so much faster.
At home one could read, but only for a short time.
Then there was the awful lonesome afternoon ahead
of you.” “Asked a little girl with
dyed hair but a good little heart. She enjoyed
her work. It made her feel she was worth something.”
At another laundry, the first six
girls all answered they were happy because the “work
takes up your mind,” and generally added, “It’s
awful lonesome at home,” or “there is an
awful emptiness at home.” However, one
girl with nine brothers and sisters was happy in the
collar packing room just because “it was so awful
lonesome”-she could enjoy her own
thoughts. An Irishwoman at another laundry who
had married an Italian said, “Sure I am always
happy. It leaves me no time to think.”
At a knitting plant one girl said “when she didn’t
work, she was always thinking of dead people, but
work always made her cheer up directly.”
The great industrial population comes
from crowded tenements. It is inconceivable that
enough work could be found within those walls to make
life attractive to the girls and young women growing
to maturity in such households.
So much for the psychological side.
The fact remains that the great bulk of women in industry
work because they have to work-they
enter industrial life to make absolutely necessary
money. The old tasks at which a woman could be
self-supporting in the home are no longer possible
in the home. She earns her bread now as she has
earned it for thousands of years-spinning,
weaving, sewing, baking, cooking-only to-day
she is one of hundreds, thousands in a great factory.
Nor is she longer confined to her traditional tasks.
Men are playing a larger part in what was since time
began and up to a few years ago woman’s work.
Women, in their need, are finding employment at any
work that can use unskilled less physically capable
labor.
Ever has it been the very small proportion
of men who could by their unaided effort support the
entire family. At no time have all the men in
a country been able to support all the women, regardless
of whether that situation would be desirable.
Always must the aid of womenfolk be called in as a
matter of course. We have a national ideal of
a living wage to the male head of the family which
will allow him to support his family without forcing
his wife and children into industry. Any man
who earns less than that amount during the year must
depend on the earnings of wife and children or else
fall below the minimum necessary to subsistence, with
all which that implies. In 1910, four-fifths
of the heads of families in the United States earned
under eight hundred dollars a year. At that same
time, almost nine-tenths of the women workers living
at home in New York City working in factories, mills,
and such establishments, paid their entire earnings
to the family. Of 13,686 women investigated in
Wisconsin in 1914, only 2 per cent gave nothing to
the family support. Of girls in retail stores
living at home in New York City, 84 per cent paid
their entire earnings to the family. Work, then,
for the majority of women, is more apt to be cold
economic necessity-not only for herself,
but for her family.
Besides the fact that great numbers
of women must work and many want to work, there are
the reasons for women’s work arising in modern
industry itself. First, a hundred years ago, there
was the need for hands in the new manufactures, and
because of the even more pressing agricultural demands,
men could not be spared. The greater the subdivisions
of labor up to a certain point, the simpler the process,
and the more women can be used, unskilled as they are
ever apt to be. Also they will work at more monotonous,
more disagreeable work than men, and for less wages.
Again, women’s entrance into new industries
has often been as strike breakers, and once in, there
was no way to get them out. Industrial depressions
throw men out of work, and also women, and in the
financial pressure following, women turn to any sort
of work at any sort of pay, and perhaps open a new
wedge for women’s work in a heretofore untried
field, desirable or undesirable.
The freedom from having to perform
every and all domestic functions within the four walls
of home is purchased at the expense of millions of
toilers outside the home, the majority of whom do not
to-day receive enough wages, where they are the menfolk,
to support their own families; nor where they are
single women, to support themselves. The fact
that men cannot support their families forces women
in large numbers into industry. There would be
nothing harmful in that, if only industry were organized
so that participation in it enriched human lives.
Remembering always that where industry takes women
from the care of young children, society and the nation
pay dearly; for, inadequate and ignorant as mothers
often are regarding child care, their substitutes
to-day are apt to be even less efficient.
Pessimists marshal statistics to show
that modern industrialism is going to rack and ruin.
Maybe it is. But pessimism is more a matter of
temperament than statistics. An optimist can assemble
a most cheerful array of figures to show that everything
is on the up. Temperament again. Industry
is what industry does. If you are feeling gloomy
to-day, you can visit factories where it is plain to
see that no human being could have his lot improved
by working there. Such factories certainly exist.
If you would hug your pessimism to your soul, then
there are many factories you must stay away from.
Despite all the pessimists, there is a growing tendency
to increase the welfare of human beings in industry.
It is but an infinitesimal drop any
one individual can contribute to hasten a saner industrialism.
Yet some of us would so fain contribute our mite!
Where the greatest need of all lies is that the human
beings in industry, the employer and the employees,
shall better understand one another, and society at
large better understand both. My own amateur
and humble experiences here recorded have added much
to my own understanding of the problems of both manager
and worker.
Can they add even a fraction to the
understanding of anyone else?
CorneliaStratton Parker.
Woods Hole,
August, 1921.