IN A PITTSBURG FACTORY
In choosing the scene for my first
experiences, I decided upon Pittsburg, as being an
industrial centre whose character was determined by
its working population. It exceeds all other cities
of the country in the variety and extent of its manufacturing
products. Of its 321,616 inhabitants, 100,000
are labouring men employed in the mills. Add to
these the great number of women and girls who work
in the factories and clothing shops, and the character
of the place becomes apparent at a glance. There
is, moreover, another reason which guided me toward
this Middle West town without its like. This
land which we are accustomed to call democratic, is
in reality composed of a multitude of kingdoms whose
despots are the employers the multi-millionaire
patrons and whose serfs are the labouring
men and women. The rulers are invested with an
authority and a power not unlike those possessed by
the early barons, the feudal lords, the Lorenzo de
Medicis, the Cheops; but with this difference, that
whereas Pharaoh by his unique will controlled a thousand
slaves, the steel magnate uses, for his own ends also,
thousands of separate wills. It was a submissive
throng who built the pyramids. The mills which
produce half the steel the world requires are run
by a collection of individuals. Civilization has
undergone a change. The multitudes once worked
for one; now each man works for himself first and
for a master secondarily. In our new society where
tradition plays no part, where the useful is paramount,
where business asserts itself over art and beauty,
where material needs are the first to be satisfied,
and where the country’s unclaimed riches are
our chief incentive to effort, it is not uninteresting
to find an analogy with the society in Italy which
produced the Renaissance. Diametrically opposed
in their ideals, they have a common spirit. In
Italy the rebirth was of the love of art, and of classic
forms, the desire to embellish all that
was inspired by culture of the beautiful; the Renaissance
in America is the rebirth of man’s originality
in the invention of the useful, the virgin power of
man’s wits as quickened in the crude struggle
for life. Florence is par excellence the
place where we can study the Italian Renaissance;
Pittsburg appealed to me as a most favourable spot
to watch the American Renaissance, the enlivening
of energies which give value to a man devoid of education,
energies which in their daily exercise with experience
generate a new force, a force that makes our country
what it is, industrially and economically. So
it was toward Pittsburg that I first directed my steps,
but before leaving New York I assumed my disguise.
In the Parisian clothes I am accustomed to wear I present
the familiar outline of any woman of the world.
With the aid of coarse woolen garments, a shabby felt
sailor hat, a cheap piece of fur, a knitted shawl
and gloves I am transformed into a working girl of
the ordinary type. I was born and bred and brought
up in the world of the fortunate I am going
over now into the world of the unfortunate. I
am to share their burdens, to lead their lives, to
be present as one of them at the spectacle of their
sufferings and joys, their ambitions and sorrows.
I get no farther than the depot when
I observe that I am being treated as though I were
ignorant and lacking in experience. As a rule
the gateman says a respectful “To the right”
or “To the left,” and trusts to his well-dressed
hearer’s intelligence. A word is all that
a moment’s hesitation calls forth. To the
working girl he explains as follows: “Now
you take your ticket, do you understand, and I’ll
pick up your money for you; you don’t need to
pay anything for your ferry just put those
three cents back in your pocket-book and go down there
to where that gentleman is standing and he’ll
direct you to your train.”
This without my having asked a question.
I had divested myself of a certain authority along
with my good clothes, and I had become one of a class
which, as the gateman had found out, and as I find
out later myself, are devoid of all knowledge of the
world and, aside from their manual training, ignorant
on all subjects.
My train is three hours late, which
brings me at about noon to Pittsburg. I have
not a friend or an acquaintance within hundreds of
miles. With my bag in my hand I make my way through
the dark, busy streets to the Young Women’s
Christian Association. It is down near a frozen
river. The wind blows sharp and biting over the
icy water; the streets are covered with snow, and
over the snow the soot falls softly like a mantle
of perpetual mourning. There is almost no traffic.
Innumerable tramways ring their way up and
down wire-lined avenues; occasionally a train of freight
cars announces itself with a warning bell in the city’s
midst. It is a black town of toil, one man in
every three a labourer. They have no need for
vehicles of pleasure. The trolleys take them
to their work, the trains transport the products of
the mills.
I hear all languages spoken:
this prodigious town is a Western bazaar where the
nations assemble not to buy but to be employed.
The stagnant scum of other countries floats hither
to be purified in the fierce bouillon of live opportunity.
It is a cosmopolitan procession that passes me:
the dusky Easterner with a fez of Astrakhan, the gentle-eyed
Italian with a shawl of gay colours, the loose-lipped
Hungarian, the pale, mystic Swede, the German with
wife and children hanging on his arm.
In this giant bureau of labour all
nationalities gather, united by a common bond of hope,
animated by a common chance of prosperity, kindred
through a common effort, fellow-citizens in a new land
of freedom.
At the central office of the Young
Women’s Christian Association I receive what
attention a busy secretary can spare me. She questions
and I answer as best I can.
“What is it you want?”
“Board and work in a factory.”
“Have you ever worked in a factory?”
“No, ma’am.”
“Have you ever done any housework?”
She talks in the low, confidential
tone of those accustomed to reforming prisoners and
reasoning with the poor.
“Yes, ma’am, I have done housework.”
“What did you make?”
“Twelve dollars a month.”
“I can get you a place where
you will have a room to yourself and fourteen dollars
a month. Do you want it?”
“No, ma’am.”
“Are you making anything now?”
“No, ma’am.”
“Can you afford to pay board?”
“Yes, as I hope to get work at once.”
She directs me to a boarding place
which is at the same time a refuge for the friendless
and a shelter for waifs. The newly arrived population
of the fast-growing city seems unfamiliar with the
address I carry written on a card. I wait on
cold street corners, I travel over miles of half-settled
country, long stretches of shanties and saloons huddled
close to the trolley line. The thermometer is
at zero. Toward three o’clock I find the
waif boarding-house.
The matron is in the parlour hovering
over a gas stove. She has false hair, false teeth,
false jewelry, and the dry, crabbed, inquisitive manner
of the idle who are entrusted with authority.
She is there to direct others and do nothing herself,
to be cross and make herself dreaded. In the
distance I can hear a shrill, nasal orchestra of children’s
voices. I am cold and hungry. I have as yet
no job. The noise, the sordidness, the witchlike
matron annoy me. I have a sudden impulse to flee,
to seek warmth and food and proper shelter to
snap my fingers at experience and be grateful I was
born among the fortunate. Something within me
calls Courage! I take a room at three dollars
a week with board, put my things in it, and while
my feet yet ache with cold I start to find a factory,
a pickle factory, which, the matron tells me, is run
by a Christian gentleman.
I have felt timid and even overbold
at different moments in my life, but never so audacious
as on entering a factory door marked in gilt letters:
“Women Employees.”
The Cerberus between me and the fulfilment
of my purpose is a gray-haired timekeeper with kindly
eyes. He sits in a glass cage and about him are
a score or more of clocks all ticking soundly and all
surrounded by an extra dial of small numbers running
from one to a thousand. Each number means a workman each
tick of the clock a moment of his life gone in the
service of the pickle company. I rap on the window
of the glass cage. It opens.
“Do you need any girls?”
I ask, trying not to show my emotion.
“Ever worked in a factory?”
“No, sir; but I’m very handy.”
“What have you done?”
“Housework,” I respond with conviction,
beginning to believe it myself.
“Well,” he says, looking
at me, “they need help up in the bottling department;
but I don’t know as it would pay you they
don’t give more than sixty or seventy cents
a day.”
“I am awfully anxious for work,”
I say. “Couldn’t I begin and get
raised, perhaps?”
“Surely there is
always room for those who show the right spirit.
You come in to-morrow morning at a quarter before
seven. You can try it, and you mustn’t
get discouraged; there’s plenty of work for good
workers.”
The blood tingles through my cold
hands. My heart is lighter. I have not come
in vain. I have a place!
When I get back to the boarding-house
it is twilight. The voices I had heard and been
annoyed by have materialized. Before the gas stove
there are nine small individuals dressed in a strange
combination of uniform checked aprons and patent leather
boots worn out and discarded by the babies of the
fortunate. The small feet they encase are crossed,
and the freshly washed faces are demure, as the matron
with the wig frowns down into a newspaper from which
she now and then hisses a command to order. Three
miniature members are rocking violently in tiny rocking
chairs.
“Quit rocking!”
the false mother cries at them. “You make
my head ache. Most of ’em have no parents,”
she explains to me. “None of ’em
have homes.”
Here they are, a small kingdom, not
wanted, unwelcome, unprovided for, growled at and
grumbled over. Yet each is developing in spite
of chance; each is determining hour by hour his heritage
from unknown parents. The matron leaves us; the
rocking begins again. Conversation is animated.
The three-year-old baby bears the name of a three-year-old
hero. This “Dewey” complains in a
plaintive voice of a too long absent mother. His
rosy lips are pursed out even with his nose. Again
and again he reiterates the refrain: “My
mamma don’t never come to see me. She don’t
bring me no toys.” And then with pride,
“My mamma buys rice and tea and lots of things,”
and dashing to the window as a trolley rattles by,
“My mamma comes in the street cars, only,”
sadly, “she don’t never come.”
Not one of them has forgotten what
fate has willed them to do without. At first
they look shrinkingly toward my outstretched hand.
Is it coming to administer some punishment? Little
by little they are reassured, and, gaining in confidence,
they sketch for me in disconnected chapters the short
outlines of their lives.
“I’ve been to the hospital,”
says one, “and so’s Lily. I drank
a lot of washing soda and it made me sick.”
Lily begins her hospital reminiscences.
“I had typhoy fever I was in the
childun’s ward awful long, and one night they
turned down the lights it was just evening and
a man came in and he took one of the babies up in
his arms, and we all said, ’What’s the
row? What’s the row?’ and he says
‘Hush, the baby’s dead.’ And
out in the hall there was something white, and he
carried the baby and put it in the white thing, and
the baby had a doll that could talk, and he put that
in the white thing too, right alongside o’ the
dead baby. Another time,” Lily goes on,
“there was a baby in a crib alongside of mine,
and one day he was takin’ his bottle, and all
of a suddint he choked; and he kept on chokin’
and then he died, and he was still takin’ his
bottle.”
Lily is five. I see in her and
in her companions a familiarity not only with the
mysteries but with the stern realities of life.
They have an understanding look at the mention of
death, drunkenness and all domestic difficulties or
irregularities. Their vocabulary and conversation
image the violent and brutal side of existence the
only one with which they are acquainted.
At bedtime I find my way upward through
dark and narrow stairs that open into a long room
with a slanting roof. It serves as nursery and
parlour. In the dull light of a stove and an
oil lamp four or five women are seated with babies
on their knees. They have the meek look of those
who doom themselves to acceptance of misfortune, the
flat, resigned figures of the overworked. Their
loose woolen jackets hang over their gaunt shoulders;
their straight hair is brushed hard and smooth against
high foreheads. One baby lies a comfortable bundle
in its mother’s arms; one is black in the face
after a spasm of coughing; one howls its woes through
a scarlet mask. The corners of the room are filled
with the drones those who “work for
a bite of grub.” The cook, her washing done,
has piled her aching bones in a heap; her drawn face
waits like an indicator for some fresh signal to a
new fatigue. Mary, the woman-of-all-work, who
has spent more than one night within a prison’s
walls, has long ago been brutalized by the persistence
of life in spite of crime; her gray hair ripples like
sand under receding waves; her profile is strong and
fine, but her eyes have a film of misery over them dull
and silent, they deaden her face. And Jennie,
the charwoman, is she a cripple or has toil thus warped
her body? Her arms, long and withered, swing
like the broken branches of a gnarled tree; her back
is twisted and her head bowed toward earth. A
stranger to rest, she seems a mechanical creature
wound up for work and run down in the middle of a
task.
What could be hoped for in such surroundings?
With every effort to be clean the dirt accumulates
faster than it can be washed away. It was impossible,
I found by my own experience, to be really clean.
There was a total absence of beauty in everything not
a line of grace, not a pleasing sound, not an agreeable
odour anywhere. One could get used to this ugliness,
become unconscious even of the acrid smells that pervade
the tenement. It was probable my comrades felt
at no time the discomfort I did, but the harm done
them is not the physical suffering their condition
causes, but the moral and spiritual bondage in which
it holds them. They are not a class of drones
made differently from us. I saw nothing to indicate
that they were not born with like capacities
to ours. As our bodies accustom themselves to
luxury and cleanliness, theirs grow hardened to deprivation
and filth. As our souls develop with the advantages
of all that constitutes an ideal an intellectual,
esthetic and moral ideal their souls diminish
under the oppression of a constant physical effort
to meet material demands. The fact that they
become physically callous to what we consider unbearable
is used as an argument for their emotional insensibility.
I hold such an argument as false. From all I
saw I am convinced that, given their relative preparation
for suffering and for pleasure, their griefs and their
joys are the same as ours in kind and in degree.
When one is accustomed to days begun
at will by the summons of a tidy maid, waking oneself
at half-past five means to be guardian of the hours
until this time arrives. Once up, the toilet I
made in the nocturnal darkness of my room can best
be described by the matron’s remark to me as
I went to bed: “If you want to wash,”
she said, “you’d better wash now; you
can’t have no water in your room, and there won’t
be nobody up when you leave in the morning.”
My evening bath is supplemented by a whisk of the
sponge at five.
Without it is black a more
intense black than night’s beginning, when all
is astir. The streets are silent, an occasional
train whirls past, groups of men hurry hither and
thither swinging their arms, rubbing their ears in
the freezing air. Many of them have neither overcoats
nor gloves. Now and then a woman sweeps along.
Her skirts have the same swing as my own short ones;
under her arm she carries a newspaper bundle whose
meaning I have grown to know. My own contains
a midday meal: two cold fried oysters, two dried
preserve sandwiches, a pickle and an orange.
My way lies across a bridge. In the first gray
of dawn the river shows black under its burden of
ice. Along its troubled banks innumerable chimneys
send forth their hot activity, clouds of seething
flames, waving arms of smoke and steam a
symbol of spent energy, of the lives consumed and
vanishing again, the sparks that shine an instant
against the dark sky and are spent forever.
As I draw nearer the factory I move
with a stream of fellow workers pouring toward the
glass cage of the timekeeper. He greets me and
starts me on my upward journey with a wish that I
shall not get discouraged, a reminder that the earnest
worker always makes a way for herself.
“What will you do about your
name?” “What will you do with your hair
and your hands?” “How can you deceive
people?” These are some of the questions I had
been asked by my friends.
Before any one had cared or needed
to know my name it was morning of the second day,
and my assumed name seemed by that time the only one
I had ever had. As to hair and hands, a half-day’s
work suffices for their undoing. And my disguise
is so successful I have deceived not only others but
myself. I have become with desperate reality a
factory girl, alone, inexperienced, friendless.
I am making $4.20 a week and spending $3 of this for
board alone, and I dread not being strong enough to
keep my job. I climb endless stairs, am given
a white cap and an apron, and my life as a factory
girl begins. I become part of the ceaseless,
unrelenting mechanism kept in motion by the poor.
The factory I have chosen has been
built contemporaneously with reforms and sanitary
inspection. There are clean, well-aired rooms,
hot and cold water with which to wash, places to put
one’s hat and coat, an obligatory uniform for
regular employees, hygienic and moral advantages of
all kinds, ample space for work without crowding.
Side by side in rows of tens or twenties
we stand before our tables waiting for the seven o’clock
whistle to blow. In their white caps and blue
frocks and aprons, the girls in my department, like
any unfamiliar class, all look alike. My first
task is an easy one; anybody could do it. On
the stroke of seven my fingers fly. I place a
lid of paper in a tin jar-top, over it a cork; this
I press down with both hands, tossing the cover, when
done, into a pan. In spite of myself I hurry;
I cannot work fast enough I outdo my companions.
How can they be so slow? I have finished three
dozen while they are doing two. Every nerve, every
muscle is offering some of its energy. Over in
one corner the machinery for sealing the jars groans
and roars; the mingled sounds of filling, washing,
wiping, packing, comes to my eager ears as an accompaniment
for the simple work assigned to me. One hour
passes, two, three hours; I fit ten, twenty, fifty
dozen caps, and still my energy keeps up.
The forewoman is a pretty girl of
twenty. Her restless eyes, her metallic voice
are the messengers who would know all. I am afraid
of her. I long to please her. I am sure
she must be saying “How well the new girl
works.”
Conversation is possible among those
whose work has become mechanical. Twice I am
sent to the storeroom for more caps. In these
brief moments my companions volunteer a word of themselves.
“I was out to a ball last night,”
the youngest one says. “I stayed so late
I didn’t feel a bit like getting up this morning.”
“That’s nothing,”
another retorts. “There’s hardly an
evening we don’t have company at the house,
music or somethin’; I never get enough rest.”
And on my second trip the pale creature with me says:
“I’m in deep mourning.
My mother died last Friday week. It’s awful
lonely without her. Seems as though I’d
never get over missing her. I miss her dreadful.
Perhaps by and by I’ll get used to it.”
“Oh, no, you won’t,”
the answer comes from a girl with short skirts.
“You’ll never get used to it. My ma’s
been dead eight years next month and I dreamt about
her all last night. I can’t get her out
o’ me mind.”
Born into dirt and ugliness, disfigured
by effort, they have the same heritage as we:
joys and sorrows, grief and laughter. With them
as with us gaiety is up to its old tricks, tempting
from graver rivals, making duty an alien. Grief
is doing her ugly work: hollowing round cheeks,
blackening bright eyes, putting her weight of leaden
loneliness in hearts heretofore light with youth.
When I have fitted 110 dozen tin caps
the forewoman comes and changes my job. She tells
me to haul and load up some heavy crates with pickle
jars. I am wheeling these back and forth when
the twelve o’clock whistle blows. Up to
that time the room has been one big dynamo, each girl
a part of it. With the first moan of the noon
signal the dynamo comes to life. It is hungry;
it has friends and favourites news to tell.
We herd down to a big dining-room and take our places,
five hundred of us in all. The newspaper bundles
are unfolded. The menu varies little: bread
and jam, cake and pickles, occasionally a sausage,
a bit of cheese or a piece of stringy cold meat.
In ten minutes the repast is over. The dynamo
has been fed; there are twenty minutes of leisure spent
in dancing, singing, resting, and conversing chiefly
about young men and “sociables.”
At 12:30 sharp the whistle draws back
the life it has given. I return to my job.
My shoulders are beginning to ache. My hands are
stiff, my thumbs almost blistered. The enthusiasm
I had felt is giving way to a numbing weariness.
I look at my companions now in amazement. How
can they keep on so steadily, so swiftly? Cases
are emptied and refilled; bottles are labeled, stamped
and rolled away; jars are washed, wiped and loaded,
and still there are more cases, more jars, more bottles.
Oh! the monotony of it, the never-ending supply of
work to be begun and finished, begun and finished,
begun and finished! Now and then some one cuts
a finger or runs a splinter under the flesh; once the
mustard machine broke and still the work
goes on, on, on! New girls like myself, who had
worked briskly in the morning, are beginning to loiter.
Out of the washing-tins hands come up red and swollen,
only to be plunged again into hot dirty water.
Would the whistle never blow? Once I pause an
instant, my head dazed and weary, my ears strained
to bursting with the deafening noise. Quickly
a voice whispers in my ear: “You’d
better not stand there doin’ nothin’.
If she catches you she’ll give it to
you.”
On! on! bundle of pains! For
you this is one day’s work in a thousand of
peace and beauty. For those about you this is
the whole of daylight, this is the winter dawn and
twilight, this is the glorious summer noon, this is
all day, this is every day, this is life.
Rest is only a bit of a dream, snatched when the sleeper’s
aching body lets her close her eyes for a moment in
oblivion.
Out beyond the chimney tops the snowfields
and the river turn from gray to pink, and still the
work goes on. Each crate I lift grows heavier,
each bottle weighs an added pound. Now and then
some one lends a helping hand.
“Tired, ain’t you? This is your first
day, ain’t it?”
The acid smell of vinegar and mustard
penetrates everywhere. My ankles cry out pity.
Oh! to sit down an instant!
“Tidy up the table,” some
one tells me; “we’re soon goin’ home.”
Home! I think of the stifling
fumes of fried food, the dim haze in the kitchen where
my supper waits me; the children, the band of drifting
workers, the shrill, complaining voice of the hired
mother. This is home.
I sweep and set to rights, limping,
lurching along. At last the whistle blows!
In a swarm we report; we put on our things and get
away into the cool night air. I have stood ten
hours; I have fitted 1,300 corks; I have hauled and
loaded 4,000 jars of pickles. My pay is seventy
cents.
The impressions of my first day crowd
pell-mell upon my mind. The sound of the machinery
dins in my ears. I can hear the sharp, nasal voices
of the forewoman and the girls shouting questions
and answers.
A sudden recollection comes to me
of a Dahomayan family I had watched at work in their
hut during the Paris Exhibition. There was a magic
spell in their voices as they talked together; the
sounds they made had the cadence of the wind in the
trees, the running of water, the song of birds:
they echoed unconsciously the caressing melodies of
nature. My factory companions drew their vocal
inspiration from the bedlam of civilization, the rasping
and pounding of machinery, the din which they must
out-din to be heard.
For the two days following my first
experience I am unable to resume work. Fatigue
has swept through my blood like a fever. Every
bone and joint has a clamouring ache. I pass
the time visiting other factories and hunting for
a place to board in the neighbourhood of the pickling
house. At the cork works they do not need girls;
at the cracker company I can get a job, but the hours
are longer, the advantages less than where I am; at
the broom factory they employ only men. I decide
to continue with tin caps and pickle jars.
My whole effort now is to find a respectable
boarding-house. I start out, the thermometer
near zero, the snow falling. I wander and ask,
wander and ask. Up and down the black streets
running parallel and at right angles with the factory
I tap and ring at one after another of the two-story
red-brick houses. More than half of them are empty,
tenantless during the working hours. What hope
is there for family life near the hearth which is
abandoned at the factory’s first call? The
sociableness, the discipline, the division of responsibility
make factory work a dangerous rival to domestic care.
There is something in the modern conditions of labour
which act magnetically upon American girls, impelling
them to work not for bread alone, but for clothes and
finery as well. Each class in modern society
knows a menace to its homes: sport, college education,
machinery each is a factor in the gradual
transformation of family life from a united domestic
group to a collection of individuals with separate
interests and aims outside the home.
I pursue my search. It is the
dinner hour. At last a narrow door opens, letting
a puff of hot rank air blow upon me as I stand in the
vestibule questioning: “Do you take boarders?”
The woman who answers stands with
a spoon in her hand, her eyes fixed upon a rear room
where a stove, laden with frying-pans, glows and sputters.
“Come in,” she says, “and get warm.”
I walk into a front parlour with furniture
that evidently serves domestic as well as social purposes.
There is a profusion of white knitted tidies and portieres
that exude an odour of cooking. Before the fire
a workingman sits in a blue shirt and overalls.
Fresh from the barber’s hands, he has a clean
mask marked by the razor’s edge. Already
I feel at home.
“Want board, do you?”
the woman asks. “Well, we ain’t got
no place; we’re always right full up.”
My disappointment is keen. Regretfully
I leave the fire and start on again.
“I guess you’ll have some
trouble in finding what you want,” the woman
calls to me on her way back to the kitchen, as I go
out.
The answer is everywhere the same,
with slight variations. Some take “mealers”
only, some only “roomers,” some “only
gentlemen.” I begin to understand it.
Among the thousands of families who live in the city
on account of the work provided by the mills, there
are girls enough to fill the factories. There
is no influx such as creates in a small town the necessity
for working-girl boarding-houses. There is an
ample supply of hands from the existing homes.
There is the same difference between city and country
factory life that there is between university life
in a capital and in a country town.
A sign on a neat-looking corner house
attracts me. I rap and continue to rap; the door
is opened at length by a tall good-looking young woman.
Her hair curls prettily, catching the light; her eyes
are stupid and beautiful. She has on a black
skirt and a bright purple waist.
“Do you take boarders?”
“Why, yes. I don’t
generally like to take ladies, they give so much trouble.
You can come in if you like. Here’s the
room,” she continues, opening a door near the
vestibule. She brushes her hand over her forehead
and stares at me; and then, as though she can no longer
silence the knell that is ringing in her heart, she
says to me, always staring:
“My husband was killed on the
railroad last week. He lived three hours.
They took him to the hospital a boy come
running down and told me. I went up as fast as
I could, but it was too late; he never spoke again.
I guess he didn’t know what struck him; his
head was all smashed. He was awful good to me so
easy-going. I ain’t got my mind down to
work yet. If you don’t like this here room,”
she goes on listlessly, “maybe you could get
suited across the way.”
Thompson Seton tells us in his book
on wild animals that not one among them ever dies
a natural death. As the opposite extreme of vital
persistence we have the man whose life, in spite of
acute disease, is prolonged against reason by science;
and midway comes the labourer, who takes his chances
unarmed by any understanding of physical law, whose
only safeguards are his wits and his presence of mind.
The violent death, the accidents, the illnesses to
which he falls victim might be often warded off by
proper knowledge. Nature is a zealous enemy;
ignorance and inexperience keep a whole class defenseless.
The next day is Saturday. I feel
a fresh excitement at going back to my job; the factory
draws me toward it magnetically. I long to be
in the hum and whir of the busy workroom. Two
days of leisure without resources or amusement make
clear to me how the sociability of factory life, the
freedom from personal demands, the escape from self
can prove a distraction to those who have no mental
occupation, no money to spend on diversion. It
is easier to submit to factory government which commands
five hundred girls with one law valid for all, than
to undergo the arbitrary discipline of parental authority.
I speed across the snow-covered courtyard. In
a moment my cap and apron are on and I am sent to
report to the head forewoman.
“We thought you’d quit,”
she says. “Lots of girls come in here and
quit after one day, especially Saturday. To-day
is scrubbing day,” she smiles at me. “Now
we’ll do right by you if you do right by us.
What did the timekeeper say he’d give you?”
“Sixty or seventy a day.”
“We’ll give you seventy,”
she says. “Of course, we can judge girls
a good deal by their looks, and we can see that you’re
above the average.”
She wears her cap close against her
head. Her front hair is rolled up in crimping-pins.
She has false teeth and is a widow. Her pale,
parched face shows what a great share of life has
been taken by daily over-effort repeated during years.
As she talks she touches my arm in a kindly fashion
and looks at me with blue eyes that float about under
weary lids. “You are only at the beginning,”
they seem to say. “Your youth and vigour
are at full tide, but drop by drop they will be sapped
from you, to swell the great flood of human effort
that supplies the world’s material needs.
You will gain in experience,” the weary lids
flutter at me, “but you will pay with your
life the living you make.”
There is no variety in my morning’s
work. Next to me is a bright, pretty girl jamming
chopped pickles into bottles.
“How long have you been here?”
I ask, attracted by her capable appearance. She
does her work easily and well.
“About five months.”
“How much do you make?”
“From 90 cents to $1.05.
I’m doing piece-work,” she explains.
“I get seven-eighths of a cent for every dozen
bottles I fill. I have to fill eight dozen to
make seven cents. Downstairs in the corking-room
you can make as high as $1.15 to $1.20. They
won’t let you make any more than that.
Me and them two girls over there are the only ones
in this room doing piece-work. I was here three
weeks as a day-worker.”
“Do you live at home?” I ask.
“Yes; I don’t have to
work. I don’t pay no board. My father
and my brothers supports me and my mother. But,”
and her eyes twinkle, “I couldn’t have
the clothes I do if I didn’t work.”
“Do you spend your money all on yourself?”
“Yes.”
I am amazed at the cheerfulness of
my companions. They complain of fatigue, of cold,
but never at any time is there a suggestion of ill-humour.
Their suppressed animal spirits reassert themselves
when the forewoman’s back is turned. Companionship
is the great stimulus. I am confident that without
the social entrain, the encouragement of example,
it would be impossible to obtain as much from each
individual girl as is obtained from them in groups
of tens, fifties, hundreds working together.
When lunch is over we are set to scrubbing.
Every table and stand, every inch of the factory floor
must be scrubbed in the next four hours. The
whistle on Saturday blows an hour earlier. Any
girl who has not finished her work when the day is
done, so that she can leave things in perfect order,
is kept overtime, for which she is paid at the rate
of six or seven cents an hour. A pail of hot
water, a dirty rag and a scrubbing-brush are thrust
into my hands. I touch them gingerly. I get
a broom and for some time make sweeping a necessity,
but the forewoman is watching me. I am afraid
of her. There is no escape. I begin to scrub.
My hands go into the brown, slimy water and come out
brown and slimy. I slop the soap-suds around
and move on to a fresh place. It appears there
are a right and a wrong way of scrubbing. The
forewoman is at my side.
“Have you ever scrubbed before?”
she asks sharply. This is humiliating.
“Yes,” I answer; “I have scrubbed
... oilcloth.”
The forewoman knows how to do everything.
She drops down on her knees and, with her strong arms
and short-thumbed, brutal hands, she shows me how
to scrub.
The grumbling is general. There
is but one opinion among the girls: it is not
right that they should be made to do this work.
They all echo the same resentment, but their complaints
are made in whispers; not one has the courage to openly
rebel. What, I wonder to myself, do the men do
on scrubbing day. I try to picture one of them
on his hands and knees in a sea of brown mud.
It is impossible. The next time I go for a supply
of soft soap in a department where the men are working
I take a look at the masculine interpretation of house
cleaning. One man is playing a hose on the floor
and the rest are rubbing the boards down with long-handled
brooms and rubber mops.
“You take it easy,” I say to the boss.
“I won’t have no scrubbing
in my place,” he answers emphatically. “The
first scrubbing day, they says to me ‘Get down
on your hands and knees,’ and I says ’Just
pay me my money, will you; I’m goin’ home.
What scrubbing can’t be done with mops ain’t
going to be done by me.’ The women wouldn’t
have to scrub, either, if they had enough spirit all
of ’em to say so.”
I determined to find out if possible,
during my stay in the factory, what it is that clogs
this mainspring of “spirit” in the women.
I hear fragmentary conversations about
fancy dress balls, valentine parties, church sociables,
flirtations and clothes. Almost all of the girls
wear shoes with patent leather and some or much cheap
jewelry, brooches, bangles and rings. A few draw
their corsets in; the majority are not laced.
Here and there I see a new girl whose back is flat,
whose chest is well developed. Among the older
hands who have begun work early there is not a straight
pair of shoulders. Much of the bottle washing
and filling is done by children from twelve to fourteen
years of age. On their slight, frail bodies toil
weighs heavily; the delicate child form gives way
to the iron hand of labour pressed too soon upon it.
Backs bend earthward, chests recede, never to be sound
again.
After a Sunday of rest I arrive somewhat
ahead of time on Monday morning, which leaves me a
few moments for conversation with a piece-worker who
is pasting labels on mustard jars. She is fifteen.
“Do you like your job?” I ask.
“Yes, I do,” she answers,
pleased to tell her little history. “I began
in a clothing shop. I only made $2.50 a week,
but I didn’t have to stand. I felt awful
when papa made me quit. When I came in here, bein’
on my feet tired me so I cried every night for two
months. Now I’ve got used to it. I
don’t feel no more tired when I get home than
I did when I started out.” There are two
sharp blue lines that drag themselves down from her
eyes to her white cheeks.
“Why, you know, at Christmas
they give us two weeks,” she goes on in the
sociable tone of a woman whose hands are occupied.
“I just didn’t know what to do with myself.”
“Does your mother work?”
“Oh, my, no. I don’t
have to work, only if I didn’t I couldn’t
have the clothes I do. I save some of my money
and spend the rest on myself. I make $6 to $7
a week.”
The girl next us volunteers a share in the conversation.
“I bet you can’t guess how old I am.”
I look at her. Her face and throat
are wrinkled, her hands broad, and scrawny; she is
tall and has short skirts. What shall be my clue?
If I judge by pleasure, “unborn” would
be my answer; if by effort, then “a thousand
years.”
“Twenty,” I hazard as a safe medium.
“Fourteen,” she laughs.
“I don’t like it at home, the kids bother
me so. Mamma’s people are well-to-do.
I’m working for my own pleasure.”
“Indeed, I wish I was,”
says a new girl with a red waist. “We three
girls supports mamma and runs the house. We have
$13 rent to pay and a load of coal every month and
groceries. It’s no joke, I can tell you.”
The whistle blows; I go back to my
monotonous task. The old aches begin again, first
gently, then more and more sharply. The work itself
is growing more mechanical. I can watch the girls
around me. What is it that determines superiority
in this class? Why was the girl filling pickle
jars put on piece-work after three weeks, when others
older than she are doing day-work at fifty and sixty
cents after a year in the factory? What quality
decides that four shall direct four hundred?
Intelligence I put first; intelligence of any kind,
from the natural penetration that needs no teaching
to the common sense that every one relies upon.
Judgment is not far behind in the list, and it is soon
matured by experience. A strong will and a moral
steadiness stand guardians over the other two.
The little pickle girl is winning in the race by her
intelligence. The forewomen have all four qualities,
sometimes one, sometimes another predominating.
Pretty Clara is smarter than Lottie. Lottie is
more steady. Old Mrs. Minns’ will has kept
her at it until her judgment has become infallible
and can command a good price. Annie is an evenly
balanced mixture of all, and the five hundred who
are working under the five lack these qualities somewhat,
totally, or have them in useless proportions.
Monday is a hard day. There is
more complaining, more shirking, more gossip than
in the middle of the week. Most of the girls have
been to dances on Saturday night, to church on Sunday
evening with some young man. Their conversation
is vulgar and prosaic; there is nothing in the language
they use that suggests an ideal or any conception of
the abstract. They make jokes, state facts about
the work, tease each other, but in all they say there
is not a word of value nothing that would
interest if repeated out of its class. They have
none of the sagaciousness of the low-born Italian,
none of the wit and penetration of the French ouvrière.
The Old World generations ago divided itself into
classes; the lower class watched the upper and grew
observant and appreciative, wise and discriminating,
through the study of a master’s will. Here
in the land of freedom, where no class line is rigid,
the precious chance is not to serve but to live for
oneself; not to watch a superior, but to find out
by experience. The ideal plays no part, stern
realities alone count, and thus we have a progressive,
practical, independent people, the expression of whose
personality is interesting not through their words
but by their deeds.
When the Monday noon whistle blows
I follow the hundreds down into the dining-room.
Each wears her cap in a way that speaks for her temperament.
There is the indifferent, the untidy, the prim, the
vain, the coquettish; and the faces under them, which
all looked alike at first, are becoming familiar.
I have begun to make friends. I speak bad English,
but do not attempt to change my voice and inflection
nor to adopt the twang. No allusion is made to
my pronunciation except by one girl, who says:
“I knew you was from the East.
My sister spent a year in Boston and when she come
back she talked just like you do, but she lost it all
again. I’d give anything if I could talk
aristocratic.”
I am beginning to understand why the
meager lunches of preserve-sandwiches and pickles
more than satisfy the girls whom I was prepared to
accuse of spending their money on gewgaws rather than
on nourishment. It is fatigue that steals the
appetite. I can hardly taste what I put in my
mouth; the food sticks in my throat. The girls
who complain most of being tired are the ones who
roll up their newspaper bundles half full. They
should be given an hour at noon. The first half
of it should be spent in rest and recreation before
a bite is touched. The good that such a regulation
would work upon their faulty skins and pale faces,
their lasting strength and health, would be incalculable.
I did not want wholesome food, exhausted as I was.
I craved sours and sweets, pickles, cake, anything
to excite my numb taste.
So long as I remain in the bottling
department there is little variety in my days.
Rising at 5:30 every morning, I make my way through
black streets to offer my sacrifice of energy on the
altar of toil. All is done without a fresh incident.
Accumulated weariness forces me to take a day off.
When I return I am sent for in the corking-room.
The forewoman lends me a blue gingham dress and tells
me I am to do “piece"-work. There are three
who work together at every corking-table. My two
companions are a woman with goggles and a one-eyed
boy. We are not a brilliant trio. The job
consists in evening the vinegar in the bottles, driving
the cork in, first with a machine, then with a hammer,
letting out the air with a knife stuck under the cork,
capping the corks, sealing the caps, counting and
distributing the bottles. These operations are
paid for at the rate of one-half a cent for the dozen
bottles, which sum is divided among us. My two
companions are earning a living, so I must work in
dead earnest or take bread out of their mouths.
At every blow of the hammer there is danger. Again
and again bottles fly to pieces in my hand. The
boy who runs the corking-machine smashes a glass to
fragments.
“Are you hurt?” I ask, my own fingers
crimson stained.
“That ain’t nothin’,”
he answers. “Cuts is common; my hands is
full of ’em.”
The woman directs us; she is fussy
and loses her head, the work accumulates, I am slow,
the boy is clumsy. There is a stimulus unsuspected
in working to get a job done. Before this I had
worked to make the time pass. Then no one took
account of how much I did; the factory clock had a
weighted pendulum; now ambition outdoes physical strength.
The hours and my purpose are running a race together.
But, hurry as I may, as we do, when twelve blows its
signal we have corked only 210 dozen bottles!
This is no more than day-work at seventy cents.
With an ache in every muscle, I redouble my energy
after lunch. The girl with the goggles looks
at me blindly and says:
“Ain’t it just awful hard
work? You can make good money, but you’ve
got to hustle.”
She is a forlorn specimen of humanity,
ugly, old, dirty, condemned to the slow death of the
overworked. I am a green hand. I make mistakes;
I have no experience in the fierce sustained effort
of the bread-winners. Over and over I turn to
her, over and over she is obliged to correct me.
During the ten hours we work side by side not one murmur
of impatience escapes her. When she sees that
I am getting discouraged she calls out across the
deafening din, “That’s all right; you can’t
expect to learn in a day; just keep on steady.”
As I go about distributing bottles
to the labelers I notice a strange little elf, not
more than twelve years old, hauling loaded crates;
her face and chest are depressed, she is pale to blueness,
her eyes have indigo circles, her pupils are unnaturally
dilated, her brows contracted; she has the appearance
of a cave-bred creature. She seems scarcely human.
When the time for cleaning up arrives toward five my
boss sends me for a bucket of water to wash up the
floor. I go to the sink, turn on the cold water
and with it the steam which takes the place of hot
water. The valve slips; in an instant I am enveloped
in a scalding cloud. Before it has cleared away
the elf is by my side.
“Did you hurt yourself?” she asks.
Her inhuman form is the vehicle of
a human heart, warm and tender. She lifts her
wide-pupiled eyes to mine; her expression does not
change from that of habitual scrutiny cast early in
a rigid mould, but her voice carries sympathy from
its purest source.
There is more honour than courtesy
in the code of etiquette. Commands are given
curtly; the slightest injustice is resented; each man
for himself in work, but in trouble all for the one
who is suffering. No bruise or cut or burn is
too familiar a sight to pass uncared for.
It is their common sufferings, their
common effort that unites them.
When I have become expert in the corking
art I am raised to a better table, with a bright boy,
and a girl who is dignified and indifferent with the
indifference of those who have had too much responsibility.
She never hurries; the work slips easily through her
fingers. She keeps a steady bearing over the
morning’s ups and downs. Under her load
of trials there is something big in the steady way
she sails.
“Used to hard work?” she asks me.
“Not much,” I answer; “are you?”
“Oh, yes. I began at thirteen
in a bakery. I had a place near the oven and
the heat overcame me.”
Her shoulders are bowed, her chest is hollow.
“Looking for a boarding place near the factory,
I hear,” she continues.
“Yes. You live at home, I suppose.”
“Yes. There’s four
of us: mamma, papa, my sister and myself.
Papa’s blind.”
“Can’t he work?”
“Oh, yes, he creeps to his job
every morning, and he’s got so much experience
he kind o’ does things by instinct.”
“Does your mother work?”
“Oh, my, no. My sister’s
an invalid. She hasn’t been out o’
the door for three years. She’s got enlargement
of the heart and consumption, too, I guess; she ‘takes’
hemorrhages. Sometimes she has twelve in one night.
Every time she coughs the blood comes foaming out of
her mouth. She can’t lie down. I guess
she’d die if she lay down, and she gets so tired
sittin’ up all night. She used to be a tailoress,
but I guess her job didn’t agree with her.”
“How many checks have we got,” I ask toward
the close of the day.
“Thirteen,” Ella answers.
“An unlucky number,” I venture, hoping
to arouse an opinion.
“Are you superstitious?”
she asks, continuing to twist tin caps on the pickle
jars. “I am. If anything’s going
to happen I can’t help having presentiments,
and they come true, too.”
Here is a mystic, I thought; so I continued:
“And what about dreams?”
“Oh!” she cried. “Dreams!
I have the queerest of anybody!”
I was all attention.
“Why, last night,” she
drew near to me, and spoke slowly, “I dreamed
that mamma was drunk, and that she was stealing chickens!”
Such is the imagination of this weary worker.
The whole problem in mechanical labour
rests upon economy of force. The purpose of each,
I learned by experience, was to accomplish as much
as possible with one single stroke. In this respect
the machine is superior to man, and man to woman.
Sometimes I tried original ways of doing the work
given me. I soon found in every case that the
methods proposed by the forewoman were in the end
those whereby I could do the greatest amount of work
with the least effort. A mustard machine had recently
been introduced to the factory. It replaced three
girls; it filled as many bottles with a single stroke
as the girls could fill with twelve. This machine
and all the others used were run by boys or men; the
girls had not strength enough to manipulate them methodically.
The power of the machine, the physical
force of the man were simplifying their tasks.
While the boy was keeping steadily at one thing, perfecting
himself, we, the women, were doing a variety of things,
complicated and fussy, left to our lot because we
had not physical force for the simpler but greater
effort. The boy at the corking-table had soon
become an expert; he was fourteen and he made from
$1 to $1.20 a day. He worked ten hours at one
job, whereas Ella and I had a dozen little jobs almost
impossible to systematize: we hammered and cut
and capped the corks and washed and wiped the bottles,
sealed them, counted them, distributed them, kept
the table washed up, the sink cleaned out, and once
a day scrubbed up our own precincts. When I asked
the boy if he was tired he laughed at me. He
was superior to us; he was stronger; he could do more
with one stroke than we could do with three; he was
by nature a more valuable aid than we.
We were forced through physical inferiority to abandon
the choicest task to this young male competitor.
Nature had given us a handicap at the start.
For a few days there is no vacancy
at the corking-tables. I am sent back to the
bottling department. The oppressive monotony is
one day varied by a summons to the men’s dining-room.
I go eagerly, glad of any change. In the kitchen
I find a girl with skin disease peeling potatoes, and
a coloured man making soup in a wash-boiler.
The girl gives me a stool to sit on, and a knife and
a pan of potatoes. The dinner under preparation
is for the men of the factory. There are two hundred
of them. They are paid from $1.35 up to $3 a
day. Their wages begin above the highest limit
given to women. The dinner costs each man ten
cents. The $20 paid in daily cover the expenses
of the cook, two kitchen maids and the dinner, which
consists of meat, bread and butter, vegetables and
coffee, sometimes soup, sometimes dessert. If
this can pay for two hundred there is no reason why
for five cents a hot meal of some kind could not be
given the women. They don’t demand it, so
they are left to make themselves ill on pickles and
preserves.
The coloured cook is full of song
and verse. He quotes from the Bible freely, and
gives us snatches of popular melodies.
We have frequent calls from the elevator
boy, who brings us ice and various provisions.
Both men, I notice, take their work easily. During
the morning a busy Irish woman comes hurrying into
our precincts.
“Say,” she yells in a
shrill voice, “my cauliflowers ain’t here,
are they? I ordered ’em early and they
ain’t came yet.”
Without properly waiting for an answer
she hurries away again.
The coloured cook turns to the elevator
boy understandingly:
“Just like a woman! Why,
before I’d make a fuss about cauliflowers
or anything else!”
About eleven the head forewoman stops
in to eat a plate of rice and milk. While I am
cutting bread for the two hundred I hear her say to
the cook in a gossipy tone:
“How do you like the new girl? She’s
here all alone.”
I am called away and do not hear the
rest of the conversation. When I return the cook
lectures me in this way:
“Here alone, are you?”
“Yes.”
“Well, I see no reason why you
shouldn’t get along nicely and not kill yourself
with work either. Just stick at it and they’ll
do right by you. Lots o’ girls who’s
here alone gets to fooling around. Now I like
everybody to have a good time, and I hope you’ll
have a good time, too, but you mustn’t carry
it too far.”
My mind went back as he said this
to a conversation I had had the night before with
a working-girl at my boarding-house.
“Where is your home?” I asked.
She had been doing general housework,
but ill-health had obliged her to take a rest.
She looked at me skeptically.
“We don’t have no homes,”
was her answer. “We just get up and get
whenever they send us along.”
And almost as a sequel to this I thought
of two sad cases that had come close to my notice
as fellow boarders.
I was sitting alone one night by the
gas stove in the parlour. The matron had gone
out and left me to “answer the door.”
The bell rang and I opened cautiously, for the wind
was howling and driving the snow and sleet about on
the winter air. A young girl came in; she was
seeking a lodging. Her skirts and shoes were
heavy with water. She took off her things slowly
in a dazed manner. Her short, quick breathing
showed how excited she was. When she spoke at
last her voice sounded hollow, her eyes moved about
restlessly. She stopped abruptly now and then
and contracted her brows as though in an appeal for
merciful tears; then she continued in the same broken,
husky voice:
“I suppose I’m not the
only one in trouble. I’ve thought a thousand
times over that I would kill myself. I suppose
I loved him but I hate him now.”
These two sentences, recurring, were the story’s
all.
The impotence of rebellion, a sense
of outrage at being abandoned, the instinctive appeal
for protection as a right, the injustice of being
left solely to bear the burden of responsibility which
so long as it was pleasure had been shared these
were the thoughts and feelings breeding hatred.
She had spent the day in a fruitless
search for her lover. She had been to his boss
and to his rooms. He had paid his debts and gone,
nobody knew where. She was pretty, vain, homeless;
alone to bear the responsibility she had not been
alone to incur. She could not shirk it as the
man had done. They had both disregarded the law.
On whom were the consequences weighing more heavily?
On the woman. She is the sufferer; she is the
first to miss the law’s protection. She
is the weaker member whom, for the sake of the race,
society protects. Nature has made her man’s
physical inferior; society is obliged to recognize
this in the giving of a marriage law which beyond
doubt is for the benefit of woman, since she can least
afford to disregard it.
Another evening when the matron was
out I sat for a time with a young working woman and
her baby. There is a comradeship among the poor
that makes light of indiscreet questions. I felt
only sympathy in asking:
“Are you alone to bring up your child?”
“Yes, ma’am,” was the answer.
“I’ll never go home with him.”
I looked at him: a wizened,
four-months-old infant with a huge flat nose, and
two dull black eyes fixed upon the gas jet. The
girl had the grace of a forest-born creature; she
moved with the mysterious strength and suppleness
of a tree’s branch. She was proud; she felt
herself disgraced. For four months she had not
left the house. I talked on, proposing different
things.
“I don’t know what to
do,” she said. “I can’t never
go home with him, and if I went home without
him I’d never be the same. I don’t
know what I’d do if anything happened to him.”
Her head bowed over the child; she held him close
to her breast.
But to return to the coloured cook
and my day in the kitchen. I had ample opportunity
to compare domestic service with factory work.
We set the table for two hundred, and do a thousand
miserable slavish tasks that must be begun again the
following day. At twelve the two hundred troop
in, toil-worn and begrimed. They pass like locusts,
leaving us sixteen hundred dirty dishes to wash up
and wipe. This takes us four hours, and when
we have finished the work stands ready to be done over
the next morning with peculiar monotony. In the
factory there is stimulus in feeling that the material
which passes through one’s hands will never
be seen or heard of again.
On Saturday the owner of the factory
comes at lunch time with several friends and talks
to us with an amazing camaraderie. He is
kindly, humourous and tactful. One or two missionaries
speak after him, but their conversation is too abstract
for us. We want something dramatic, imaginative,
to hold our attention, or something wholly natural.
Tell us about the bees, the beavers or the toilers
of the sea. The longing for flowers has often
come to me as I work, and a rose seems of all things
the most desirable. In my present condition I
do not hark back to civilized wants, but repeatedly
my mind travels toward the country places I have seen
in the fields and forests. If I had a holiday
I would spend it seeing not what man but what God
has made. These are the things to be remembered
in addressing or trying to amuse or instruct girls
who are no more prepared than I felt myself to be
for any preconceived ideal of art or ethics.
The omnipresence of dirt and ugliness, of machines
and “stock,” leave the mind in a state
of lassitude which should be roused by something natural.
As an initial remedy for the ills I voluntarily assumed
I would propose amusement. Of all the people who
spoke to us that Saturday, we liked best the one who
made us laugh. It was a relief to hear something
funny. In working as an outsider in a factory
girls’ club I had always held that nothing was
so important as to give the poor something beautiful
to look at and think about a photograph
or copy of some chef d’oeuvre, an objet
d’art, lessons in literature and art which
would uplift their souls from the dreariness of their
surroundings. Three weeks as a factory girl had
changed my beliefs. If the young society women
who sacrifice one evening every week to talk to the
poor in the slums about Shakespeare and Italian art
would instead offer diversion first a play,
a farce, a humourous recitation they would
make much more rapid progress in winning the confidence
of those whom they want to help. The working
woman who has had a good laugh is more ready to tell
what she needs and feels and fears than the woman who
has been forced to listen silently to an abstract lesson.
In society when we wish to make friends with people
we begin by entertaining them. It should be the
same way with the poor. Next to amusement as a
means of giving temporary relief and bringing about
relations which will be helpful to all, I put instruction,
in the form of narrative, about the people of other
countries, our fellow man, how he lives and works;
and, third, under this same head, primitive lessons
about animals and plants, the industries of the bees,
the habits of ants, the natural phenomena which require
no reasoning power to understand and which open the
thoughts upon a delightful unknown vista.
My first experience is drawing to
its close. I have surmounted the discomforts
of insufficient food, of dirt, a bed without sheets,
the strain of hard manual labour. I have confined
my observations to life and conditions in the factory.
Owing, as I have before explained, to the absorption
of factory life into city life in a place as large
as Pittsburg, it seemed to me more profitable to centre
my attention on the girl within the factory, leaving
for a small town the study of her in her family and
social life. I have pointed out as they appeared
to me woman’s relative force as a worker and
its effects upon her economic advancement. I
have touched upon two cases which illustrate her relative
dependence on the law. She appeared to me not
as the equal of man either physically or legally.
It remained to study her socially. In the factory
where I worked men and women were employed for ten-hour
days. The women’s highest wages were lower
than the man’s lowest. Both were working
as hard as they possibly could. The women were
doing menial work, such as scrubbing, which the men
refused to do. The men were properly fed at noon;
the women satisfied themselves with cake and pickles.
Why was this? It is of course impossible to generalize
on a single factory. I can only relate the conclusions
I drew from what I saw myself. The wages paid
by employers, economists tell us, are fixed at the
level of bare subsistence. This level and its
accompanying conditions are determined by competition,
by the nature and number of labourers taking part
in the competition. In the masculine category
I met but one class of competitor: the bread-winner.
In the feminine category I found a variety of classes:
the bread-winner, the semi-bread-winner, the woman
who works for luxuries. This inevitably drags
the wage level. The self-supporting girl is in
competition with the child, with the girl who lives
at home and makes a small contribution to the household
expenses, and with the girl who is supported and who
spends all her money on her clothes. It is this
division of purpose which takes the “spirit”
out of them as a class. There will be no strikes
among them so long as the question of wages is not
equally vital to them all. It is not only nature
and the law which demand protection for women, but
society as well. In every case of the number
I investigated, if there were sons, daughters or a
husband in the family, the mother was not allowed
to work. She was wholly protected. In the
families where the father and brothers were making
enough for bread and butter, the daughters were protected
partially or entirely. There is no law which
regulates this social protection: it is voluntary,
and it would seem to indicate that civilized woman
is meant to be an economic dependent. Yet, on
the other hand, what is the new force which impels
girls from their homes into the factories to work when
they do not actually need the money paid them for
their effort and sacrifice? Is it a move toward
some far distant civilization when women shall have
become man’s physical equal, a “free,
economic, social factor, making possible the full
social combination of individuals in collective industry”?
This is a matter for speculation only. What occurred
to me as a possible remedy both for the oppression
of the woman bread-winner and also as a betterment
for the girl who wants to work though she does not
need the money, was this: the establishment of
schools where the esthetic branches of industrial
art might be taught to the girls who by their material
independence could give some leisure to acquiring a
profession useful to themselves and to society in
general. The whole country would be benefited
by the opening of such schools as the Empress of Russia
has patronized for the maintenance of the “petites
industries,” or those which Queen Margherita
has established for the revival of lace-making in
Italy. If there was such a counter-attraction
to machine labour, the bread-winner would have a freer
field and the non-bread-winner might still work for
luxury and at the same time better herself morally,
mentally and esthetically. She could aid in forming
an intermediate class of labourers which as yet does
not exist in America: the hand-workers, the main
d’oeuvre who produce the luxurious objects
of industrial art for which we are obliged to send
to Europe when we wish to beautify our homes.
The American people are lively, intelligent,
capable of learning anything. The schools of
which I speak, founded, not for the manufacturing
of the useful but of the beautiful, could be started
informally as classes and by individual effort.
Such labour would be paid more than the mechanical
factory work; the immense importation from abroad
of objects of industrial art sufficiently proves the
demand for them in this country; there would be no
material disadvantage for the girl who gave up her
job in a pickle factory. Her faculties would be
well employed, and she could, without leaving her home,
do work which would be of esthetic and, indirectly,
of moral value.
I was discouraged at first to see
how difficult it was to help the working girls as
individuals and how still more difficult to help them
as a class. There is perhaps no surer way of doing
this than by giving opportunities to those who have
a purpose and a will. No amount of openings will
help the girl who has not both of these. I watched
many girls with intelligence and energy who were unable
to develop for the lack of a chance a start in the
right direction. Aside from the few remedies
I have been able to suggest, I would like to make an
appeal for persistent sympathy in behalf of those
whose misery I have shared. Until some marvelous
advancement has been made toward the reign of justice
upon earth, every man, woman and child should have
constantly in his heart the sufferings of the poorest.
On the evening when I left the factory
for the last time, I heard in the streets the usual
cry of murders, accidents and suicides: the mental
food of the overworked. It is Saturday night.
I mingle with a crowd of labourers homeward bound,
and with women and girls returning from a Saturday
sale in the big shops. They hurry along delighted
at the cheapness of a bargain, little dreaming of
the human effort that has produced it, the cost of
life and energy it represents. As they pass,
they draw their skirts aside from us, the labourers
who have made their bargains cheap; from us, the cooeperators
who enable them to have the luxuries they do; from
us, the multitude who stand between them and the monster
Toil that must be fed with human lives. Think
of us, as we herd to our work in the winter dawn;
think of us as we bend over our task all the daylight
without rest; think of us at the end of the day as
we resume suffering and anxiety in homes of squalour
and ugliness; think of us as we make our wretched
try for merriment; think of us as we stand protectors
between you and the labour that must be done to satisfy
your material demands; think of us be merciful.