As stated on Upworthy, Once In A While, Somebody Comes Along And Captures Images That Change A
Nation
Some of
the most disturbing images that were captured in the early part of the 1900s
were those of kids working in factories, coal mines, and other places where no
kids belonged. The most famous photographer was Lewis Hine; his pictures
brought these children into the spotlight in a way the nation could no longer
ignore.
There is a video at
the end with many images of child laborers ... they didn’t have childhoods like
what many of us had. It’s well worth taking 3.5 minutes to watch it. Maybe some of your ancestors were child
laborers and worked under these conditions.
You can check out
more images in the National Child Labor Committee
Collection (Library of Congress). I searched on Salem Massachusetts
since my ancestors were emigrating between 1900-1910 into that community. Many of the photos do identify who the
children were.
This website, The
History Place, also has a webpage devoted to Child Labor in America 1908-1912, Photographs of Lewis W. Hine. I also found this website interesting, Child Labor Public
Education Project.
Upfront with NGS previously
talked a bit about this same project in the post Photo + Genealogy Sleuthing = 100+
Year Mystery Solved.
This is a reminder
that as we do our research, we have to consider the time and the place and what
were considered the norms. You cannot
look at your life now and use that as the benchmark for your ancestors. Do learn the history of where they lived, what
was acceptable and not. Though we may
not agree with child labor, there also used to be laws on the books that might
be nice if we still had them such not swearing in public (you could be fined),
etc
Do you know if your ancestors worked as child laborers? If so, doing what?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
copyright ©
National Genealogical Society, 3108 Columbia Pike, Suite 300, Arlington,
Virginia 22204-4370. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NGS does not
imply endorsement of any outside advertiser or other vendors appearing in this
blog. Any opinions expressed by guest authors are their own and do not
necessarily reflect the view of NGS.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Republication
of UpFront articles is permitted and encouraged for
non-commercial purposes without express permission from NGS. Please drop us a
note telling us where and when you are using the article. Express written
permission is required if you wish to republish UpFront articles
for commercial purposes. You may send a request for express written permission
to [email protected]. All
republished articles may not be edited or reworded and must contain the
copyright statement found at the bottom of each UpFront article.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Think your
friends, colleagues, or fellow genealogy researchers would find this blog post interesting?
If so, please let them know that anyone can read past UpFront with
NGS posts or subscribe!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suggestions
for topics for future UpFront with NGS posts are always welcome. Please
send any suggested topics to [email protected]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unless
indicated otherwise or clearly an NGS Public Relations piece, Upfront with NGS posts are written by
Diane L Richard, editor, Upfront with NGS.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want to
learn more about interacting with the blog, please read Hyperlinks, Subscribing and Comments -- How to Interact with
Upfront with NGS Blog posts!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
No comments:
Post a Comment