The Trade Union Woman eBook

Alice Henry
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about The Trade Union Woman.

The Trade Union Woman eBook

Alice Henry
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about The Trade Union Woman.

Speaking broadly, the points upon which the trade-union movement concentrates are the raising of wages, the shortening of hours, the diminution of seasonal work, the abolition or regulation of piece-work, with its resultant speeding up, the maintaining of sanitary conditions, and the guarding of unsafe machinery, the enforcement of laws against child-labor, the abolition of taxes for power and working materials such as thread and needles, and of unfair fines for petty or unproved offenses—­and with these, the recognition of the union to insure the obtaining and the keeping of all the rest.

A single case taken from a non-union trade (a textile trade, too) must serve to suggest the reasons that make organization a necessity.  Twenty-one years ago in the bag and hemp factories of St. Louis, girl experts turned out 460 yards of material in a twelve-hour day, the pay being 24 cents per bolt (of from 60 to 66 yards).  These girls earned $1.84 per day (on the bolt of from 60 to 66 yards).  Four years ago a girl could not hold her job under 1,000 yards in a ten-hour day.  “The fastest possible worker can turn out only 1,200 yards, and the price has dropped to 15 cents per hundred yards.  The old rate of 24 cents per bolt used to net $1.80 to a very quick worker.  The new rate to one equally competent is but $1.50.  Workers have to fill a shuttle every minute and a half or two minutes.  This necessitates the strain of constant vigilance, as the breaking of the thread causes unevenness, and for this operators are laid off for two or three days.  The operators are at such a tension that they not only stand all day, but may not even bend their knees.  The air is thick with lint, which the workers inhale.  The throat and eyes are terribly affected, and it is necessary to work with the head bound up, and to comb the lint from the eyebrows.  The proprietors have to retain a physician to attend the workers every morning, and medicine is supplied free, as an accepted need for everyone so engaged.  One year is spent in learning the trade, and the girls last at it only from three to four years afterwards.  Some of them enter marriage, but many of them are thrown on the human waste-heap.  One company employs nearly 1,000 women, so that a large number are affected by these vile and inhuman conditions.  The girls in the trade are mostly Slovaks, Poles and Bohemians, who have not long been in this country.  In their inexperience they count $1.50 as good wages, although gained at ever so great a physical cost.”

These are intolerable conditions, and that tens of thousands are enduring similar hardships in the course of earning a living and contributing their share towards the commercial output of the country only aggravates the cruelty and the injustice to the helpless and defrauded girls.  It is not an individual problem merely.  It is a national responsibility shared by every citizen to see that such cruelty and such injustice shall cease.  No system of commercial production can be permanently maintained which ignores the primitive rights of the human workers to such returns for labor as shall provide decent food, clothing, shelter, education and recreation for the worker and for those dependent upon him or her, as well as steadiness of employment, and the guarantee of such working conditions as shall not be prejudicial to health.

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Project Gutenberg
The Trade Union Woman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.