Boys in the Nova Scotia Cole Mines
- 11-15 years old
- Respectful but small in stature
- From 1880-1890 percentage of boys in the mine rose from 17.1-21.5 %
- Boys were employed because of their size to do certain tasks
- Labour for boys was cheap
- Halling coals
- 14-17 years of age
- On all fours to pull coal
- Trappers
- Less than 10 years old
- Doors were made to allow ventilation into the building
- Boys experiences in mine
- Moves up the ladder of jobs
- Trapper, driver, miner
- Death in the mines
- Explosions
- Moves up the ladder of jobs
- Average pay
- 65 cents a day
- 50 cent less than adults
- Provincial Workmen’s Association
- System of “apprenticeship” to protect coal mine as a skilled labour
- This brought the question of child labour
- Unfair advantages were given to adults over boys due to age and not the ability to perform tasks
- 1890 acknowledge importance of education for mining
- Mst be older than 12
- Ability to read
- 1923 boys must be older than 16 to work in mines
- Strikes
- Boys have the power to shut down mines if they go on strike
- Recreational Strikes
- Ability to take time off to play sports
- First strike was do to the payment boys were receiving for doing work
- Boys and Alcohol
- Drunken colliery boys were reported
- 2 boys were jailed due to being “drunk and disorderly”
- Free Schools Act
- Children between 6-16 had to go to school for at least 120 days a year
- If not parents were fined, or jailed
- Exemptions were made to those with 12 or older with grade seven education or 13 or older with indispensable income
- Mines
- Boys without a grade seven education and between 12-16 were not able to work in the mines
- Children between 6-16 had to go to school for at least 120 days a year
- Nova Scotia Mining community
- 1888 minimum age of 12 to mine
Bibliography
Mcintosh R. (1987). The Boys in the Nova Scotian Coal Mines: 1873-1923. Acadiensis, 16(2), 35-50. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/30302726
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