“The economy, industry and moderate wants of every member of the household”-Canniff Haight
- Guidelines of a rural family and a working class family
Rural Family
- Household economy
- The whole family is the provider including mother, father, and children
Urban Family
- Father is the provider
- Mother is the home management
- Children are a financial burden
Working Class Urban Families
- Children meet the demands of city life
- ‘Youngsters as wage earners’
- Children 7-14
- Work outside industrial and commercial
- No wages but still provided importance to families
Urbanization
- Canada’s urban population increase 3X the rate of the general population in nineteenth century
- Came from
- Vistums of land ehsation
- Exclusionary inheritance customs
- Immigrant families settling in Canadian cities hoping to escape poverty
- Father and older sons immigrated first and family members followed as employment and living was found
- Different environment and value system from rural life
- Materialism, competition, standardization, consumption
- Fear of unemployment
- Winter increase costs of fuel and food
- Working class homes
- Children assume domestic responsibilities
- Began with keep up of the home
- Sweeping steps, washing windows, scrubbing floors
- Making repairs to the home when the father is away
- Gathering coal and wood for fuel
- Fetch water from wells
- Cultivated gardens
- Raised and slaughtered animals
- Sell cultivated food to other families
- Provide care for ill family members
- Children would fill in the role of a deceased parent
- Older children babysat the younger children
- Responsibilities based on sex
- Females
- Babysat, housekeeping
- Tasks inside the home
- Males
- Tasks outside home
- Females
- Began with keep up of the home
- Children assume domestic responsibilities
- Sweatshop system
- Tiny workplace part of home
- Predominantly female workers
- Produce saleable materials for large retail or wholesale outlets
- Of 324 married females, 272 worked at home
- Being able to watch children and work
- Alexander Whyte Wright investigated the sweating system of canada
- Found kids working 60 hr a week
- Employers paid by the piece
- Discouraged rest periods
- Mackenzie King
- Carried out government clothing contracts
- Made my girls and women in homes or shops hired by subcontractors
- Private homes had the harshest working conditions
- Shop workers brought their work home to be finished by family members
- Clothing contracts violating privacy of working class holmes
- Long hours of labour for little in return
- Middle men
- Create harsher conditions with less pay
- Child Workers
- Families would rent out rooms for stay
- Children had to clean r0oms and wash sheets
- Delivered landry and food to other people
- Street Trades (700 youngsters)
- Polish shoes
- Sold old newspapers
- Pencils, shoe laces, fruit
- Children begged for money
- Teenage prostitution
- Newsboys stood out
- Families would rent out rooms for stay
-
- Newsboys
- Some lived in boarding houses
- Boys became providers of the house from this job
- Sold newspapers on the streets
- Earned 60 cent to 1 dollar a day
- Lead to petty crime
- Turned into irresponsible adults
- 1890 streetboys needed to apply for licence
- Require clean criminal records
- Newsboys
- Foster Children
- Orphaned children were sent to farms
- Farms aspects would develop moral and industrious habits
- Children as servants
- Ability to perform around the house would account to their placement
- Girls 12 and boys 14 should become self-supporting
- Betweens this children can work domestic services for pay
- Servents
- Paid 2$ to 9$ a month depending on service
- Orphaned children were sent to farms
- Education
- Kids were given free educations
- However children didn’t go due to economic responsibilities
- 1,632 children between 5-16 did not attend school
- Middle and upper class children posttest regular attendance
- 16.1% of kids worked at home
- 27.7% were full time workers
- Mandatory attendance laws came in place in 1871 and strengthened from 1881-1891
- Middle and upper class children were at an advantage as working class children weren’t able to go to class
- Began to provide working class kids the ability to go to school
- White collar jobs grew into the 1900s
- Education became more important in finding jobs to improve class
- Working class families receive special consideration from school boards whose kids are economic responsibilities
- Physical education and health programs were created in late 1880s which were missed by students who didn’t attend school
- Sweatshop children workers or home workers had little job training which did not provide advancements in later years
- Social legislation and reform movements were made
- Sert standard for social conduct
- Children’s Aid society
- Rescues children from poverty and places them in foster care
Bibliography
Bullen, John. “Hidden Workers: Child Labour and the Family Economy in Late Nineteenth-Century Urban Ontario.” Labour / Le Travail 18 (1986): 163-87. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25142677.
Leave a Reply