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Question: How did sweatshops start!? Where!? Origin!?
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Best Answer - Chosen by Asker:
Origin: 1892

A century ago, a sweater was not just an outer garment to keep out the cold!. It could also be a person who sweated others by employing them at low wages in bleak conditions, in a place that was consequently called a sweatshop!. The article "Among the Poor of Chicago" in an 1892 issue of Scribner's Magazine gives this explanation:


Like slavery, the sweatshop had defenders in its time!. "Division of labor is good," the Scribner's reporter concluded!. "Scattering of workers from great groups into smaller groups is good;!.!.!.prevention of theft is good, and cheapness of garments is good!." But then: "Unwholesome atmosphere, moral and material, is bad; insufficient wages is bad; possibility of infection is bad, and child-labor is (usually) bad!. How shall the good be preserved and the bad cured or alleviated!?"

The twentieth century gave its answer by establishing the minimum wage, workplace regulation, and the abolition of child labor!. The sweatshop now exists as an illegal, hidden operation and as a word for a place with oppressive working conditions!.


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Sweatshop labor systems are most often associated with garment and cigar manufacturing of the period 1880–1920!. Sweated labor can also be seen in laundry work, green grocers, and most recently in the "day laborers," often legal or illegal immigrants, who landscape suburban lawns!.

Sweatshops became visible through the public exposure given to them by reformers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in both England and the United States!. In 1889–1890, an investigation by the House of Lords Select Committee on the Sweating System brought attention in Britain!. In the United States the first public investigations came as a result of efforts to curb tobacco homework, which led to the outlawing of the production of cigars in living quarters in New York State in 1884!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

advances in farming required fewer farmers!. when poor farmers migrated to the cities, the supply of labor increased and drove the price of labor down!.

wages were low because there was always a lot of labor, so workers could not demand higher wages!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

Industrial Revolution in england, the need to supply the mass market so the number of women working just increased and increased

the women took to work as there was little alternative employment for femalesWww@QuestionHome@Com

When hand-loom weavers (who used to work at home) became power-loom weavers (and had to work together, in mills)!.Www@QuestionHome@Com