Document #3 Evidence: Explanation:

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Do document 3 only
Document
Working
Conditions
Author's Perspective
Evidence and Explanation
Evidence:
for Women
and Children
Explanation:
Document #1
Evidence:
Explanation
Document #2
Evidence:
Explanation:
Document #3
Evidence:
Explanation:
Transcribed Image Text:Document Working Conditions Author's Perspective Evidence and Explanation Evidence: for Women and Children Explanation: Document #1 Evidence: Explanation Document #2 Evidence: Explanation: Document #3 Evidence: Explanation:
Document 3
The Brooklyn Eagle Defends Some Kinds of Child Labor
In this 1902 editorial, the Brooklyn Eagle describes the conditions that require some children
to work for wages to support their families.
It is the impulsive thing to say that children should never be employed; that they should
be kept at home during the tender years, and that their schooling should have priority
over the formation of business habits. Theoretically this is right, but the needs of the
poor are little known. Many of the children who are employed as helpers, messengers,
cash boys and minor laborers in shops, foundries, factories, offices and as venders, are
the mainstay of families that live, God knows how, for the one who should be the bread
winner is an invalid, a cripple, a paralytic, and would be in the charity hospital or the
almshouse were it not that the instinct of family unity is as strong and admirable among
the humble as among the rich. If all children are to be released from employment we
must immensely widen our charities to care for their parents.
Transcribed Image Text:Document 3 The Brooklyn Eagle Defends Some Kinds of Child Labor In this 1902 editorial, the Brooklyn Eagle describes the conditions that require some children to work for wages to support their families. It is the impulsive thing to say that children should never be employed; that they should be kept at home during the tender years, and that their schooling should have priority over the formation of business habits. Theoretically this is right, but the needs of the poor are little known. Many of the children who are employed as helpers, messengers, cash boys and minor laborers in shops, foundries, factories, offices and as venders, are the mainstay of families that live, God knows how, for the one who should be the bread winner is an invalid, a cripple, a paralytic, and would be in the charity hospital or the almshouse were it not that the instinct of family unity is as strong and admirable among the humble as among the rich. If all children are to be released from employment we must immensely widen our charities to care for their parents.
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