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Significant Events and DevelopmentsSearching for the Common GoodMaking Self-Government Work
The Costs of Industrialization


1870
15th Amendment gives African-American men the right to vote

1873
General Assembly establishes Bureau of Labor Statistics

1873
The Depression of
1873-78 begins

1874
Smith sisters defy the town of Glastonbury

1875
General Assembly refuses to give women the right to vote

1875
Hartford becomes Connecticut's sole capital

1886
General Assembly bans employment of children under 13

1886
Strikes shut down 144 Connecticut factories

1887
General Assembly passes factory safety legislation

 

Searching for the
Common Good,
1866-1887
Click on images for larger version

   
1. Workers pose for the camera at Hartford's Pratt and Whitney Company
   

The Costs of Industrialization

In 1873, the legislature began to look more closely at the problems of Connecticut's workers and established the Bureau of Labor Statistics to collect data on employment and wages. Picture 1

Representative Stephen Walkley, a member of the Select Committee to Revise the Pauper Laws, was part owner of several large factories in his hometown of Southington. Made up entirely of farmers, small businessmen and industrialists, the committee recommended that the unemployed asking for food must work for it or face jail. Picture 2

The General Assembly attempted to deal with unemployment by voting to expand the state's almshouses and placing the jobless in institutions. Picture 3

Textile mills were the state's largest employer of children, who comprised over 20% of the cotton-mill workforce in 1880. Organized labor sought to end these conditions. In 1885, the Knights of Labor elected 37 members to the General Assembly. Rejecting the protests of employers, the 1886 legislature banned employment of children under 13 years old. The law worked: between 1880 and 1890 the percentage of children in the industrial workforce declined from 8% to 2%. Picture 4

Shafting, belts and pulleys posed constant dangers to inattentive workers in 19th century factories. In 1887, the General Assembly passed a factory safety law but failed to provide adequate means for enforcement. Picture 5

 

 
         
   
2. Representative Stephen Walkley
   
         
   

3. Photo of the Hartford almshouse
   
         
   
4. Textile mill workers
   
         
       
    5. Belt-driven machinery at the Ingraham clock factory, Bristol    
         
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