industrial revolution katherine riordan. child labor

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Industrial Revolution Katherine Riordan

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Page 1: Industrial Revolution Katherine Riordan. Child Labor

Industrial Revolution

Katherine Riordan

Page 2: Industrial Revolution Katherine Riordan. Child Labor

Child Labor

Page 4: Industrial Revolution Katherine Riordan. Child Labor

Working conditions in factories

Both show child labor but the working conditions were horrible that had no safety regulations that children go without shoes in the cold winter or close to machines could take off limbs.

Page 6: Industrial Revolution Katherine Riordan. Child Labor

urbanization

The city overhead view of New York City

The poor tenements livers.

Page 11: Industrial Revolution Katherine Riordan. Child Labor

Jane Addams – Hull House Jane Addams is the youngest of eight kids. Her mother and

four of her siblings died when she was very young. Her father remarried when she was young too. Her sister and stepbrother got married in 1875. Her sister and her finished a year of medical school in Philadelphia. Her friend and her co-founded the hull house in 1889. The place is in Chicago. It was the first settlement house in the United States. She had many ethnic groups around her in the neighborhood. She became part of the women’s peace party in the world war one. She has a community that is in Sacramento, California. She has said this after she said that “ What after all has maintained the human race on this old globe despite all the calamities of nature and all the tragic failings of mankind. If not faith in new possibilities and courage to advocate them.”

Page 12: Industrial Revolution Katherine Riordan. Child Labor

Elizabeth Cady Stanton Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in the year of 1815 of the month of

November 12. She was the eighth child out of eleven kids. Her brothers and sisters died until there was four girls left. Her mother was in the Dutch settlers. Her grandpa was part of the Continental soldiers and the American Revolution. She was formally educated while she was in school. She was educated in Latin, Greek, and Mathematics until the age of sixteen. As a young woman she meet her husband at a movement she was at. They had seven kids together. She began the women’s rights at the age of 44. She wrote this after the American Civil War. It says this “ The prejudice against color, of which we hear so much, is no stronger than that against sex. Its produced by the same cause, and manifested very much in the same way.” She died of a heart failure at her house in the year of 1902. She was buried in Bronx. The women’s right movement was put on a postage stamp that said 100 years of the women’s right movement.