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Lowell and the Factory System |
HTI LESSON PLAN |
| Introduction
This lesson plan examines the efforts of early American manufacturers to implement the factory system on a large-scale in the town of Lowell, Massachusetts. It can be used when teaching about the economic revolution of the post-War of 1812-period or the development of industry in the Antebellum North. Objectives
1. To understand the
idealistic goals of the industrialists who financed and built the Lowell
mills. 2. To investigate how the
expectations of Lowell’s founders compared to the reality of life in the
textile mills for the young women who comprised the factories’ principal
work force.
Pre-Class
Preparation
This lesson plan requires
students to examine several documents of varying length drawn from
different sources on the Internet.
Students should read all of the texts before coming to class. Links to the assigned documents
are provided in the lesson plan.
For convenience, the documents have also been collected into a
single MS-WORD file, which can be
printed out and distributed to students ahead of time at the teacher’s
discretion. Part 1: The Idealized
Vision The Lowell mills were as
much a social experiment as they were an economic enterprise. Mill owners recruited young New
England farm girls and provided housing for them in company-owned
dormitories where their leisure time was as carefully supervised as their
working hours. The girls were
required to attend church regularly.
Lending libraries, lectures, concerts, and recitals were also
provided for their moral and intellectual edification. In creating Lowell, the mill
owners hoped to enjoy all of the benefits that came with the factory
system while avoiding the social consequences of industrialization. Above all, they wanted to avoid
the creation of a permanent, degraded working class. This part of the lesson asks
students to examine a series of illustrations that express something of
the social vision that guided Lowell’s founders. The pictures present idealized
portraits of both the factory operatives and the mills. The illustrations have
been taken from a variety of websites and books on American history. They have been organized into a PowerPoint presentation that should be shown to students
in class. Alternatively, the
individual PowerPoint slides can be converted into color transparencies or
printed out on paper for distribution to the students.
Activity: Before starting
the presentation, ask your students to jot down on paper the image that
comes to mind when they hear the word “factory.” Also, advise students to pay
close attention not only to the factory buildings and the women
themselves, but also to the surrounding details that the artists chose to
include in their pictures. Assignment: After students
have viewed the artwork, ask them to respond to some or all of the
following questions--Do the pictures of the Lowell mills conform to your
image of a factory?
What do these illustrations seem to suggest about the relationship
between the factories and the natural environment? How are the girls
portrayed? Describe the setting that the girl on the cover of The Lowell Offering has been
placed in. What message is
the illustrator trying to convey in this drawing? Part 2: Life in the Mills As the first American
factory town of its kind, Lowell attracted a great deal of national and
international attention.
Visitors flocked to Lowell to tour the town and observe what
working and living conditions were like for the female mill
operatives. The documents in
this part of the lesson provide several different perspectives on
Lowell. The first (http://www.albany.edu/history/history316/VisitorLowell1836.html)
is an article from The
Harbinger, one of many publications that was established in the early
1800s to support the interests of the working class. The second (http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/DICKENS/dks4.html)
is a chapter from American
Notes, a collection of sketches by English author Charles Dickens
describing his travels across the United States in 1842. Renowned as both a novelist and a
journalist, Dickens had written frequently about the horrors of Britain’s industrial cities. The third document (http://www.albany.edu/faculty/gz580/His316/SecondPeepatFactoryLife.html) is an account by one of the factory workers that
appeared in The Lowell
Offering, a literary magazine published by the young women who worked in
the mills. The final document
(http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/americanstudies/lavender/graphics/spinsong.jpg)
is the text of a song that was popular among the mill operatives. Assignment: Ask students
to respond to some or all of the following questions--The authors of the
first three documents offer very different impressions of the mills and
factory life. On what points
do their accounts disagree the most?
Are their any subjects on which all three writers agree? How did the female workers
themselves view their situation?
After examine all of these documents, do you think the founders of
Lowell fulfilled their original goal of creating a benevolent industrial
system that benefited factory owners and workers alike? Suggestions
for Additional Activities
This lesson plan is primarily concerned with examining what factory life was like for workers during this early stage of industrialization in the United States. However, the topic can also be used as a springboard to explore the changing status of women in antebellum America. The decision to hire young, unmarried women to work in the Lowell mills generated a considerable amount of controversy. Critics claimed that factory work was not suited to the female sex and would leave the women tarnished for life. The mill workers vigorously disputed these charges in the pages of The Lowell Offering and wrote very eloquently on the subject of why they valued their experiences at Lowell. A good selection of their writings from this periodical and other sources can be found at http://www.albany.edu/history/history316/his316f2000.html. These documents offer an excellent basis for discussion on how factory work reshaped the social and economic boundaries of women’s lives during this time period. | |
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This lesson has been recreated from an original site for stability reasons only. No changes in the text have been made by the webmasters of this site. The original can be located at http://history.osu.edu/HTI/Lessons/US.htm |