Lewis Hine sometimes went undercover to capture images of kids at work.
In the early 1900's, Lewis Hine left his job as a schoolteacher to
work as a photographer for the National Child Labor Committee,
investigating and documenting child labor in the United States. As a
sociologist, Hine was an early believer in the power of photography to
document work conditions and help bring about change. He traveled the
country, going to fields, factories, and mines—sometimes working
undercover—to take pictures of kids as young as four years old being put
to work.
Partly as a result of Hine's work (as well as that of
Mary Harris Jones, who Mother Jones is named after), Congress passed the
Keating-Owens Child Labor Act
in 1916. It established child labor standards, including a a minimum
age (14 years old for factories, and 16 years old for mines) and an
eight-hour workday. It also barred kids under the age of 16 from working
overnight. However, the Keating-Owens Act was later ruled
unconstitutional, and lasting reform to federal child labor laws didn't
come until the New Deal.
In 2004, retired social worker Joe Manning set out to see what had
happened to as many of the kids in Hine's photos as he could find. He's
documented his findings—showing the lives of hundreds of subjects—on his
website,
MorningsOnMapleStreet.com.
Breaker boys who worked in Ewen Breaker of Pennsylvania Coal Company, South Pittston, Pennsylvania
A group of breaker boys in Pittston, Pennsylvania. The smallest is Sam Belloma.
A young driver in Brown Mine in Brown,
West Virginia. Hine said the boy had been driving one year, working from
7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily.
A tipple boy working at Turkey Knob Mine in MacDonald, West Virginia.
A trapper boy working in the Turkey Knob
Mine in Macdonald, West Virginia. The boy had to stoop because of the
low roof. This photo was taken more than a mile inside the mine.
Drivers in a coal mine in West Virginia
Vance,
a trapper boy, was 15 years old when this photo was taken. He was paid
75 cents a day for 10 hours of work. His job was to open and shut this
door. Because of the intense darkness in the mine, the writing on the
door was not visible until plate was developed.
A view of Pennsylvania Coal Company's Ewen
Breaker in South Pittson, Pennsylvania. The dust was so dense at times,
it was difficult to see, Hine wrote. A man sometimes stood over the
boys, prodding or kicking them, the photographer wrote.
Noon at Pennsylvania Coal Company's Ewen Breaker in South Pittston
A young leader and a driver for the
Pennsylvania Coal Company worked in Shaft #6 in South Pittson. The
workers are Pasquale Salvo and Sandy Castina.
At the end of the day, workers for the
Pennsylvania Coal Company waited for the cage to go up at Shaft #6 in
South Pittson, Pennsylvania. The small boy in front is Jo Pume, a
nipper.
A photo of a miner boy named Frank as he
was going home. At the time, he was about 14 years old. He had worked in
the mine for three years helping his father pick and load. He was in
the hospital one year, after his leg was crushed by a coal car, Hine
wrote.
Workers at the end of the day in a
Pennsylvania coal mine. The smallest boy, near the far right, is a
nipper. On his right is Arthur, a driver. Jo, on Arthur's right, is a
nipper. Frank, the boy on the left end of the photo, is a nipper and
works a mile underground from the shaft, which is 5,000 feet down.
James O'Dell helped push these heavily
loaded cars. He appears to be about 12 or 13 years old, Hine wrote.
James worked at Knoxville Iron Co.'s Cross Mountain Mine, which is in
the vicinity of Coal Creek, Tennessee. James had been there four months.
Shorpy Higginbotham was a greaser at
Bessie Mine in Alabama, working for the Sloss-Sheffield Steel and Iron
Company. Hine said the boy told him that he was 14 years old, but Hine
suspected the boy wasn't telling the truth. At work, Shorpy carried two
heavy pails of grease and was often in danger of being run over by the
coal cars.
A greaser at Bessie Mine in Alabama
Harry and Sallie. Harry was a driver for
the Maryland Coal Co. Mine, which was near Grafton, West Virginia. Hine
said the boy was afraid of being photographed because he might be forced
to go to school. Harry was probably 12 years old, Hine wrote.
Tom Vitol (also called Dominick Dekatis)
was photographed in Hughestown Burough, Pittston, Pennsylvania. He
worked in Breaker #9 and was probably younger than 14 years old, Hine
wrote.
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