DiScOvErInG HiStOrY Women and the Industrial Revolution
In the countryside women’s traditional work practices slowly changed. As commonage was enclosed the places women could graze their animals were lost, reducing the farm produce they could use or sell. When heavy tools like scythes replaced sickles it was difficult for children and older women to use them in harvest time, and progressive landlords and land-agents preferred to employ men to use and maintain the traction engines operating in the countryside.
Although some women benefitted from the prosperity and mechanisation by owning or working in hostelries along the canals and railways, cottage industries dominated by women became obsolete as growers sent raw materials to mills to be processed more quickly and cheaply. This led skilled women to seek employment outside their locality. In this era the number of young single women living outside their family home increased. These were the first ‘factory girls’ or ‘women workers’.
Other women brought their families to work in factories producing cheap fabric from imported cotton. Factory towns were expensive to live in so women and their children worked hard to survive. They could do intricate work and access small spaces – in mining areas this included going down narrow tunnels to haul out coal.
Women were involved in trade organisations like the Chartists, but these soon became male unions focused on gaining advantages for their members from their male bosses. They restricted women from operating certain machines and from doing well-paid skilled work. As legislation was introduced to improve pay and conditions for factory workers, the hours women could work were reduced and women were seen as cheap labour. Some factory owners set up ‘sweat shops’ or sold equipment to women who did ‘piecework’ at home.
As more women stayed at home supported by their menfolk, women workers became objects of pity to the middle classes.
Dr Jean Mary Walker Women’s History Association of Ireland