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Queen Victoria
Let see the first information
• Victorian children
•
Working Children
If you were a child from a poor
family at the beginning of the
Victorian times, you worked and
worked and worked .......
Children were often forced to work
almost as soon as they could walk.
This was not something new to the
Victorian period as children had
always been been expected to work
for hundreds of years. Many were
used as cheap labour.
Why didn't children refuse to
work?
Most children had no choice - they
needed to work to help their
families earn enough money to live.
What kind of jobs did children do?
The lucky children got apprenticed
in a trade, the less lucky ones
worked on farms or helped with the
spinning. When new types of work
appeared with the development of
industries and factories, it seemed
perfectly natural to use children for
work that adults couldn't do;
Crawling underneath machinery or
sitting in coal mines to open and
close the ventilation doors.
Chimney Sweeps
Chimney sweeping was a job
children could do better than
adults. Small boys (starting at the
age of 5 or 6 years) would be sent
scrambling up inside the chimney to
scrape and brush soot away. They
came down covered in soot, and
with bleeding elbows and knees.
"I have two boys working for me.
after work their arms and legs are
bleeding so I rub them with salt-
water before sending them up
another chimney" Sweep Master
The chimneys were usually very
narrow (in some cases as small as
30cm) and twisted. Children often
got stuck or froze with terror in the
cramped darkness - in these cases
the Master Chimney Sweeper,
would simply light the fire
underneath to 'encourage' them to
get on with their work.
The work was dangerous and
painful. Some boys got stuck and
died of suffocation.
"I never got stuck myself but some
of my friends have and were taken
out dead." boy aged 8
In 1832 the use of boys for
sweeping chimneys was forbidden
by law, however, boys continued to
be forced through the narrow
winding passages of chimneys in
large houses.
'The Water Babies' by Charles
Kingsley, tells the tale of a young
sweep, Tom. who drowns while
trying to escape from his evil
master and comes back to life
underwater as a 'water baby'.
• Factories
• Children worked long hours and sometimes had to carry out some dangerous jobs
working in factories.
• "I start work promptly at 5:00 in the morning and work all day till 9:00 at night.
That’s 16 hours! We are not allowed to talk, sit or look out of the window whilst we
work. The only day off from work I get is on Sundays, when we have to go to
church." Girl aged 9
• In textile mills children were made to clean machines while the machines were
kept running, and there were many accidents. Many children lost fingers in the
machinery and some were killed, crushed by the huge machines.
• In match factories children were employed to dip matches into a dangerous
chemical called phosphorous. The phosphorous could cause their teeth to rot and
some died from the effect of breathing it into their lungs.
• The Factory Act of 1878 banned employment of children under ten years of age,
but poor families needed the extra money so many children still skipped school.
• Why were children employed to work in factories?
• Children were much cheaper than adults as a factory owner did not have to pay
them as much.
• There were plenty of children in orphanages, so they could be replaced easily if
accidents did occur.
• Children were small enough to crawl under machinery to tie up broken threads.
• Street Children
• Thousands of poor children worked and lived on the
streets. Many were orphans, others were simply
neglected. They worked very long hours for very
little money. To buy bread, they sold matches,
firewood, buttons, flowers or bootlaces, polished
shoes, ran errands and swept the crossing places
where rich people crossed the busy roads.
• Coal Mines
• Coal was the main source of power in Victorian times. It was used for cooking and heating,
and for driving machinery, trains and steam ships. In order to produce more coal, the mines
needed more workers and children as young as 5 years old were used to supply this need.
They worked for up to 12 hours a day.
• The coal mines were dangerous places where roofs sometimes caved in, explosions
happened and workers often injured themselves.
• Below is a small sample of how children were killed working in coal mines
• A trapper, only 10 years old killed in an explosion.
• A horse driver aged 11. Crushed by horse.
• A driver, aged 14 fell off limmers and was crushed between the tubs and a door.
• A token keeper aged 14. Crushed by surface wagons on branches.
• A screenboy aged 12. Crushed by surface wagons.
• A trapper aged 12. Crushed by tubs.
• A driver aged 12. Horse fell on him.
• A bank boy aged 11. Caught by cage.
• A driver aged 12. Head crushed between tub top and a plank while riding on limmers.
• A trapper aged 13. Head crushed between cage and bunton while riding to bank.
• Tub Cleaner, aged 13. Fell down the shaft off a pumping engine.
• Boy aged 14, drowned.
• Boy, aged 7. Killed in an explosion.
• Trapper , aged 9. Killed in an explosion.
• Driver, aged 14. Crushed against wall by a horse.
• Screen Boy, aged 15. Head crushed between a tub and screen legs ; too little room.
• Trappers
Trappers were children who operated the air doors
providing ventilation for the miners. By keeping the fresh
air flowing they prevented the build up of dangerous gases.
The children would sit in the draft of the doors, cold, damp
and very frightened, with little or no light for 12 hours a
day.
• "I sit in the dark down in the pit for 12 hours a day. I only
see daylight on Sundays when I don't work down the pit.
Once I fell asleep and a wagon ran over my leg" Boy aged 7
• "I hate the dark, it scares me. I never go to sleep.
Sometimes I sing, there is nothing else to do other than
open and close the door." Girl aged 8
• Drawers
Drawers pulled heavy carts of cut coal to the pits
surface with heavy chains around their waists.
• " I am a drawer, and work from six o'clock in the
morning to six at night. stop about an hour at noon to
eat my dinner: I have bread and butter for dinner; I get
no drink.
• I have a belt round my waist, and a chain passing
between my legs, and I go on my hands and feet. The
tunnels are narrow and very wet where I work. My
clothes are wet through almost all day long." Girl aged
• Let see the second information
•
• Victorian house
• The Victorian period is the time when Queen Victoria ruled Britain.
• With the beginning of the railways and new manufacturing processes, previously locally produced
building materials became available all over the country. This meant the end of all houses in the
local area being built using the same building materials. Houses made of local stone, timber and
straw could now, for example, be built of bricks from Bedfordshire and slate from North Wales.
• The new mass produced bricks were cheaper and required less preparation and maintenance, so
for the first time all over the country new mansions, chapels, cottages, barns and factories were
made from the same material irrespective of region.
•
A public building in a town
• Despite the availability of these new products vast numbers of the working population in the
countryside were still living in tiny cottages, hovels and shacks well into the 20th century. In towns
poor people lived in back-to-back houses called terraced houses.
•
Terraced Houses
• Rich Victorians favoured villas ( not the same as Roman villas), whilst the emerging middle classes
of Victorian England lived in superior terraces with gardens back and front and a room for servants
in the attic.
•
• Let see the last information
• Florence Nightangel
• Florence was named after the place of her birth and is known as 'The lady with the Lamp'.
• Florence Nightingale was born in Florence, Italy on 12 May 1820. Her father was a wealthy landowner. She was
brought up in Derbyshire (where she spent her summers) and Hampshire ( where she spent her winters).
• Rich English girls such as Florence were expected to do - almost nothing. Florence couldn't bear the boredom of
it. Instead she became interested in hospitals and by 1853 was running a hospital in London.
• Education
• At the time when Florence was born, many girls did not receive any type of education. Florence was very lucky
because her father, William Nightingale, believed that all women should receive an education. He taught Florence
and her sister a variety of subjects ranging from science and mathematics to history and philosophy.
• Teenage years
• As Florence grew up she developed an interest in helping others. She cared for sick pets and servants whenever
she had the chance.
• At seventeen years of age, she believed she was called into service by God “to do something toward lifting the
load of suffering from the helpless and miserable.”
• At first her parents refused to allow her to become a nurse because, at that time, it was not thought to be a
suitable profession for a well educated woman. But Florence did not give up. Eventually in 1851 her father gave his
permission and Florence went to Germany to train as a nurse.
• Working Life
• 1849 - traveled to Europe to study the European hospital system.
1850 - traveled to Alexandria, Egypt and began studying nursing at the Institute of Saint Vincent de Paul.
1851 - aged thirty-one, went to Germany to train to become a nurse.
1853 - became superintendent of the Hospital for Gentlewomen in London.
1854 - the Crimean War broke out.
• Thanhk for watching

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Victorian Children's Difficult Working Lives Under Queen Victoria

  • 2. Let see the first information • Victorian children
  • 3. • Working Children If you were a child from a poor family at the beginning of the Victorian times, you worked and worked and worked ....... Children were often forced to work almost as soon as they could walk. This was not something new to the Victorian period as children had always been been expected to work for hundreds of years. Many were used as cheap labour. Why didn't children refuse to work? Most children had no choice - they needed to work to help their families earn enough money to live. What kind of jobs did children do? The lucky children got apprenticed in a trade, the less lucky ones worked on farms or helped with the spinning. When new types of work appeared with the development of industries and factories, it seemed perfectly natural to use children for work that adults couldn't do; Crawling underneath machinery or sitting in coal mines to open and close the ventilation doors. Chimney Sweeps Chimney sweeping was a job children could do better than adults. Small boys (starting at the age of 5 or 6 years) would be sent scrambling up inside the chimney to scrape and brush soot away. They came down covered in soot, and with bleeding elbows and knees. "I have two boys working for me. after work their arms and legs are bleeding so I rub them with salt- water before sending them up another chimney" Sweep Master The chimneys were usually very narrow (in some cases as small as 30cm) and twisted. Children often got stuck or froze with terror in the cramped darkness - in these cases the Master Chimney Sweeper, would simply light the fire underneath to 'encourage' them to get on with their work. The work was dangerous and painful. Some boys got stuck and died of suffocation. "I never got stuck myself but some of my friends have and were taken out dead." boy aged 8 In 1832 the use of boys for sweeping chimneys was forbidden by law, however, boys continued to be forced through the narrow winding passages of chimneys in large houses. 'The Water Babies' by Charles Kingsley, tells the tale of a young sweep, Tom. who drowns while trying to escape from his evil master and comes back to life underwater as a 'water baby'.
  • 4. • Factories • Children worked long hours and sometimes had to carry out some dangerous jobs working in factories. • "I start work promptly at 5:00 in the morning and work all day till 9:00 at night. That’s 16 hours! We are not allowed to talk, sit or look out of the window whilst we work. The only day off from work I get is on Sundays, when we have to go to church." Girl aged 9 • In textile mills children were made to clean machines while the machines were kept running, and there were many accidents. Many children lost fingers in the machinery and some were killed, crushed by the huge machines. • In match factories children were employed to dip matches into a dangerous chemical called phosphorous. The phosphorous could cause their teeth to rot and some died from the effect of breathing it into their lungs. • The Factory Act of 1878 banned employment of children under ten years of age, but poor families needed the extra money so many children still skipped school. • Why were children employed to work in factories? • Children were much cheaper than adults as a factory owner did not have to pay them as much. • There were plenty of children in orphanages, so they could be replaced easily if accidents did occur. • Children were small enough to crawl under machinery to tie up broken threads.
  • 5. • Street Children • Thousands of poor children worked and lived on the streets. Many were orphans, others were simply neglected. They worked very long hours for very little money. To buy bread, they sold matches, firewood, buttons, flowers or bootlaces, polished shoes, ran errands and swept the crossing places where rich people crossed the busy roads.
  • 6. • Coal Mines • Coal was the main source of power in Victorian times. It was used for cooking and heating, and for driving machinery, trains and steam ships. In order to produce more coal, the mines needed more workers and children as young as 5 years old were used to supply this need. They worked for up to 12 hours a day. • The coal mines were dangerous places where roofs sometimes caved in, explosions happened and workers often injured themselves. • Below is a small sample of how children were killed working in coal mines • A trapper, only 10 years old killed in an explosion. • A horse driver aged 11. Crushed by horse. • A driver, aged 14 fell off limmers and was crushed between the tubs and a door. • A token keeper aged 14. Crushed by surface wagons on branches. • A screenboy aged 12. Crushed by surface wagons. • A trapper aged 12. Crushed by tubs. • A driver aged 12. Horse fell on him. • A bank boy aged 11. Caught by cage. • A driver aged 12. Head crushed between tub top and a plank while riding on limmers. • A trapper aged 13. Head crushed between cage and bunton while riding to bank. • Tub Cleaner, aged 13. Fell down the shaft off a pumping engine. • Boy aged 14, drowned. • Boy, aged 7. Killed in an explosion. • Trapper , aged 9. Killed in an explosion. • Driver, aged 14. Crushed against wall by a horse. • Screen Boy, aged 15. Head crushed between a tub and screen legs ; too little room.
  • 7. • Trappers Trappers were children who operated the air doors providing ventilation for the miners. By keeping the fresh air flowing they prevented the build up of dangerous gases. The children would sit in the draft of the doors, cold, damp and very frightened, with little or no light for 12 hours a day. • "I sit in the dark down in the pit for 12 hours a day. I only see daylight on Sundays when I don't work down the pit. Once I fell asleep and a wagon ran over my leg" Boy aged 7 • "I hate the dark, it scares me. I never go to sleep. Sometimes I sing, there is nothing else to do other than open and close the door." Girl aged 8
  • 8. • Drawers Drawers pulled heavy carts of cut coal to the pits surface with heavy chains around their waists. • " I am a drawer, and work from six o'clock in the morning to six at night. stop about an hour at noon to eat my dinner: I have bread and butter for dinner; I get no drink. • I have a belt round my waist, and a chain passing between my legs, and I go on my hands and feet. The tunnels are narrow and very wet where I work. My clothes are wet through almost all day long." Girl aged
  • 9. • Let see the second information • • Victorian house
  • 10. • The Victorian period is the time when Queen Victoria ruled Britain. • With the beginning of the railways and new manufacturing processes, previously locally produced building materials became available all over the country. This meant the end of all houses in the local area being built using the same building materials. Houses made of local stone, timber and straw could now, for example, be built of bricks from Bedfordshire and slate from North Wales. • The new mass produced bricks were cheaper and required less preparation and maintenance, so for the first time all over the country new mansions, chapels, cottages, barns and factories were made from the same material irrespective of region. • A public building in a town • Despite the availability of these new products vast numbers of the working population in the countryside were still living in tiny cottages, hovels and shacks well into the 20th century. In towns poor people lived in back-to-back houses called terraced houses. • Terraced Houses • Rich Victorians favoured villas ( not the same as Roman villas), whilst the emerging middle classes of Victorian England lived in superior terraces with gardens back and front and a room for servants in the attic. •
  • 11. • Let see the last information • Florence Nightangel
  • 12. • Florence was named after the place of her birth and is known as 'The lady with the Lamp'. • Florence Nightingale was born in Florence, Italy on 12 May 1820. Her father was a wealthy landowner. She was brought up in Derbyshire (where she spent her summers) and Hampshire ( where she spent her winters). • Rich English girls such as Florence were expected to do - almost nothing. Florence couldn't bear the boredom of it. Instead she became interested in hospitals and by 1853 was running a hospital in London. • Education • At the time when Florence was born, many girls did not receive any type of education. Florence was very lucky because her father, William Nightingale, believed that all women should receive an education. He taught Florence and her sister a variety of subjects ranging from science and mathematics to history and philosophy. • Teenage years • As Florence grew up she developed an interest in helping others. She cared for sick pets and servants whenever she had the chance. • At seventeen years of age, she believed she was called into service by God “to do something toward lifting the load of suffering from the helpless and miserable.” • At first her parents refused to allow her to become a nurse because, at that time, it was not thought to be a suitable profession for a well educated woman. But Florence did not give up. Eventually in 1851 her father gave his permission and Florence went to Germany to train as a nurse. • Working Life • 1849 - traveled to Europe to study the European hospital system. 1850 - traveled to Alexandria, Egypt and began studying nursing at the Institute of Saint Vincent de Paul. 1851 - aged thirty-one, went to Germany to train to become a nurse. 1853 - became superintendent of the Hospital for Gentlewomen in London. 1854 - the Crimean War broke out.
  • 13. • Thanhk for watching