A Memoir of Robert Blincoe, an Orphan Boy / Sent from the workhouse of St. Pancras, London, at seven years of age, to endure the horrors of a cotton-mill, through his infancy and youth, with a minute detail of his sufferings, being the first memoir of the kind published.
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About This Book
An orphan sent from a parish workhouse at seven is apprenticed into cotton mills and subjected to relentless labor, malnutrition, physical injury, and severe discipline. The memoir recounts his childhood and youth in mill bondage, detailing daily routines, abuses by masters, the parochial apprenticeship system that enabled exploitation, and the social and legislative debates surrounding factory labor. Interwoven are eyewitness reports and publisher commentary that draw comparisons between industrial child labor and other forms of coerced labor, argue for reform, and record the subject’s later life in Manchester.
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