Primary:
Hine, Lewis. A Bowery. N.d. Photograph. The History Place, New York City. We are using this photo to show different types of child labor. Hine, Lewis. The Factory. 1909. Photograph. The History Place, Laurinburg, North Carolina. This source is a picture that was taken in one of the factories while the little boys were working. We are using this source to depict how bad the working conditions in the factories really were. Hine, Lewis. The Littlest Laborers. N.d. Web. 23 Jan 2013. We are using this image to show what the children looked like during the time that they worked. Hine, Lewis. Newsies. N.d. Photograph. The History Place, St. Louis, Missouri. We are using this photograph to show the children who worked on the streets. Hine, Lewis. The Mill. N.d. Photograph. The History Place, Whitnel, North Carolina. We are using this picture to show what the faces of the workers looked like inside the factories. Hine, Lewis. The Mill. N.d. Photograph. The History Place, Macon, Georgia. We are using this picture to show what conditions were like in the factories. Hine, Lewis. The Mill. N.d. Photograph. The History Place, Lincolnton, North Carolina. This source is a picture which we will use to depict a vivid image of what a child longed for during the years of child labor. Hirsch, Dr. Emil G. "The Evil of Child Labor." Cleveland Journal. 03.06 (4/22/1905): 02. Web. 15 Jan. 2013. <www.memory.loc.gov>. This source is a web journal and we will use it to quote the cruelty of child labor. Lovejoy, Owen R. "Seven Years of Child Labor Reform." American Decades 1. (1911): 31-38. American Decades Primary Sources. Database. 7 Jan 2013. This source was a web document about the child labor laws and reforms. We are going to use this source to learn information about the different tasks that children did and the reforms that happened. "Transcript of Keating-Owen Child Labor Act of 1916 ." www.ourdocuments.gov. U.S. National Archives & Records Administrations, 1 Sep 1916. Web. 9 Jan 2013. <www.ourdocuments.gov> This source is a web document from the U.S. National Archives & Records Administration that we will use to learn facts about the Keating-Owen Child Labor Act of 1916. This Act was ruled unconstitutional in 1918. |
Secondary:
Bartoletti, Susan Campbell. Kids on Strike! Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999. Print. This source is a book. We will use it to describe different aspects of the life of a child at work as well as the reform acts. "Child Labor." World book. 3. Chicago: 2007. This source is an encyclopedia. We will use it to learn about the child labor laws and the reforms that took place. Hillstrom, Kevin. The Industrial Revolution. Farmington Hills, MI: Lucent, 2009. Print. We are going to use this source to discuss the responsibilities of working in the factories. Hillstrom, Kevin. The Progressive Era. Detroit, MI: Lucent, 2009. Print. This source is a book about the Progressive Era but it has a lot of information about child laborers and families. "Keating-Owen Child Labor Act of 1916." U.S News. U.S. News & World Report, 2003. Web. 25 Jan. 2013. We plan to use this article to pull out interesting facts from the census and facts about the Keating-Owen Act. Stein, R. Conrad. The Story of Child Labor Laws. United Stated of America: Regensteiner Publishing Enterprises Inc., 1984. Print. This source is a book about child labor. The information that we are using is about the amount of money that the children earned, where children usually worked and about the tenements where they lived. United States. Cong. Child Labor in America: History, Policy, and Legislative Issues. By William G. Whittaker. Cong. Bill. [Washington, D.C.]: Congressional Research Service, the Library of Congress, 2004. Print. We are going to use this article to quote different aspects of child labor. Zimand, Gertrude F. "Children Hurt at Work." The Survey 4 (1932): 1-5. GaleGroup. Web. 7 Jan. 2013. This sources is a journal article and we will use this information to describe the hardships of child labor and its effect on children's health. |