September 2001, Vol 91, No. 9 | American Journal of Public Health 1370
© 2001 American Public Health Association
Night Shift in a Glass Factory
William H. Helfand,
Jan Lazarus and
Paul Theerman
William H. Helfand is a consultant based in New York, NY. Jan Lazarus and Paul Theerman are with the History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, Md.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Paul Theerman, Head, Non-Book Collections, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20894 (e-mail: paul_theerman{at}nlm.nih.gov).
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INTRODUCTION
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TOP
INTRODUCTION
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THE EXPLOITATION OF CHILD labor, a practice still evident in this country and common in many parts of the world, was once rampant in the United States. As captured in this photograph by John Spargo (1876 1966), published in his The Bitter Cry of the Children (New York: Macmillan Co; 1906), childrenwho should have been in bed resting before the next day at schooloften toiled through the night. The 1870 US census recorded 750 000 workers younger than 15 years, not counting farm workers. Children on family farms were routinely expected to work long and exhausting hours.
Socialists, labor leaders, Progressive reformers, and public health workers led the protracted fight against child labor. Photographs such as this one were effective tools for education and mobilization, as were the more famous images by Lewis Hine and Jacob Riis. Such images clearly brought home to people the terrible conditions and injustice of much of child labor. Indeed, the National Child Labor Committee employed Hine from 1909 to 1911, using his photographs to arouse public opinion. Only in the 1930s, however, with the growing power of organized labor, did the campaign succeed in implementing the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
The problem is by no means over. The many provisions of the APHA Policy Statement on Protection of Child and Adolescent Workers (1994) deserve study and reaffirmation. Not mentioned in the APHA statement but also critical for child health is the campaign for a living wage, so that the many single mothers who work at low-wage jobs will be able to afford food, housing, and other necessities for their childrenwithout requiring the children to work.

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Source. Prints and Photographs Collection, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine.
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Footnotes
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Most of the Prints and Photographs Collection of the History of Medicine Division of the National Library of Medicine may be viewed through its on-line database "Images from the History of Medicine" at http://wwwihm.nlm.nih.gov. The Web site also provides information on ordering reproductions of images. If you have a print, photograph, or other visual item that might be appropriate for this collection, please contact the History of Medicine Division.
Copyright © 2001 by the American Public Health Association