"Life in the Shop": The Story of an Immigrant Garment Worker  - by Clara Lemlich This piece was first published in the New York Evening Journal, on November 28, 1909.   First let me tell you something about the way we work and what we are paid. There are two kinds of work—regular, that is salary work, and piecework. The regular work pays about $6 a week and the girls have to be at their machines at 7 o'clock in the morning and they stay at them until 8 o'clock at night, with just one-half hour for lunch in that time.   The shops. Well, there is just one row of machines that the daylight ever gets to—that is the front row, nearest the window. The girls at all the other rows of machines back in the shops have to work by gaslight, by day as well as by night. Oh, yes, the shops keep the work going at night, too.   The bosses in the shops are hardly what you would call educated men, and the girls to them are part of the machines they are running. They yell at the girls and berate them...   There are no dressing rooms for the girls in the shops. They have to hang up their hats and coats—such as they are—on hooks along the walls. Sometimes a girl has a new hat. It never is much to look at because it never costs more than 50 cents, which means that we have gone for weeks on two-cent lunches—dry cake and nothing else.   The shops are unsanitary—that's the word that is generally used, but there ought to be a worse one used. Whenever we tear or damage any of the goods we sew on, or whenever it is found damaged after we are through with it, whether we have done it or not, we are charged for the piece and sometimes for a whole yard of the material.   At the beginning of every slow season, $2 is deducted from our salaries. We have never been able to find out what this is for.   1. Analysis: Overall, what are two conclusions you can make about working conditions in Gilded Age garment factories in New York City from this source?  2. Whose perspective on working conditions is not mentioned in this article?

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"Life in the Shop": The Story of an Immigrant Garment Worker 

- by Clara Lemlich

This piece was first published in the New York Evening Journal, on November 28, 1909.

 

First let me tell you something about the way we work and what we are paid. There are two kinds of work—regular, that is salary work, and piecework. The regular work pays about $6 a week and the girls have to be at their machines at 7 o'clock in the morning and they stay at them until 8 o'clock at night, with just one-half hour for lunch in that time.

 

The shops. Well, there is just one row of machines that the daylight ever gets to—that is the front row, nearest the window. The girls at all the other rows of machines back in the shops have to work by gaslight, by day as well as by night. Oh, yes, the shops keep the work going at night, too.

 

The bosses in the shops are hardly what you would call educated men, and the girls to them are part of the machines they are running. They yell at the girls and berate them...

 

There are no dressing rooms for the girls in the shops. They have to hang up their hats and coats—such as they are—on hooks along the walls. Sometimes a girl has a new hat. It never is much to look at because it never costs more than 50 cents, which means that we have gone for weeks on two-cent lunches—dry cake and nothing else.

 

The shops are unsanitary—that's the word that is generally used, but there ought to be a worse one used. Whenever we tear or damage any of the goods we sew on, or whenever it is found damaged after we are through with it, whether we have done it or not, we are charged for the piece and sometimes for a whole yard of the material.

 

At the beginning of every slow season, $2 is deducted from our salaries. We have never been able to find out what this is for.

 

1. Analysis: Overall, what are two conclusions you can make about working conditions in Gilded Age garment factories in New York City from this source? 

2. Whose perspective on working conditions is not mentioned in this article? 

 

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