Child Labor In The Gilded Age

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Since the beginning of the Gilded Age, children worked with no Child-Labor laws. Because of this, industries began abusing children’s lack of authority and made them work 10 or more hours a day.” [Child labor laws] did not exist until the 1910s, when nearly every state passed minimum age and maximum hour legislation.” (Horizons Vol. II, 595). In 2015, the minimum age requirement is 14 (with a state work permit). J.H. Kellogg writes the article Plain Facts for the Old and Young in 1884 about the inexcusable character of young boys and girls, describing how they should behave in accordance with God’s will. Even though America should have been fixing the character issue, child labor should have been addressed first. As a result, the decrease of

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