Bobbin boy
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A bobbin boy was a boy who worked in a textile mill in the 18th and early 19th centuries. One example of rising from this job to great heights in America was young Andrew Carnegie, who at age 13 worked as a bobbin boy in 1848.
Description
[edit]In the 18th and early 19th centuries, bobbin boys worked in textile mills. The boys brought bobbins to the women at the looms when they called for them, and collected the full bobbins of spun cotton or wool thread. They also would be expected to fix minor problems with the machines. Average pay was about $1.00 a week (equivalent to $37 in 2023, compared to 1900), with days often beginning at 5:30 am and ending around 7:30 pm six days a week. The job as a bobbin boy was extremely dangerous, and there was always an extreme risk of death.
Notable bobbin boys
[edit]One example of rising from this job to great heights in America was young Andrew Carnegie, who at age 13 worked as a bobbin boy in 1848.[1] The following persons once worked as a bobbin boy:
- Andrew Carnegie, the great steel tycoon[1][2]
- Nathaniel Prentice Banks, Governor of Massachusetts and Union general[3]
- Robert Frost, poet[4]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Carnegie, Andrew (1920). Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie. p. 34. ISBN 9780722221914.
- ^ "Carnegie Started as a Bobbin Boy". archive.nytimes.com.
- ^ Hollandsworth, James (1998). Pretense of Glory: The Life of General Nathaniel P. Banks. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. p. 4. ISBN 0-8071-2293-9.
- ^ Faggen, Robert, ed. (2001). The Cambridge companion to Robert Frost. Cambridge companions to literature. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 246. ISBN 978-0-521-63248-5.