Women and children in textile factories had to work shifts of between 14 and 16 hours. Even hen workingconditions improved during the course of the 19th century – primarily for children – this tendency was [...] and the workers had to keep to a strict discipline despite the fact that the majority were still working individually by hand. The decisive element which turned the whole world of work on its head was [...] Economist, Adam Smith, tells of a factory where the manufacture of a pin was divided up into 18 working sections. In 1769, the English pioneer, Josiah Wedgwood, opened up his porcelain factory "Etruria"
workers' association was the British 'Chartists'. They were concerned not only with better workingconditions, but also with political participation: In the 'People's Charta' of 1838, they demanded the [...] squeezing in more multi-storey blocks. Several thousand people lived in these estates. Hygiene in the working class districts was disastrous. With no sewers, rubbish, including human faeces, piled up in the [...] action. With so many people looking for work, factory owners could afford to pay poverty wages. Working hours ranged from 12 to 16 hours, 6 days a week. Violations of the strict time and work discipline
effort. According to international law, prisoners of war could be used as labourers under certain conditions, but as they could not decide on the nature and duration of their work in the German Reich, their [...] and Poles eventually forming the vast majority. On farms and in private households, their living conditions could be bearable - but they were at the mercy of the racism of the German population every day [...] production of tights and bed linen. Here, too, the pressure to perform was high, with unregulated working hours and harsh punishments for misbehaviour. Although the companies paid according to collective
demanding higher wages, and demands for a twelve-hour working day were soon followed by demands for a ten-hour day. The first improvements in workingconditions occurred after a law was introduced in 1842 to [...] exploded into major cities: here the masses were forced to live under appalling conditions in crowded slums and damp cellars. Working hours were around 14 hours a day and the workers were slaves to the rhythm [...] 19th century. All these developments were paralleled by stronger workers' organisations. The first working-class political party was set up in 1863 in Germany; this was followed by the SPD in 1869. It was
to stories? Perhaps stories telling about industrial history, or about people and their working or living conditions? Here you are right ... more BROCHURE: EUROPEAN INDUSTRIAL HERITAGE From its very beginning
workers. For the same reason they were able to postpone any improvements to the catastrophic workingconditions for a long time. Thus, for centuries technical developments failed to move on from the Middle [...] badly ventilated galleries which were sometimes so low that they were forced to lie down whilst working. The coal was then loaded into baskets or low wagons, to be drawn by horses over wooden or iron rails [...] introduced in Great Britain for the first time. This not only cut coal but loaded it in a single working process. In areas where the coal was softer a coal plane was used as an alternative. The first e
great deal of European common ground waiting to be discovered. For a start, the living and workingconditions of the industrial age were more or less the same, assuming that a miner in the Ruhr or the
especially the "Borinage" in the far west - gained a sad notoriety because of the disastrous workingconditions and the miserable wages. The workers fought back in bitter strikes and the region developed [...] HISTORY OF BELGIUM Listen The industrial age of the European continent began in Belgium, where conditions were similarly good to those in England: coal had been mined in the valleys of the Meuse and Sambre
boosted by the vast forests of this Alpine country. Concurrently, industrial workingconditions gradually improved, working time was capped at 11 hours and health and accident insurance was introduced [...] core region, where Karl Wittgenstein, "Austria’s Krupp", formed the established mining and iron-working operations into a powerful cartel. Textile production developed in the Vorarlberg region, and in
more jute factories than anywhere else in the world. One of them was the Verdant Works. The last working jute mill in Britain is now an exciting museum. Here visitors can find out more about the past history [...] in the hold of a clipper from India to Dundee before being confronted with the appalling factory conditions under which children were forced to work. They are then given the chance to contrast this to the
mother Dorothy Shuttleworth continued to develop the collection. All the aircraft are kept in flying condition and the maintenance and restoration workshops are open to visitors. Hangers contain many exhibits [...] steam engines and farm machinery of the same era are presented alongside the aircraft and kept in working order. Visitors can take rides on vintage buses.
vehicles on display, this is said to be the largest car museum in Sweden. It shows everyday and working vehicles alongside extraordinary cars. It opened in 2015 and is based on the personal collection [...] career in property. The oldest car is a De Dion-Bouton from 1899. Many cars were acquired in poor condition, such as the Renault pickup dating from 1914 that Lundkvist brought from Paris and restored himself
built relatively late – shortly after 1900. For this reason it is still in an impressively good condition. Nowadays the colliery near Beringen in Limburg (Belgium) is the site of the Flemish Mining Museum [...] pithead towers. And those who still have the time and energy, can then pay a visit to the neighbouring working class housing estate, complete with its mining cathedral.
at the relationship between the Earth and the Sun, followed by the history of mining and the workingconditions of the miners. A show tunnel leads into the former pithead bath, which encourages visitors
soon afterwards destroyed by fire, and were rebuilt with iron-frames from 1805, and remain in that condition. Manufacturing of woollen cloth at Armley Mills depended entirely on water power until 1850 when [...] see an array of textile machinery used and made in Leeds, together with their sources of power, a working water wheel and two four-column beam engines of c1820 by Matthew Murray (1765-1826) and Benjamin
stoke the flames. The Workers' Museum is an open-air museum that shows the regional living and workingconditions between the 1850s and 1960s. Several old houses are furnished as workers' homes from different
The museum gives an insight into the living conditions of working people in the new industries of Finland from around 1900 until the 1960s. The forestry and papermaking company Tornator began a factory [...] the city of Imatra. The museum opened in 1975. One building displays the furnished interiors of working-class homes in around 1900, the 1940s and the 1960s. The other is the sauna, where visitors learn
from the period, all kept in pristine condition. There are over 29 working stationary steam engines including four large pumping beam engines, the oldest working electrical generator in Britain and a large
ral jewel. During its working life it was a self enclosed world cut off from the surrounding area by high walls. The mining company not only dictated everyday workingconditions but also the miners´ private [...] gives a vivid picture of the strict hierarchy at the pit and the close intermeshing of the various working processes. Visitors can experience a typical day in the life of a collier, enter the director´s office
can don a miner’s helmet and lamp before descending into the underworld to find out what everyday conditions were like for the miners who once worked here. Their guides are themselves former miners. On the [...] miners to arrive. Even the steam-driven winding wheels which were in operation till 1970 are still working. In addition the museum has an audio-visual exhibition which takes visitors on a journey through