For this essay I have chosen the short story done by Ann Eggley as my primary source document.

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For this essay I have chosen the short story done by Ann Eggley as my primary source document. It is located at the end of chapter twenty-two under the heading of "Listening to the Past" on pages 754 to 755. My focus within this essay will be to demonstrate the working life lived by Ann Eggley according to the average working life lived by a female during the early eighteen hundreds. Presenting a comparison as well as a difference between both Ann and the average daily working life of a female. Providing the difficulties of the working class at this point, as well as the struggles to survive and the measures to which some of these people went through in order to stay alive. I will also provide the general opinion of the males at that time concerning the idea of the females working moving coal wagons under- ground such as Ann. My final point will discuss the Factory Act passed in 1883 which changed the lives for all of these people by improving the working conditions.

 This text provides a short summary of the working life and the working conditions for Ann working during the early eighteen hundreds. Ann is only Eighteen years old and had been working moving coal wagons underground for eleven years already. She is uneducated, and does not known how to read, does not known her letters enabling her to even spell her own name. She had never gone to a church or chapel because there was no church or chapel closer than a mile of where she had lived. She had never heard of Christ or of what a prayer was. She began work at around four, four thirty in the mourning and did not finish until four sometimes five that evening. Her job required her to move coal wagons "stripped to the waist and harnessed to the wagon with belt and chain, this underground work "hurrying" coal from the face of the seam to the mine shaft". She wore trousers and her shifts in the pit and great big shoes clinkered and nailed. Fortunately in her pit the girls never worked naked and the men never insulted them.  The food conditions where very limited as explained by Ann stating that there wasn't always enough to eat, but they did get a good supper.  

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One thing that must be made clear is that the era of the Industrial Revolution witnessed major changes in the sexual division of labor. In the case of Ann I came across many differences and similarities among her lifestyle and that of the average female during this time period. These similarities include that Ann like most children were employed very young to keep the family together. Which is true because if Ann was not working then her father would not be able to support her and she would be on her own. The second similarity was that 'the presence ...

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