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Industrialization and the Lowell Girls Reading

Text that covers Industrialization through the lens of the Lowell Girls.

Option A: 

Lexile: 930 
Word Count: 426
Vocabulary: waterpower, cloth-making, farming, spinning, weaving, Industrialization, yarn, unmarried, power 

 

In 1790, a man named Samuel Slater introduced a water powered spinning mill in Rhode Island. This marked the early stages of Industrialization in New England, making way for a big shift in the United States’ economy and society. This shift, fueled by the start of manufacturing after the War of 1812, represented a departure from a primarily farming society to one of industry. This process is called Industrialization. 

The factory system, which began to emerge in the 1830s and 1840s, notably in Lowell, Massachusetts, saw the active involvement of women in the workforce. Before Industrialization, women had mostly engaged in making clothes within their homes. Slater’s water powered spinning mills, inspired by British models, used waterpower to create thread or yarn. Then the fabric was finished by workers at home. Mills employed entire families, including women and children, to produce fabric and clothes in small spinning mills. 

Later, A man named Francis Cabot Lowell set up the Boston Manufacturing Company. It introduced the factory system. The new factory weaving machine finished all the work. It brought all fabric manufacturing steps together in one place. The transition to working in the factories was appealing to young single women. They preferred it to their home duties, despite tough work conditions. 

Factories started to hire mostly unmarried women instead of families. These women, usually between 15-35 (but sometimes even younger!), were called Lowell Girls. They were very important in the cloth-making industry. This industry grew a lot in mill towns like Lowell. The Boston Associates were important business leaders. They controlled the factories. They made decisions on technology, workers, and pay. 

Despite the hard work and difficulties, the Lowell Girls built a sense of community. They lived in small spaces. They worked long hours. There were strict rules. But, they developed their own newspaper. They went on strike, this means they refused to work, when their pay was cut by the factory owners. The factory was dangerous. The Lowell Girls had courage and stood up to the factory owners in big and small ways.  

The factory system changed New England. It led to more cities as many people moved to the area. This included many immigrants, mostly from Ireland. By 1860, factories were making items like clothing and shoes that used to be made by hand in small shops or at home. Women now had more opportunities to work outside their homes and had more power. Samuel Slater and Francis Cabot Lowell led these changes, part of the larger movement of Industrialization in the United States.  

 

Option B:

Lexile: 670
Word Count: 341
Vocabulary: water powered, factory-made, spinning, yarn, power, farming, cloth, mill, cotton, strict 

 

In 1790, a man named Samuel Slater started a water powered spinning mill in Rhode Island. With this new tool, thread and fabric could be made faster. This began factories in New England. It led to big changes in the U.S. economy and society. This changed the U.S. from farming to industry. This is called Industrialization.  

Women started working in Slater’s mills in the 1830s and 1840s, in Lowell, Massachusetts. Before, women made clothes at home. Slater’s factories used British ideas. They hired families, including women and children. They made clothes in these small spinning mills. 

Later, Francis Cabot Lowell started a new company with new technology. This company used the factory system. The old mills were powered by water. They made yarn. Workers made cloth from this yarn at home on hand machines. Francis Cabot Lowell’s new machine did all this work in one step. His plant was very big. It was ten times larger than Slater’s Rhode Island factories. It had all steps of making cotton cloth in one place. These factories hired young, single women instead of whole families.  

These women workers were called the Lowell Girls. The Lowell Girls were important. They helped the cloth industry grow a lot. The Boston Associates were their bosses, and they were powerful. They controlled technology, labor, and wages in the factories. 

The Lowell Girls faced big challenges and hard times with courage. They worked long hours. They followed strict rules. They lived in small spaces. But, they built a community. They made their own newspaper. They came together to strike, or refuse to work, when pay was cut.  

The factory system made big changes to New England. It made more people move to cities. People even came from other countries. By 1860, wearing factory-made clothing and shoes was normal across the U.S. 

The factory system started in New England. Samuel Slater and Francis Cabot Lowell led this. It changed American society in many ways. It gave power to women in work. It made the U.S. more industrial.