From Great Britain, Parliamentary Papers, 1842, Vol XVI, pp. 24, 196.
In England, exclusive of Wales, it is only in some of the colliery districts of
Yorkshire and Lancashire that female Children of tender age and young and adult women are
allowed to descend into the coal mines and regularly to perform the same kinds of
underground work, and to work for the same number of hours, as boys and men; but in the
East of Scotland their employment in the pits is general; and in South Wales it is not
uncommon.
West Riding of Yorkshire: Southern Part - In many of the collieries in this
district, as far as relates to the underground employment, there is no distinction of sex,
but the labour is distributed indifferently among both sexes, except that it is
comparatively rare for the women to hew or get the coals, although there are numerous
instances in which they regularly perform even this work. In great numbers of the coalpits
in this district the men work in a state of perfect nakedness, and are in this state
assisted in their labour by females of all ages, from girls of six years old to women of
twenty-one, these females being themselves quite naked down to the waist.
"Girls," says the Sub-Commissioner [J. C. Symons], -regularly perform all the
various offices of trapping, hurrying [Yorkshire terms for drawing the loaded coal
corves], filling, riddling, tipping, and occasionally getting, just as they are
performed by boys. One of the most disgusting sights 1 have ever seen was that of young
females, dressed like boys in trousers, crawling on all fours, with belts round their
waists and chains passing between their legs, at day pits at Hunshelf Bank, and in many
small pits near Holmfirth and New Mills: it exists also in several other places. 1 visited
the Hunshelf Colliery on the 18th of January: it is a day pit; that is, there is no shaft
or descent; the gate or entrance is at the side of a bank, and nearly horizontal. The gate
was not more than a yard high, and in some places not above 2 feet.
" When I arrived at the board or workings of the pit I found at one of the
sideboards down a narrow passage a girl of fourteen years of age in boy's clothes, picking
down the coal with the regular pick used by the men. She was half sitting half lying at
her work, and said she found it tired her very much, and 'of course she didn't like it.'
The place where she was at work was not 2 feet high. Further on were men lying on their
sides and getting. No less than six girls out of eighteen men and children are employed in
this pit.
"Whilst I was in the pit the Rev Mr Bruce, of Wadsley, and the Rev Mr Nelson, of
Rotherham, who accompanied me, and remained outside, saw another girl of ten years of age,
also dressed in boy's clothes, who was employed in hurrying, and these gentlemen saw her
at work. She was a nice-looking little child, but of course as black as a tinker, and with
a little necklace round her throat.
"In two other pits in the Huddersfield Union I have seen the same sight. In one
near New Mills, the chain, passing high up between the legs of two of these girls, had
worn large holes in their trousers; and any sight more disgustingly indecent or revolting
can scarcely be imagined than these girls at work-no brothel can beat it.
"On descending Messrs Hopwood's pit at Barnsley, I found assembled round a fire a
group of men, boys, and girls, some of whom were of the age of puberty; the girls as well
as the boys stark naked down to the waist, their hair bound up with a tight cap, and
trousers supported by their hips. (At Silkstone and at Flockton they work in their shifts
and trousers.) Their sex was recognizable only by their breasts, and some little
difficulty occasionally arose in pointing out to me which were girls and which were boys,
and which caused a good deal of laughing and joking. In the Flockton and Thornhill pits
the system is even more indecent: for though the girls are clothed, at least three-fourths
of the men for whom they "hurry" work stark naked, or with a flannel
waistcoat only, and in this state they assist one another to fill the corves 18 or 20
times a day: I have seen this done myself frequently.
"When it is remembered that these girls hurry chiefly for men who are not their
parents; that they go from 15 to 20 times a day into a dark chamber (the bank face), which
is often 50 yards apart from any one, to a man working naked, or next to naked, it is not
to be supposed but that where opportunity thus prevails sexual vices are of common
occurrence. Add to this the free intercourse, and the rendezvous at the shaft or
bullstake, where the corves are brought, and consider the language to which the young ear
is habituated, the absence of religious instruction, and the early age at which
contamination begins, and you will have before you, in the coal-pits where females are
employed, the picture of a nursery for juvenile vice which you will go far and we above
ground to equal."
Two Women Miners - From Great Britain, Parliamentary Papers, 1842, Vol. XV, p. 84,
and ibid., Vol. XVII, p. 108.
Betty Harris, age 37: I was married at 23, and went into a
colliery when I was married. I used to weave when about 12 years old; can neither read nor
write. I work for Andrew Knowles, of Little Bolton (Lancs), and make sometimes 7s a week,
sometimes not so much. I am a drawer, and work from 6 in the morning to 6 at night. Stop
about an hour at noon to eat my dinner; have bread and butter for dinner; I get no drink.
I have two children, but they are too young to work. I worked at drawing when I was in the
family way. I know a woman who has gone home and washed herself, taken to her bed,
delivered of a child, and gone to work again under the week.
I have a belt round my waist, and a chain passing between my legs, and I go on my hands
and feet. The road is very steep, and we have to hold by a rope; and when there is no
rope, by anything we can catch hold of. There are six women and about six boys and girls
in the pit I work in; it is very hard work for a woman. The pit is very wet where I work,
and the water comes over our clog-tops always, and I have seen it up to my thighs; it
rains in at the roof terribly. My clothes are wet through almost all day long. I never was
ill in my life, but when I was lying in.
My cousin looks after my children in the day time. I am very tired when I get home
at night; I fall asleep sometimes before I get washed. I am not so strong as I was, and
cannot stand my work so well as I used to. I have drawn till I have bathe skin off me; the
belt and chain is worse when we are in the family way. My feller (husband) has beaten me
many a times for not being ready. I were not used to it at first, and he had little
patience.
I have known many a man beat his drawer. I have known men take liberties with the
drawers, and some of the women have bastards.
Patience Kershaw, age 17, Halifax: I go to pit at 5 o'clock in the
morning and come out at 5 in the evening; I get my breakfast, porridge and milk, first; I
take my dinner with me, a cake, and eat it as I go; I do not stop or rest at any time for
the purpose, I get nothing else until I get home, and then have potatoes and meat, not
every day meat.
Source: Parliamentary Papers, 1842, Vol XVI,
pp. 24, 196; Parliamentary Papers, 1842, Vol. XV, p. 84,
and ibid., Vol. XVII, p. 108
This text is part of the Internet
Modern History Sourcebook. The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and
copy-permitted texts for introductory level classes in modern European and World history.