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The Factory Girl's Song

American History Museum

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Object Details

Description

This broadside contains the lyrics to “The Factory Girl’s Song,” a folk song whose origins date back at least to the 1830s. The song’s nineteen 4-line stanzas describe the daily work of the mill girls in different jobs: spinning, weaving, and dressing the finished cloth. At the end the singer tells of returning home to marry, giving up the rigors of tending the machinery and working for harsh overseers. The song may have originated in Lowell, Massachusetts, but some scholars suggest that the reference to wages earned in “shillings” instead of dollars may mean it had connections to Canadian immigrants to the Lowell textile mills. Several iterations of the song are known, including “The Lowell Factory Girl”, “The Factory Girl’s Come-All-Ye” from Lewiston, Maine, and generalized versions titled “Factory Girl.”

Location

Currently not on view

date made

1840s
1835 - 1855

ID Number

2013.0125.01

accession number

2013.0125

catalog number

2013.0125.01

Object Name

broadside

Physical Description

paper (overall material)
printer's ink (overall material)

Measurements

overall: 9 1/2 in x 5 3/4 in; 24.13 cm x 14.605 cm

place made

United States: New England

See more items in

Home and Community Life: Textiles
Cultures & Communities
Work
American Enterprise
Industry & Manufacturing

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Subject

Girls
labor issues
Music
Textile Processing and Production

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746b4-4641-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_1445159

Discover More

battle of the sewing machines

Work and Music

3 cent Labor Day Stamp and the words labor is life

Labor Day: Celebrating the Achievements of the American Worker and Labor Movement

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