oven, nor had there been intelligent definition
of the actual meaning of this system until Ure formulated one:--
"The factory system in technology is simply the combined operation
of many orders of work-people in tending with assiduous skill a
series of productive machines, continuously impelled by a central
power."[15]
A central power controlling an army of workers had been the dream of all
mechanicians; and Ure formulated this also:--
"It is the idea of a vast automaton, composed of various mechanical
and intellectual organs, acting in uninterrupted concert for the
production of a common object,--all of them being subordinate to a
self-regulated moving force."
This was the result brought about by the gradual extension of the
factory system. The objections made from the beginning, and still made,
with such answers as experience has suggested, find place later on.
FOOTNOTES:
[4] By Thorold Rogers.
[5] Weeden's Economic and Social History of New England, vol. i. p. 304.
[6] Caulkins, p. 273.
[7] Rider's Book Notes, vol. ii. p. 7.
[8] Boston News-Letter, Jan. 25, 1773.
[9] Boston News-Letter, Jan. 25, 1773.
[10] Barry's Massachusetts, vol. xi. p. 193.
[11] Weeden's Social and Economic History of New England, vol. ii. p.
790.
[12] Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, 1798-1835, p.
353.
[13] Atlantic Monthly, December, 1883, p. 773.
[14] For further detail, see McMaster's History of the United States,
vol. i. p. 62.
[15] Philosophy of Manufactures, by Andrew Ure, M.D., p. 13.
III.
EARLY ASPECTS OF FACTORY LABOR FOR WOMEN.
Lack not only of machinery but of any facilities for its manufacture
hampered and delayed the progress of the factory movement in the United
States; but these difficulties were at last overcome, and in 1813
Waltham, Mass., saw what is probably the first factory in the world that
combined under one roof every process for converting raw cotton into
finished cloth.
Manufacturing, even when most hampered by the burden of taxation then
imposed and the heavy duties and other restrictions following the long
war, began under happier conditions than have ever been known elsewhere.
Unskilled labor had smallest place, and of this class New England had
for long next to no knowledge. Her workers in the beginning were
recruited from the outlying country; and the women and girls who
flocked into Lowell, as in
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