A child miner in 1842. |
We do not know precisely how many
children worked underground in the middle of the nineteenth century. The commission only established the proportion
of children and young people to adults, which varied according to district. For example, over one-third of the workforce was under eighteen in the
Wellcome Collection. Child workers 'hurrying'. |
The age when children first entered the pit depended on the
thickness of the coal seams, family poverty, and local custom. Children as
young as four were recorded. On average
girls and boys began working underground when they were eight or nine years
old.
The youngest children were 'trappers'. They opened and closed the ‘trap-doors’ which regulated air-flow through the pit. The trappers sat alone for hours in the dark,
unless they had a candle. Six-year-old
Susan Reece, a trapper in a
Older children moved coal for the ‘getter’ or ‘hewer’ from the
coal-face to the bottom of the mine-shaft. Thin seams (only twenty inches high) could only be worked by using children
to drag or push the loads of coal, sometimes up a steep slope. This was called
‘hurrying’ or ‘putting’.
Children hauled tubs of coal using a girdle or belt and chain, which they paid for out of their wages. The belt blistered and cut the children’s skin; their bodies became stunted from prolonged stooping.
In some pits, young boys were ‘engineers’; they controlled the engine which wound parties of workers up and down the
mine-shaft. They had to stop the basket or tub
carrying the people at exactly the right moment. If not, the tub and its
passengers continued up and over the overhead pulley, injuring them or dashing
them into the mine-shaft below. Descending into the pit, 1870s.
In east Scotland, women and girls of all ages carried coal on their backs to the surface via a succession of steep, rickety ladders. The loads they carried were incredibly heavy. Some fathers ruptured themselves as they lifted a load onto their daughter’s back.
Women and children also worked above ground at the pit-brow in many areas.
An explosion in a coal mine, 1870s. |
The Mines Reform Act of 1842 banned all women and girls from the pits. The minimum age for boys entering the pit was lowered to ten, but they could be engine-men as young as fifteen. However, it proved difficult to enforce the Act. Boys under ten were found working below ground over ten years after the Mines Reform Act.
Oldest and youngest miners in a colliery, c.1906. |
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