
THROUGH THE MILL
Note
Illustrations
Chapter I. A Mixture of Fish, Wrangles, and Beer
Chapter II. Dripping Potatoes, Diplomatic Charity, and Christmas Carols
Chapter III. My Schoolmates Teach me American
Chapter IV. I pick up a handful of America, make an American cap, whip a Yankee, and march home whistling “Yankee Doodle”
Chapter V. I cannot become a President, but I can go to the Dumping Grounds
Chapter VI. The Luxurious Possibilities of the Dollar-Down-Dollar-a-Week System of Housekeeping
Chapter VII. I am given the Privilege of Choosing my own Birthday
A young orphan, raised by his aunt and uncle in a modest shop on Station Road, narrates his first decade in the industrial heart of northern England. He recalls a modest tenth‑birthday cake shared with a neighbor’s son, the cramped alleys that lead to a coffin‑maker’s workshop, and the strange, almost gothic doorways that framed his early world. These early memories set the tone for a life that quickly shifts from domestic routine to the relentless rhythm of the mill.
From the moment he steps into the factory, the iron wheels and humming machinery become the backdrop to his coming‑of‑age. He watches the mill’s relentless pace grind both grain and youth, describing the camaraderie among boys, the occasional “surprise parties” for the girls, and the subtle ways the workers navigate hardship. Through candid, often humorous observations, the narrative offers a vivid portrait of the social conscience of the era, capturing the hopes, fears, and resilient spirit of those who toiled beneath the mill’s towering gears.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (284K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: The Pilgrim Press, 1911.
Credits
David E. Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Release date
2022-07-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1882
A former mill boy turned memoirist, this early-20th-century writer is remembered for vivid autobiographical books about child labor, hardship, and the hard-won path to education.
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