
Two genteel sisters, accustomed to comfortable middle‑class lives, resolve to step into the world of industrial labor. Disguised as factory girls, they enter the noisy workshops of Chicago, Lynn, and other manufacturing centers, trading silk gowns for work shirts. Their first‑hand experience holds a mirror up to the stark contrast between the privileged and the toiling masses.
Through vivid sketches of soot‑filled streets, clattering looms, and cramped tenements, they record the daily grind of women earning a meager ten to fourteen dollars a week. The narrative captures both the physical hardships—long hours, relentless heat, and the ever‑present danger of injury—and the subtle social dynamics, from camaraderie among coworkers to the uneasy hierarchy imposed by foremen. Their observations reveal how ambition, pride, and a sense of duty intersect with the era’s prevailing ideas about marriage, motherhood, and national character.
Beyond the factory floor, the book offers a thoughtful commentary on the moral expectations placed on women and the broader implications for society. It asks listeners to consider whether true independence can arise without effort and whether a nation’s future hinges on the willingness of its citizens to embrace hard work. The account invites reflection on the enduring tension between comfort and conscience.
Full title
The Woman Who Toils Being the Experiences of Two Gentlewomen as Factory Girls
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (376K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Alicia Williams and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team. at www.pgdp.net.
Release date
2005-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1873–1928
An American journalist and novelist, she was known for vivid firsthand reporting and for co-writing a groundbreaking study of women workers in the early 1900s. Her books mix social observation, travel, and fiction in a way that still feels lively and direct.
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1867–1936
A novelist, painter, and social investigator, this American writer moved between New York society and working-class realities with unusual curiosity. Her life later stretched into wartime nursing in Europe, giving her fiction and nonfiction a lived sense of history.
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