biography
| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (?1797–?1848)
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| biography:
| Carpenter and reformer, born in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. After working as a carpenter and millhand in the mill towns of New England, he spent some 15 years in the Mississippi Valley, where he observed slavery firsthand. Returning c.1830, he began lecturing and writing pamphlets that denounced abuses of the factory system and championed the 10-hour day. Largely ignored by the press, he influenced community leaders and helped secure passage in Massachusetts of the nation's first child labour law in 1842. That same year, he was imprisoned for participating, with Thomas Dorr in an attack on Rhode Island's arsenal, but he was pardoned in 1843. A victim of mental illness and poor health in later years, he apparently died in a lunatic asylum. |
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