Sweating system

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sweating system was a term used to describe an iniquitous system of subcontracting in the tailoring trade which came into prominence around 1848. In contemporary English the term sweatshop has a similar meaning. Orders from master-tailors were undertaken by sub-contractors, who themselves farmed the work out to needy workers, who made the articles in their own crowded and foetid homes, receiving "starvation wages." The term became more widely used in reference to all trades in cases where the conditions imposed by masters tend to grind the rate of payment down to a bare living wage and to subject the workers to unsanitary surroundings by overcrowding and to unduly long hours. Kingsley's pamphlet, "Cheap Clothes and Nasty," and novel, Alton Locke, did much to draw public attention to the practice. In 1890 an elaborate report by a committee of the House of Lords was published, and led in the following year to the passing of the Factory and Workshops Act 1891 and the Public Health Act 1891, which improved conditions for workers.

This article incorporates text from the public domain 1907 edition of The Nuttall Encyclopædia.