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dbr:William_Ewart_Gladstone
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dbr:Sadler_report
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dbr:Factory_Acts
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dbr:Sadler_report
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Sadler-Report Sadler report
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The Sadler Report – more correctly the Report of the Select Committee on Factory Children's Labour (Parliamentary Papers 1831-32, volume XV): usually referred to at the time as ”the report of Mr Sadler’s Committee,” - was a report written in 1832 by Michael Sadler., the chairman of a UK Parliamentary committee considering a Bill introduced by Sadler seeking to limit the hours of work of children in textile mills and factories. In committee hearings carried between the passage of the 1832 Reform Act through the Commons and Parliament’s subsequent dissolution Sadler had elicited testimony from factory workers (current and former), concerned medical men and other by-standers on bad working conditions and excessive working hours to which children were subjected, highlighting the risks to tired Beim Sadler-Report handelt es sich um einen spektakulären Bericht des Tory-Abgeordneten (1780–1835) aus dem Jahr 1832 über die Zustände während der Industriellen Revolution in Großbritannien. Sadler versuchte mit besonders grausigen Schilderungen ein Zehn-Stunden-Gesetz für Kinderarbeit durchsetzen. Friedrich Engels schrieb über den Bericht: „Sadler ließ sich durch seine edle Leidenschaft zu den schiefsten und unrichtigsten Behauptungen verleiten, er lockte schon durch die Art seiner Fragen den Zeugen Antworten ab, die zwar Wahres, aber in verkehrter, schiefer Form enthielten.“
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The Sadler Report – more correctly the Report of the Select Committee on Factory Children's Labour (Parliamentary Papers 1831-32, volume XV): usually referred to at the time as ”the report of Mr Sadler’s Committee,” - was a report written in 1832 by Michael Sadler., the chairman of a UK Parliamentary committee considering a Bill introduced by Sadler seeking to limit the hours of work of children in textile mills and factories. In committee hearings carried between the passage of the 1832 Reform Act through the Commons and Parliament’s subsequent dissolution Sadler had elicited testimony from factory workers (current and former), concerned medical men and other by-standers on bad working conditions and excessive working hours to which children were subjected, highlighting the risks to tired children and the brutality to which they might be subjected. Time (and Sadler) prevented balancing or contrary evidence being called before Parliament was dissolved. The committee report was published early in 1833: a mid-20th century historian describes it as "a mass of evidence, constituting a most formidable indictment of factory conditions ...It is impossible not to be staggered by the revelations of human misery and degradation - impossible not to be moved by the dreadful stories of children and young persons (and adults, too, for that matter) who were bullied and cursed and tormented, pushed around and knocked about by those placed in authority over them." There was a widespread public outcry at the conditions depicted by the testimony heard. Parliament, however, declined to legislate on the basis of the report: even Sadler’s parliamentary friends, such as Lord Morpeth, conceded that the proceedings of the Committee were irregular and its choice of witnesses unbalanced. Instead, it voted for a fresh inquiry by means of a Factory Commission, visiting the principal manufacturing districts and taking evidence on oath (unlike the Select Committee). The report of the Commission did not set out to directly refute testimony presented by Sadler, but reached conclusions at variance with Sadler's report on many points. It concluded however that children were working excessively long hours and Government intervention to regulate child labour in textile trades was therefore called for - this required both new restrictions on hours of work and a new and effective organisation for enforcing them. The consequent Factory Act of 1833 and its establishment of the UK Factory Inspectorate is often taken to mark the start of modern/effective factory legislation in the UK. The report of Sadler’s Committee therefore led to an important advance in factory legislation, but did so indirectly. Beim Sadler-Report handelt es sich um einen spektakulären Bericht des Tory-Abgeordneten (1780–1835) aus dem Jahr 1832 über die Zustände während der Industriellen Revolution in Großbritannien. Sadler versuchte mit besonders grausigen Schilderungen ein Zehn-Stunden-Gesetz für Kinderarbeit durchsetzen. Friedrich Engels schrieb über den Bericht: „Sadler ließ sich durch seine edle Leidenschaft zu den schiefsten und unrichtigsten Behauptungen verleiten, er lockte schon durch die Art seiner Fragen den Zeugen Antworten ab, die zwar Wahres, aber in verkehrter, schiefer Form enthielten.“
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