Answer:
The lives of the working people during the industrial revolution were very poor, troubled, and dangerous. The workers, depending on the states and time period, would range from men to women, and even to children as young as ten years old. Many factories had bunking areas and rooms within or right next to the factory, while some other people would walk to their factory jobs either in the morning (to work all day) or in the late evening (to work all night). These jobs were often accepted by, especially, children because it was the most money that they had ever come in contact with (which was barely anything). The factories were dangerous, some children would witness very commonly their own friends and coworkers becoming injured or killed by the very machines in front of them. Most commonly, in the south, this was the textile industry, which is where the children of the south would work many hours of the day to make the clothes for their adult captures who would sleep well at night, wearing the very clothes those children made. Anyway, the conditions of these places were horrible, words could not describe what those children went through without knowing it. It was dangerous work, terrible living and working conditions, and very little compensation for it all.
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