19th+century+living(jobs)-Ashf09

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 * 1) "In most areas of the economy factories and larger-scale shops were replacing the small shops that had set the pattern of labor in early America."
 * Charles Quill http://www.osv.org/explore_learn/document_viewer.php?DocID=1082

2. "The relationship between master and apprentice was changing rapidly in early nineteenth-century New England. The old system required lengthy apprenticeships to teach the entire range of crafts skills and provided an extended period of residence in the master’s family."
 * Charles Quill http://www.osv.org/explore_learn/document_viewer.php?DocID=1082

3."The Union Cotton and Woolen Manufactory performed all the steps in manufacturing cloth from cleaning the fibers and preparing them for spinning, to spinning yarn and weaving."
 * N.B. Gordon http://www.osv.org/explore_learn/document_viewer.php?DocID=134

4. "N. B. Gordon was the mill agent, or general manager and chief mechanic, at the Union Cotton and Woolen Manufactory in Mansfield, a small town in southeastern Massachusetts. As agent, he was responsible for his workers and their housing, the machinery and raw materials, and for ensuring the supply of water power. In his work diary, he recorded his daily tasks and the problems he confronted keeping the mill running smoothly."
 * N.B. Gordon 1829 http://www.osv.org/explore_learn/document_viewer.php?DocID=134