Factories And Its Effects On The United States During The Gilded Age

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During the Gilded Age many inventions were created. Trains were a booming industry that provided transportation and ways to get goods to other people. Factories were a huge part of the industrialization period because while yes they took away a lot of the labor jobs they also opened opportunities for women to work in the factories, one of the negative impacts that factories had on the U.S. was the child labor problems. Children would work in factories because they had small fingers that could get into the machines to repair them. One wrong move and the children could lose a hand. In 1892 workers went on strike because they were working long hours for very low pay. Because of Albert Einstein's light bulb there was a third shift which meant

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