
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the early 1800s, America was still a nation of fields and workshops — until one city transformed everything. Lowell, Massachusetts, became the birthplace of America’s Industrial Revolution, where red-brick mills, roaring turbines, and a new class of workers reshaped the nation’s economy and identity.
At the heart of this transformation were the “Lowell Mill Girls” — thousands of young women who left rural farms to work twelve-hour days under deafening machines. Promised education and dignity, they instead found exhaustion and exploitation, becoming some of the first Americans to fight for labor rights.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Ryan Socash5
33 ratings
In the early 1800s, America was still a nation of fields and workshops — until one city transformed everything. Lowell, Massachusetts, became the birthplace of America’s Industrial Revolution, where red-brick mills, roaring turbines, and a new class of workers reshaped the nation’s economy and identity.
At the heart of this transformation were the “Lowell Mill Girls” — thousands of young women who left rural farms to work twelve-hour days under deafening machines. Promised education and dignity, they instead found exhaustion and exploitation, becoming some of the first Americans to fight for labor rights.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices