The presence of young women in the factories represented a social shift, and that shift was controversial. These two essays (this source and the previous one, above), one written in response to the other at the time, represent divergent claims about the impact the factory (and the “Lowell girls”) had on society.
“Whom has Mr. Brownson slandered? . . .We are under restraints, but they are voluntarily assumed; and we are at liberty to withdraw from them, whenever they become galling or irksome. Neither have I ever discovered that any restraints were imposed upon us but those which were necessary for the peace and comfort of the whole, and for the promotion of the design for which we are collected, namely, to get money, as much of it and as fast as we can; and it is because our toil is so unremitting, that the wages of factory girls are higher than those of females engaged in most other occupations. It is these wages which, in spite of toil, restraint, discomfort, and prejudice, have drawn so many worthy, virtuous, intelligent, and well-educated girls to Lowell, and other factories; and it is the wages which are in great degree to decide the characters of the factory girls as a class. . . .”
NOTE: A complete volume of The Lowell Offering, 1840-1842 (subtitled “A repository of original articles on various subjects, written by factory operatives”) is available here.