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National Child Labor Committee
On slide: 131 East 23d Street, New York. Beseler Lantern Slide Co. Inc. and National Child Labor Committee. 419 Fourth Avenue. New York City.From sleeve: Hine Collection. III-1. 74-02. 56. Title Slide. National Child Labor Committee. Sticker on recto reading: 56. Sticker on verso reading: Beseler Lantern Slide Co. - New York. III-1
National Child Labor Committee
On slide: 131 East 23d Street, New York. Beseler Lantern Slide Co. Inc. and National Child Labor Committee. 419 Fourth Avenue. New York City.From sleeve: Hine Collection. III-1. 74-02. 56. Title Slide. National Child Labor Committee. Sticker on recto reading: 56. Sticker on verso reading: Beseler Lantern Slide Co. - New York. III-1
The Work of the National Child Labor Committee, 1904-1929
Summary of the history of the organization's first 25 years
National Child Labor Committee collection
Photographs, taken primarily by Lewis Hine for the National Child Labor Committee, focusing on children, showing workers, working and living conditions, and educational settings in the United States between 1908 and 1924. Images depict working conditions in agriculture, home labor, street trades, and various other industries, including, mining, canneries, glass factories, and cotton mills. Photographs also show recreational activities, victims of work-related accidents, health care activities, and images representing protests of child labor practices. Included are photographs of cartoons and clippings.For reference access, please use the digital images in the online catalog to preserve the fragile original itemsCollection title devised by Library staff.The collection includes caption cards for each image providing title, location, and date.Washingtoniana : photographs : collections in the Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress / Kathleen Collins. Washington, D.C. : Library of Congress, 1989, pp. 145-146.Special Collections in the Library of Congress / compiled by Annette Melville. Washington, D.C. : Library of Congress, 1980, no. 169Records of the National Child Labor Committee were given to the Library of Congress Manuscript Division in 1954 by Mrs. Gertrude Folks Zimand, chief executive of the NCLC, in celebration of NCLC's fiftieth anniversary. The Manuscript Division then transferred to the Prints and Photographs Division the photographs (arranged in 21 albums), negatives, and caption cards.Transfer; Manuscript Division; 1954.A set of catalog records describing each item is available through the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting. See http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gdc/lcoa1.aboutForms part of: Records of the National Child Labor Committee, Manuscript Division
The American child.
Vol. 40, no. 2 was not published.Supplements accompany some issues.Mode of access: Internet.Issued by: National Child Labor Committee, May 1919-; National Committee on Employment of Youth, 1959-Vol. 40-44. 1 v
The National Child Labor Committee : What It Is and What It Does, NCLC Publication no. 362
Pamphlet explaining the purpose and objectives of the NCL
[Letter from the White House]
On slide: 131 East 23d Street, New York. Beseler Lantern Slide Co. Inc. and The White House. December 23, 1921. The campaign against child labor in America must be pursued until such examples of neglect and misuse as are recorded in these pages no longer exist. The progress already made through the various agencies engaged in this campaign, chief among them being the National Child Labor Committee, proves what can be achieved by united and persistent effort. We must labor to complete a work so well begun. [signed] Warren G. Harding.From sleeve: Hine Collection. III-28. 74-02. 38. Writing on recto reading: III-28. Sticker on recto reading: 38
[Letter from the White House]
On slide: 131 East 23d Street, New York. Beseler Lantern Slide Co. Inc. and The White House. December 23, 1921. The campaign against child labor in America must be pursued until such examples of neglect and misuse as are recorded in these pages no longer exist. The progress already made through the various agencies engaged in this campaign, chief among them being the National Child Labor Committee, proves what can be achieved by united and persistent effort. We must labor to complete a work so well begun. [signed] Warren G. Harding.From sleeve: Hine Collection. III-28. 74-02. 38. Writing on recto reading: III-28. Sticker on recto reading: 38
Proceedings of the twelfth annual conference on child labor, Asheville, N. C., February 3-6, 1916.
Mode of access: Internet
Uniform child labor laws proceedings of the 7th annual conference of the National Child Labor Committee
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