Anthony
Ashley Cooper,
the eldest son of
the 6th Earl of Shaftesbury, was born on 28th
April, 1801. At the age of seven he was sent to boarding school and
five years later he was transferred to Harrow.
At the age of ten, Anthony was given the courtesy title of Lord Ashley.
Harrow was followed by Christ College, Oxford
and at the age of twenty-five he was elected as M.P. for Woodstock,
a pocket borough under the control of the Shaftesbury family.
Lord Ashley's early political career was undistinguished and political
reporters of the time complained that his speeches in the House of
Commons were inaudible. Lord Ashley began to take an interest in social
issues after reading reports in The Times
about the accounts given to Michael Sadler's Committee investigating
child labour. Lord Ashley wrote to Michael
Sadler offering his help in his campaign for factory reform. When
Michael Sadler was defeated in the 1832
General Election, the Rev. George Bull,
the Evangelical curate of Bierly near Bradford,
asked Lord Ashley to become the new leader of the factory reform movement
in the House of Commons. Ashley's critics claimed that he took up
the factory question "as much from a dislike of the millowners
as from sympathy
with the mill-workers."
Lord
Ashley agreed to George Bull's request and in March 1833, he proposed
a bill that would restrict children to a maximum ten hour day. On
18th July, 1833, Ashley's bill was defeated in the House
of Commonsby 238 votes to 93. Although
the government opposed Ashley's bill it accepted that children did
need protecting and decided to put forward its own proposals. The
government's 1833 Factory
Actwas passed by Parliament on 29th
August.
Under the terms of the new act, it became illegal for children under
nine to work in textile factories, whereas children aged between nine
and thirteen could not be employed for more than eight hours a day.
The main disappointment of the reformers was that children over thirteen
were allowed to work for up to twelve hours a day. They also complained
that with the employment of only four inspectors to monitor this legislation,
factory owners would continue to employ very young children.
In
1840 Lord Ashley helped set up the Children's
Employment Commission. Its first report on mines and collieries was
published in 1842. The report caused a sensation when it was published.
The majority of people in Britain were unaware that women and children
were employed as miners. Later that year Lord Ashley piloted the Coal
Mines Act through the House of Commons.
As a result of this legislation women and children were prohibited
from working underground.
Lord Ashley also continued to lead the campaign for a reduction in
the hours that children worked in factories. In 1841 Ashley received
a manuscript from William Dodd about his
experiences as a child worker. Lord Ashley, arranged for it to be
published as A Narrative of the Experience
and Sufferings of William Dodd a Factory Cripple. Lord
Ashley decided to employ Dodd to collect information about the treatment
of children in textile factories. William Dodd's research was published
as The Factory System: Illustrated
in 1842. William Dodd's books created a great deal of controversy.
William Dodd was attacked in the House of Commons as an unreliable
source of information. Attempts were made to smear his character.
When one M.P. accused Dodd of "gross immorality of conduct",
Lord Ashley decided to sack him.
In 1851 Anthony Ashley Cooper's father died
and he now became the 7th Earl
of Shaftesbury. He continued to campaign for effective factory legislation.
In 1863 the Earl of Shaftesbury published a report that revealed
that children as young as four and five were still working from six
in the morning to ten at night in some British factories.
Other social issues that interested the Earl of Shaftesbury included
the provision of working class education and was chairman of the Ragged
Schools Union for over forty years.
By 1850 the organisation had established over a hundred schools
for poor children. Anthony Ashley
Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury, died on 1st October, 1885.

A drawing of Lambeth
Ragged School in 1846
Child
Labour Debate Activity (International School of Toulouse)
Child
Labour Simulation (Spartacus Educational)
(1)
Lord Ashley personal memorandum, February, 1833
In
the autumn and winter of 1832 I read in The Times some extracts
from the evidence taken before Sadler's Committee. I was astonished
and disgusted by what I read. I wrote to Sadler offering my services.
In February the Rev. George Bull asked me to take up the question
that Sadler had been forced to drop. I can perfectly recollect my
astonishment, and doubt, and terror, at the proposition.
(2)
Lord Ashley, speech in the House of Commons, 9th May, 1836
Of
the thirty-one medical men who were examined, sixteen gave it as their
most decided opinion that ten hours is the utmost quantity of labour
which can be endured by the children, with the slightest chance of
preserving their health. Dr. Loudon reports, "I am of the opinion
no child under fourteen years of age should work in a factory of any
description more than eight hours a day." Dr. Hawkins reports,
"I am compelled to declare my deliberate opinion, that no child
should be employed in factory labour below the age of ten; that no
individual, under the age of eighteen, should be engaged in it longer
than ten hours daily."
(3)
Lord Ashley, speech in the House of Commons, 4th August, 1840
The
future hopes of a country must, under God, be laid in the character
and condition of its children; however right it may be to attempt,
it is almost fruitless to expect, the reformation of its adults; as
the sapling has been bent, so will it grow. The first step towards
a cure is factory legislation. My grand object is to bring these children
within the reach of education.