Another book from my own bookshelf. Again, I don't remember where or when I got it. How do these books get into the house? This book, written when the author was about 70 years old, tells about her very positive experiences as an employee in the Lowell, MA cotton mill industry 60 years earlier. She started in the mills alongside her mother at age 10. Her attitude is surprising as we tend to think of 19th century factory experiences as being horrible. Apparently the textile industry of the post revolution era needed workers so badly that they made it worth it. The powers that be decided to recruit New England farm girls, and widows and single women who would normally be considered burdens to their families, and some boys as well, and they came to Lowell in droves. According to Ms. Robinson, they were given very decent and pleasant housing, good wages, light and airy working conditions, jobs appropriate to the age of the "operative", and many opportunities for self improvement in the form of libraries, numerous lectures, and self improvement clubs. She remembers one young lady who came down from Maine, not because she needed money, but because she had heard that Lowell had many, many more books than could be had in her small and rural town! These workers put family members through school, paid off farm mortgages, and otherwise made their families at home more comfortable and profitable. Some contributed to the well known "Lowell Offering", their own literary magazine. Some of these women went on to have careers as writers, artists, an inventor, and one even served time as a U.S. Secretary of the Treasury! One Lowell employee wrote a scathing letter to a U.S. Senator whose views on the treatment of slaves was way out of sync with the reality of their living conditions. Much of that letter could have been written right now, this year. Future abolitionists and suffragettes were among these Lowell mill girls. Ms. Robinson went on to marry a local reporter and raise her children. Later she published her own books and articles, was active in both movements just mentioned, and continued her pursuit of learning by almost daily travelling into Boston for lectures, meetings, and social opportunities. In her book Loom and Spindle, she contrasts her own excellent experience in the Lowell mills with the reality of the late nineteenth century when factory conditions had badly deterioted. Young women of the later era whom she interviewed were tired and dispirited with little time to care about books and learning as her crowd had been. It is a fascinating and infuriating contrast. I am quite familiar with the city of Lowell and its textile mill history, but I had never really informed myself of the changing conditions within the industry, and really throughout the nighteteenth century in America. Loom and Spindle is an engaging memoir which offers incite into how positive a work environment can be when owners, employers, and operatives consider themselves partners of sorts, with a common goal, beneficial to all. I am proud to say that, in a different century and a different town, but in the very same county as Lowell MA, my own grandmother, a Polish immigrant, was a "mill girl" for the Pequot cotton sheeting company.