Sarah Bagley

Sarah Bagley
Sarah George Bagley
Born April 19, 1806
Died unknown
Occupation Labor organizer
Known for Working in textile mills

Sarah George Bagley (April 19, 1806  –  ?)

Sarah George Bagley was an advocate for women's rights and one of the most important labor leaders in New England during the 1840s. An advocate of shorter workdays for factory operatives and mechanics, she campaigned to make ten hours of labor per day the maximum in Massachusetts. Her activities in support of the mill workers in Lowell, Massachusetts put her in contact with a broader network of reformers in areas of women’s rights, communitarianism, abolition, peace, prison reform, and health reform. Sarah Bagley and her coworkers became familiar with middle-class reform activities, demonstrating the ways in which working people embraced this reform impulse as they transformed and critiqued some of its key elements. Sarah’s activities within the labor movement reveal many of the tensions that underlay relations between male and female working people as well as the constraints of gender that female activists had to overcome.[1]

Contents

History

Sarah Bagley was born in New Hampshire to Rhoda Witham and Nathan Bagley, both members of large New England families. Nathan and Rhoda farmed, sold land, and even owned a small mill trying to make money to support their family. She had two brothers, Thomas and Henry, and one sister Mary Osgood. It is also supposed that there was a miscarriage right after Sarah.[2]

Textile Worker

In 1835, at the age of 28, Bagley first appeared in Lowell, Massachusetts working at the Hamilton Mills. She published one of her first stories “Pleasures of Factory Life” in an 1840 issue of the Lowell Offering. The Offering was a literary magazine written, edited, and published by working women, some of them very young. Their purpose was to show the world that women who worked could also write and have a thirst for learning.[3]

In late November 1842, 70 weavers at the Middlesex Mills walked off their jobs, protesting the requirement to tend two looms instead of one. Shortly after this “turn-out” or strike, Bagley left the Hamilton Mills and went to work for the Middlesex Mills as a weaver, possibly taking the place of striking workers. Between 1842 and 1844, over 1,000 textile workers left Lowell as a result of an economic depression, which caused wage cuts and stretch-outs. In March 1844, under improved economic conditions the Lowell textile corporations raised the wages of male textile workers but not female workers to the 1842 levels.[1]

Labor Activist

In December 1844, Bagley along with five other women met in “Anti-Slavery Hall, in the Spalding Block on Central Street in downtown Lowell.” They formed the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association, to improve health conditions and lobby for the Ten-Hour Day. At that time, women worked about 13.5 hours a day in the Lowell textile mills. As president, Bagley saw the LFLRA grow to nearly six hundred members. They published their own labor newspaper The Voice of Industry for which Bagley frequently contributed articles and edited a woman’s column.[4]

In 1845, Bagley and her friends gathered names of other textile workers on petitions sent to the Massachusetts Legislature, demanding a Ten-Hour Day. As a result of dozens of petitions, for the first time in the United States history, a state legislature held hearings to investigate the conditions of labor in the manufacturing corporations. Bagley and others testified to the long hours and unhealthy working conditions in the mills. The committee led by Representative William Schouler (1814-1873) reported that the legislature did not have the power to determine “hours of work” and that the Ten-Hour Day must be decided between the corporations and the textile workers. The workers were furious and campaigned to defeat Representative Schouler in the next election.[5]

Bagley and her friends continued sending petitions to the state legislature for a Ten-Hour Day, they gathered over 10,000 names from throughout Massachusetts, and more than 2,000 signatures were from working women and men of Lowell. Again hearings were held to investigate working conditions, and again the Massachusetts Legislature refused to take action. However, labor and political pressure on the Lowell textile corporations was so great that in 1847 the mills shortened the workday by 30 minutes. As the labor reform movement persisted the corporations again reduced the hours of labor to eleven in 1853.[1]

Involvement with the Telegraph

In June 1846, John Allen became the new editor of The Voice of Industry and immediately fired Bagley. She wrote that Allen “does not want a female department. It would conflict with the opinions of the mushroom aristocracy that he seeks to favor, and beside it would not be dignified.” Discouraged and angry, Bagley looked for another job. In February 1846, only two years after Samuel Morse's first successful demonstration of the electric telegraph, the New York and Boston Magnetic Telegraph Company opened an office in Lowell, and Bagley was hired as probably the first female telegrapher in the United States. Not only did she tap out messages, but she helped people write their messages and letters. Early in 1847, Bagley was contracted to run the magnetic telegraph office in Springfield, Massachusetts. In Springfield, she was very unhappy to discover that she earned only three-quarters as much as the man she replaced. She wrote to a friend of her growing commitment to human equality and the rights of women.[6]

Return to Lowell

A year later Bagley returned to Lowell, working for the Hamilton Mills and living with her brother, Henry Bagley, to save money. While in Lowell, she traveled throughout New England, writing about health care, working conditions, prison reform, and women’s rights.[7] In 1849, she moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where she worked with the Quakers as the executive secretary of the Rosine Home, providing a safe place for prostitutes and disadvantaged young women. While in Philadelphia, Bagley met James Durno (1796-1873) and they married on November 13, 1850.[8]

Homeopathic Physician

In 1851, Sarah George Bagley and her husband James Durno moved to Albany, New York and began their practice as homeopathic physicians. At that time, homeopathic health care was a new field of medicine, which used herbs and medicines rather than the more radical cures performed by some of the well-known doctors – bleeding patients, or “purging” the body through vomiting. Their practice specialized in providing medical care for women and children. The price of their services was “to the rich, one dollar - to the poor gratis [free].” James Durno began manufacturing herbal medicines and Durno Catarrh Snuff. By 1867, the Bagleys had moved their manufacturing company to New York City and lived in a large brick house on Brooklyn Heights in Brooklyn, New York. In 1873, James Durno died in Brooklyn and was buried in Green-wood Cemetery. Sarah Bagley Durno's death has yet to be discovered, but it appears she died about ten years later.

References

  1. ^ a b c Dublin, Thomas. "Women at Work: The Transformation of Work and Community in Lowell, Massachusetts, 1826-1860. New York: Columbia University Press, 1979.
  2. ^ Wright, Helene "Sarah G. Bagley: A Biographical Note," Labor History. Vol 20, No. 3, 1979, 401.
  3. ^ Wright, Helene "Sarah G. Bagley: A Biographical Note," Labor History. Vol 20, No. 3, 1979, 404.
  4. ^ Wright, Helene "Sarah G. Bagley: A Biographical Note," Labor History. Vol 20, No. 3, 1979, 408.
  5. ^ Wright, Helene "Sarah G. Bagley: A Biographical Note," Labor History. Vol 20, No. 3, 1979, 409.
  6. ^ The Voice of Industry
  7. ^ Wright, Helene "Sarah G. Bagley: A Biographical Note," Labor History. Vol 20, No. 3, 1979, 411.
  8. ^ Murphy, Teresa. Sarah George Bagley, American National Biography.

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