In child labor clause C in the textile industry in the early 19th century, the use of language and style indicates in many ways that it comes from official documents. It states in the title that it is a term used in "action", the legislation passed by Congress. To further confirm this, use "rule", (by rule management), and "promulgation" (legal). The last sentence shows that this is "legal". It's written in old English, it is very formal, it also shows that it is an official document.
Contact with US industrial capitalism began in the early 19th century when a large textile factory was born in Lowell, Massachusetts, by the fusion of capital, labor, water and innovative technologies. In the early days of Lowell, the factory relied heavily on British young ladies. Lowell is known for its high standard of living in the working class and is considered "industrial utopia". Due to poor working conditions and wages in Europe, some people associate this high standard of living with "American" living standards. However, the intensified competition of Lowell textiles has lowered the standard of living. Since the mid-1940s, immigrant groups have got jobs from the Irish people of the 1840s to 1850s, French Canadians of the 1860s to the 1870s, and countries such as Greece, Poland, Portugal and Jews . From the 1890s to the beginning of the 20th century
In the early days of the country, women were an important part of industrial labor. Their work in textile manufacturing provides products to the expanding population and allows people to work in the agricultural sector. In the 19th century women actively participated in labor union organizations. Emerging economies are also affected by the expansion of the territory. After the revolution, the United States contained only 13 former British colonies in the northeast and southeast. The western and southern territories of the original colonies were acquired through subsequent purchases and concessions. The most important of these acquisitions was the purchase of Louisiana State 1803, which doubled the territory of the country. This acquisition shows the beginning of the expansion of the West beyond the Appalachian Mountains. It became the "important fate" of the expansion of the country from the east to the west.