The poor working conditions in the workplace in 1850 is a very important part of everyone's life. Work leads to wages and leads to a lifestyle you may live on. Between 1750 and 1850, the work in Europe has changed a lot. It changes all kinds of work, including where you are working, what you are doing, and the amount you can get. Industrial capitalism has changed dramatically during the first century, but as time goes on, work continues to decline. Therefore, work in 1750 is better than 1850.
The term "sweat shop" was built in 1850 and meant a workplace where workers or workers were illegally handled, such as low wages, long working hours, poor conditions. Since 1850, immigrants have worked in sweat shops for more than a century in cities like London and New York. Many of them work in small rooms where fires and rats are prone to occur. The word "sweat shop" comes from Charles Kingsley's inexpensive clothing and hatred (1850) and represents the workplace "sweating system" for workers. (Blackburn, 1991) Minimum wages and ideas of the Labor Alliance were not developed until the 1890s. This problem seems to be solved by several anti-perspiration organizations. However, the ongoing development of the problem presents different circumstances.
The working environment of the apparel industry was very bad from the beginning. Women who hand-sewn clothes in the clothing field early in the 1950s are known to be abused by employers and their fingers suffered from hunger wages. Caring middle class and upper class women claim to provide charity services to poor female tailors and defend them and insist that society can not tolerate "failure of women's knitwear". However, because the textile workers themselves do not have labor unions and group systems, they are still quirks of the employer.
Since the 1950s, the harsh environment of urban poor living in the slums of London began to gather the attention of philanthropists who started social reformists and community service campaigns. The first target area is a notorious slum area called demon acres near Westminster. Mainly funded by George Peabody and Peabody Trust Fund, the new campaign had a sustained impact on the character of Westminster city. Removal of the slum area began with the Rochester Building at the corner of Old Pye Street and Perkin's Rent and was done by businessman William Gibbs in 1862. It is one of the first large-scale philanthropy development in London. The Rochester Building was sold to Peabody Trust in 1877 and later called the A to D area of the rental area of Old Perkin.