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These children worked in the coal mines of Pennsylvania, in 1911. Theyre often nicked named, The Breaker Boys, because they worked long 12 - hour days using coal breakers to separate slate and impurities from coal, for as little as 8 cents an hour. This is Fannie shes 7 years old. Shes only 4 feet tall, but shes working here with her big sister in a textile mill. They start work at 6:00 in the morning in Fayetteville, Tennessee, November, 1910. This is 9-year old Minnie Thomas she works long days cutting sardines there is her work knife. She earns $2 a day in the cannery packing room, often working late nights in 1911. Here is a Young Driver in a Mine from West Virginia. This photo was published in 1908. All of these children are part of U.S. child labor history, where many children were exploited by companies, working long 10-12, sometimes 16 hours shifts for as little as pennies a day. These kids were exploited until unions and federal and s