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Children Who Labor
Also known as {Children Who Labour}
(1912) United States of America
B&W : One reel
Directed by Ashley Miller

Cast: Robert Conness [William Hanscomb, the mill owner], Miriam Nesbitt [Louise Hanscomb], Leonie Flugrath (Shirley Mason) [Mabel Hanscomb], John Sturgeon [the immigrant father], Mary Fuller [the immigrant mother], Viola Flugrath (Viola Dana) [the immigrant’s older daughter], Edna May Weick [the immigrant’s younger daughter], Bigelow Cooper [the owner of another mill], Robert Brower [Hanscomb’s friend], Barry O’Moore [an unskilled laborer], Charles Ogle [the prison warden], William West [an officer of the Child Labor Organization]

Thomas A. Edison, Incorporated, production for The National Child Labor Committee; distributed by [?] The General Film Company, Incorporated? / Scenario by Ethel Browning. / Released 23 February 1912. / Standard 35mm spherical 1.33:1 format.

Drama.

Synopsis: [?] [From The Moving Picture World]? A foreigner who does not understand the ways of this country, applies for work at a mill, but is sent away with the intimation that if has a child at home there will be work for it, but none for himself. We then travel in vision to New York to the home of a wealthy mill owner, to whom an appeal is being made to use his influence against child labor. He indicates that he can do nothing about it, and resents the insinuation that his own child might be one of the unfortunate except for her birth and his protection. His wife shows her interest in the project. We turn to the mill again and find that the foreigner, pushed by his poverty and unable get work himself, finally yields and puts his daughter to work, as the family must have bread. The next thing we see is that Hanscomb, the rich mill owner, has sent his wife and child on a journey, and the little one, getting off the train in a spirit of mischief, is left behind in a small town, which happens to be the same one in which the foreigner, aforementioned, and his family live. The child is found by them, and as they cannot understand each other, his kindly wife takes her home and shares her poor cottage with her. Of course Hanscomb and his wife are frantic and put detectives to work on the case, but without success. Meanwhile things go badly with the foreigner, and he feels that it is necessary to put the stranger to work with his own child. Hanscomb buys the mill and so unconsciously becomes the employer of his own child. Going to look over the new property, he enters the mill just as his own child has fainted and is cared for by her little companion, and so he misses her. She is carried past her own mother at the gate, and Mrs. Hanscomb, touched by the incident, though not knowing, of course, who the strange child is, gets her address and in the evening is there with the footman with a basket of food for the little sufferer. Of course there is a reunion. Mr. Hanscomb is sent for and finds that his little daughter has learned a lesson that he has not as yet. She refuses to be taken away by herself and insists that all the other little children be set free from their slavery. He is unable to refuse her request and the film story closes with the better conditions put into effect, though we are reminded at the end that the condition called “Child Labor” still exists and demands our attention.

Survival status: Print exists in the Museum of Modern Art film archive.

Current rights holder: Public domain [USA].

Listing updated: 19 December 2023.

References: Card-Seductive p. 76; Sloan-Loud pp. 70-71, 73, 74, 89, 146 : Website-IMDb; Website-NFPF; Website-Wikipedia.

Home video: DVD.

 
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