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| Minnie and Mattie Carpenter, Gastonia, North Carolina, 1908, photo by Lewis Hine |
In the fall of 2005, I was hired by author Elizabeth Winthrop to find the descendants of Addie Card, a 12-year-old
cotton mill worker in Pownal, Vermont, who had been photographed in 1910 by Lewis Hine, for the National Child Labor Committee.
Hine, who died in 1940, was one of the great photojournalists of the 20th century. Winthrop had recently completed Counting On Grace, a novel inspired by Addie's photo. She
wanted to find out the real story of Addie, who had been identified by Hine as Addie Laird. Previous attempts by others
had come up empty. Amazingly, Winthrop was able to quickly determine that Addie's last name was actually Card. With that startling
information, she learned that she had married at 17. But after the 1920 census, Winthrop could find no record
of Addie or her husband, or if they had any children. That's when she turned to me for help. Within two weeks, I had located and contacted Addie's granddaughter. In two more weeks, I was standing before Addie's
grave. Just after Christmas, Elizabeth and I met and interviewed Addie's great-granddaughter, descended from the adopted
daughter of Addie's second marriage. As the summer of 2006
approached, I learned that more than 5,000 of Hine's child labor photos are viewable on the Library of Congress website. Some
of those photos also show parents working at home, some with their children. I waded through some of them one morning.
I stared at the children, and they stared back. I said to myself, "I can do for these children (and adults) what I did
for Addie." So far, I have located and contacted descendants
of about 200 child laborers. It's been an emotional ride - none more emotional than the search for Minnie Carpenter,
the girl on the left in the photo above. Hine did not identify the other girl. This was Lewis Hine's description: "Oldest girl, Minnie Carpenter, House 53 Loray Mill, Gastonia,
N.C. Spinner. Makes fifty cents a day for 10 hours. Works four sides. Younger girl works irregularly." After a month of painstaking research, I obtained a copy of Minnie's obituary.
She died more than 30 years ago, single, with no children. A nephew, of Gastonia, was listed as one of the survivors. In the
Internet white pages, I found a man with the same name living in Gastonia. I called him, and he was the right person.
He expressed great surprise about the photograph, and was very pleased
when I told him I would send him a copy. I thanked him, dropped the photo in the mail, and called him three weeks later. He
said excitedly: "I was hoping you would call me sooner. I've got some incredible news for you. The other girl in the
photo is my mother."
More about Lewis Hine Project
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