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Today

10:00 - 17:00

Opening times

Museum

  • openinghours.days.long.tuesday Open till openinghours.days.long.sunday openinghours.openfromto.long

  • openinghours.days.long.monday closed

Special opening times

  • Swiss National Holiday 01.08.2024 10:00 - 17:00

  • Assumption Day 15.08.2024 10:00 - 17:00

  • All Saints´ Day 01.11.2024 10:00 - 17:00

  • Saint Martin 11.11.2024 closed

  • Immaculate Conception 08.12.2024 10:00 - 17:00

  • Christmas Eve 24.12.2024 10:00 - 14:00

  • Christmas 25.12.2024 closed

  • St. Stephen´s Day 26.12.2024 10:00 - 17:00

  • New Year´s Eve 31.12.2024 10:00 - 14:00

  • New Year´s Day 01.01.2025 closed

  • Saint Berchtold 02.01.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Epiphany 06.01.2025 closed

  • Carnival Thursday 27.02.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Carnival Monday 03.03.2025 closed

  • Shrove Tuesday 04.03.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Saint Joseph 19.03.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Good Friday 18.04.2025 closed

  • Easter 20.04.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Easter Monday 21.04.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Labour Day 01.05.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Mother´s Day 11.05.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Ascension Day 29.05.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Whitsun 08.06.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • Whit Monday 09.06.2025 10:00 - 17:00

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Child labour in the 19th and 20th centuries

Forum of Swiss History Schwyz | 24.2.2024 - 27.10.2024
published on 22.2.2024

The new exhibition «Child labour» at the Forum of Swiss History Schwyz deals with a topic that has, up to now, received little attention in Swiss history. It sheds light on how, in the 19th and 20th centuries, children helped to secure their family’s income through their work, and how, over the course of time, legislative measures and compulsory schooling gradually curbed the various forms of labour exploitation.

Children herded cattle, mucked out stables, and lent a hand in haymaking. The made bobbin lace, did spinning, or produced “straw strings” at home. Girls as well as boys have always had to pitch in; they were integrated in the work process from early age on, thus contributing essentially to their family’s existence and wellbeing. In Rothenthurm they helped to harvest ice in winter (called Ischä); in Gersau they worked in the local silk mill, and in Einsiedeln they coloured the pictures of saints.

The new exhibition at the Forum of Swiss History Schwyz sheds light on various aspects of child labour in earlier days and explains what kind of tasks children were asked to perform. For instance, what kind of work did loaders (Lädelibueb) and spreaders (Streicherkind) do? Why were children’s hands so valuable in embroidery? Or, how does one cut peat? The exhibition focuses in particular on the conditions in central Switzerland at the time.

It was only when compulsory schooling was introduced in 1874 and the Swiss Factory Act came into force in 1877 that the children’s situation improved. Elementary education was now a basic right and child labour under the age of 14 forbidden. But particularly in the country’s poorer and more remote regions, people still relied heavily on child labour – or else they were sent to work abroad. The «Swabian kids» from the canton of Grisons along with fostered and contract children who had to work as farm hands as well the so-called «Spazzacamini» from the Ticino, who were sent to Italy to clean chimneys, gained sad notoriety in this regard. The exhibition pays special attention to the fate of these children.

And what’s the situation like today? Switzerland signed up to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1997. But across the world, roughly 160 million children from the age of five are still forced to work, for instance, on plantations, in factories, and mines.

Waiting for you in the exhibition are a range of historical objects, impressive photographs, documents, media stations as well as statements by contemporary witnesses – you even get the chance to smell certain scents that go with the subject: for example, hay and manure (agriculture), machine oil (factory), cabbage stored in a cellar (cottage industry), and soot (boy chimney sweeps).

At the end of the exhibition, visitors get the chance to recount and record their own experiences or those of their parents or grandparents at a special media station – in other words, their own personal work history.

Images

Exhibition entrance

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "Farming and the Trades"

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "Cottage Industries"

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "Factory Work"

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "Soierie à Gersau"

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "Factory Work"

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "The Schoolroom"

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "Global Children's Rights"

A view of the exhibition

Thematic area "Children in Foster Care"

A view of the exhibition

Media station "Personal work history"

A view of the exhibition

Child labour

Home embroiderer at pantograph (scales down pattern and reproduces it several times) of hand embroidery machine, boy at threading machine, ca. 1912, probably Appenzell

© Swiss National Museum

Child labour

Possibly the dyeworks of a silk twisting mill, ca. 1890–1936, Rudolf Zinggeler-Danioth in one of his father's factories, Kilchberg

© Swiss National Museum

Child labour

Farm girl Cäcilia Schmidig, photographed by Leonard von Matt around 1942, Platten Bisisthal

© Leonard von Matt / Fotostiftung Schweiz

Press contact Forum of Swiss History Schwyz

+41 41 819 60 18 medien.fsg@nationalmuseum.ch