These are 27 emotional portrait photos of American đ˜€đ˜©đ˜Șđ˜­đ˜„ laborers taken by photographer Lewis Wickes Hine in the 1900s and 1910s.

5-year old picking cotton, Comanche County, Oklahoma, 1916
5-year-old after day’s work, was tired and refused to be photographed, Biloxi, Mississippi, 1911
11-year-old girl picking cotton, Oklahoma, 1916
14-year-old boy has been working in cotton mills for 6 years, Cuero, Texas, 1913
15-year-old messenger boy working for Mackay Telegraph Company, Waco, Texas, 1913
A little spinner in a Georgia cotton mill, 1909
A little spinner in the Mollohan Mills, Newberry, South Carolina, December 3, 1908
A sleeping newsboy found after midnight in the vestibule of a railroad station, newspapers for a pillow, 1912
A young driver in the Brown Mine, Brown, West Virginia, 1910
Boy stands next the machines that he has been working at for some months at the Avondale Mills, Birmingham, Alabama, November 1910
Boys after working, Birmingham, Alabama, 1910
Boys climb up on the spinning frame to mend the broken threads and put back the empty bobbins, Macon, Georgia,
19 january 1909
Boys working in Ewen Breaker of Pennsylvania Coal Co., South Pittston, January 1911
Breaker boys, Hughestown Borough, Pennsylvania, 1911
Children at Whitman Street dump, Pawtucket, Rhode Island, 1912
Coal breakers in break-time, Pennsylvania, 1911
Coal breakers, South Pittston, Pennsylvania, January 1911
Delivery boy for Kutterer Printing Co., St. Louis, 1910
Delivery boy in New York, ca. 1910s
Eight-year-old boy driving horse rake, Western Massachusetts, 1915
Infants working in Avondale Mills, Birmingham, Alabama, 1910
Midnight at glass works, Indiana, 1908
Newsies at Skeeter’s Branch, St. Louis, Missouri, May 9, 1910
Newsies smoking at Skeeter’s Branch, St. Louis, Missouri, May 9, 1910
Sweeper and doffer boys in Lancaster Cotton Mill, Lancaster, South Carolina, 1908
Two of the pin boys working in Bowling Academy, Burlington, Vermont, 1910
Young boy stands on the machine that he has been working for 3 months, Chicopee, Massachusett, 1911

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