The Home of the Workingman

The Home of the WorkingmanBy Alice Henry(See page 203)

By Alice Henry

(See page 203)

I look forward to a time I believe to be rapidly approaching, when the home of the workingman, like everyone else’s home, will be truly a home, the happy resting-place, the sheltering nest of father, mother and children, and when, through the rearrangement of labor, the workingman’s wife will be relieved from her monotonous existence of unrelieved domestic drudgery and overwork, disguised under the name of wifely and maternal duties, when the cooking and the washing, for instance, will be no more part of the home life in the humblest home than in the wealthiest. The workingman’s wife will then share in the general freedom to occupy part of her time in whatever occupationshe is best fitted for, and, along with every other member of the community, she will share in the benefits arising from the better organization of domestic work.


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