Home

Works of Art

 

Works of Art

Photographs: All

Work 4,825 of 27,955
Add to my Met GalleryAdd to My Met Gallery PrintPrint List ViewPrevious View
Lewis Hine (American, 1874–1940)

Newsies at Skeeter Branch, St. Louis, Missouri, 11:00 A.M., May 9, 1910

Gelatin silver print; 9.1 x 11.9 cm (3 9/16 x 4 11/16 in.)

Gift of Phyllis D. Massar, 1970 (1970.727.1)

In 1908 Lewis Hine accepted a position as chief investigator and photographer for the National Child Labor Committee (NCLC), a private organization founded in 1904 to promote legislation to protect children from exploitation by American industry. Children as young as four years old labored in a variety of trades for up to twelve hours a day. During the sixteen years that Hine worked for the NCLC (often posing as an insurance inspector to gain access to the worksite), he made some five thousand photographs of children at work in mines, farms, canneries, sweatshops, and the street. Less troubling than many of Hine's pictures of child labor, this casual portrait of a trio of newspaper sellers, or newsies, shows the young boys awkwardly assuming the roles and mannerisms of manhood.