Factory and Workshop Act 1878


The Factory and Workshop Act 1878 was an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that consolidated enactments relating to factories and workshops in the United Kingdom.

Background

In the debates on Mundella's bills and the Factory Act 1874, it had been noted that years of piece-meal legislation had left factory law in an unsatisfactory and confusing state; the government had spoken of the need to consolidate and extend factory law by a single act replacing all previous legislation, but had not felt itself able to allocate the necessary legislative time. In March 1875, a royal commission was set up to look at the consolidation and extension of factory law. It took evidence in the principal industrial towns, and published its report in March 1876. It recommended consolidation of legislation by a single new act. The new act should include workplaces in the open air, and carrying, washing and cleaning; however mines and agriculture should be excluded. Work by protected persons should be within a twelve-hour window. Within that window: in factories two hours should be allowed for meals and no work session should exceed four and a half hours; in workshops work sessions should not exceed five hours and meal breaks should total at least one and a half hours. Sunday working should be permitted where both worker and employer were Jewish. All children should attend school from five until fourteen; they should not be allowed to attend half-time, nor be employed under the new act, until ten. From ten to fourteen employment would be conditional upon satisfactory school attendance and educational achievement.
The government announced that the report had been produced too late for legislation in the current parliamentary session, but legislation would be introduced in the following one.

Passage

The Factories and Workshops Law Consolidation Bill had its a first reading in April 1877, but made no further progress; at the end of July it was postponed to the following year.
In 1878, the bill was given a higher priority. Leave to bring in the Factories and Workshops Bill to the House of Commons was granted to the Home Secretary, R. A. Cross, and Sir Henry Selwin-Ibbetson on 19 January 1878, as soon as Parliament convened. The bill had its first reading in the House of Commons on X, presented by Home Secretary, R. A. Cross. The bill had its second reading in the House of Commons on 11 February 1878, introduced by R. A. Cross, and was committed to a committee of the whole house, which met on 21 February 1878, 25 February 1878, 28 February 1878, 1 March 1878, 7 March 1878, and reported on 7 March 1878, with amendments. The amended bill was considered on 22 March 1878, with amendments. The amended bill had its third reading in the House of Commons on 29 March 1878 and passed, without amendments.
The bill had its first reading in the House of Lords on 1 April 1878. The bill had its second reading in the House of Lords on 9 April 1878 and was committed to a committee of the whole house, which met and reported on 12 April 1878, with amendments. The amended bill had its third reading in the House of Lords on 16 May 1878 and passed, with amendments.
The amended bill was considered and agreed to by the House of Commons on 21 May 1878.
The bill was granted royal assent on 27 May 1878.

Provisions

The act replaced all previous acts by a single act of some hundred and seven clauses. The Chief Inspector of Factories described it as much less restrictive than the legislation it replaced: "The hard and fast line is now an undulating and elastic one, drawn to satisfy the absolute necessities and customs of different trades in different parts of the kingdom."
The protected persons fell into three categories:
  • 'Children'
  • 'Young persons'
  • 'Women'
The premises being regulated were now separated into five categories: Factories fell into two types;
  • 'textile factories' – those within the scope of the Factory Act 1874
  • 'non-textile factories' – workplaces carrying out a number of specified processes print works, bleaching and dyeing works, earthenware works and additionally any workplace in which mechanical power was used
Workshops were places in which the manufacture, repair or finishing of articles were carried out as a trade without the use of mechanical power and to which the employer controlled access. Laundries were excluded from the final act; in Ireland much laundry work was carried out in convents and Irish members objected to inspection of convents by an exclusively Protestant inspectorate. Three types of workshop were distinguished:
  • Workshops
  • Workshops not employing protected persons other than women
  • Domestic workshops
The act excluded domestic workshops carrying out straw-plait making, pillow lace making or glove-making and empowered the Home Secretary to extend this exemption. The act also excluded domestic workshops involving non-strenuous work carried out intermittently and not providing the principal source of income of the family.
Requirements and enforcement arrangements were most stringent for textile factories, least stringent for domestic workshops. The act gave the Home Secretary some latitude to vary the requirements for specific industries to accommodate existing practices where these were not detrimental to the underlying purpose of the act.
The act followed the recommendations of the Commission by setting a limit of hours on the hours worked per week by women and young persons in textile factories, 60 hours in non-textile factories and workshops, but allowing greater flexibility on how those hours were worked for non-textile factories and workshops. The ban on Sunday working was modified to apply instead to the Jewish Sabbath where both employer and employees were Jewish. Except in domestic workshops, protected persons were to have two full holidays and eight half-holidays The full holidays would normally be Christmas Day and Good Friday, but other holidays could be substituted for Good Friday. Half holidays could be combined to give additional full-day holidays; it had to be clarified later that the act's definition of a half-holiday as "at least half" of a full day's employment "on some day other than Saturday" was to give the minimum duration of a half-holiday, not to prohibit one being taken on a Saturday.
Children were not to be employed under the age of ten, and should attend school half-time until fourteen. settled the matter in favour of school board bye-laws, but without any standardisation of criteria between different boards. Specification of a minimum educational attainment before a factory child could work half-time then became enforceable in England, but remained unenforceable in Scotland until passage of the Education (Scotland) Act 1883 'Half-time' could be achieved by splitting each day between school and work, or by working and attending school on alternate days. If the former, the child should work morning and afternoons on alternate weeks; if the latter the schooldays in one week should be workdays the next. No child should work a half-day on successive Saturdays. Surgeons no longer certified the apparent age of a child, age now being substantiated by a birth certificate or school register entry, but they were required to certify the fitness for the work of children and young persons under the age of sixteen.
Protected persons should not be allowed to clean moving machinery, the requirement to guard machinery now extended to the protection of men as well as protected persons, and the Home Secretary might direct that some or all of the fine imposed for a breach of this requirement be paid to any person injured as a result. There were restrictions on the employment of some classes of protected persons on processes injurious to health. Young persons and children could not work in the manufacture of white lead, or silvering mirrors using mercury; children and female young persons could not be employed in glass works; girls under sixteen could not be employed in the manufacture of bricks, tiles, or salt; children could not be employed in the dry grinding of metals or the dipping of lucifer matches. Inspectors were given powers to require the mitigation of dusty atmospheres by mechanical ventilation or other mechanical means.

Repealed enactments

Section 107 of the act repealed 18 enactments, listed in the seventh schedule to the act. Section 107 of the act also provided that notices, appointments, certificates, orders and standards made under previous acts would remain valid as if they were made under the act, and that the repeals would not affect anything done or any obligation, liabilities, penalties, punishments or legal proceedings under the repealed acts. Section 107 of the act also provided that a child exempted by section 8 of the Elementary Education Act 1876 from section 12 of the Factory Act 1874 by reason of being 11 years old before 1 January 1877 would, upon becoming 13 years, be deemed a young person old within the meaning of the act.
CitationShort TitleTitleExtent of repeal
42 Geo. 3. c. 73Health and Morals of Apprentices Act 1802An Act for the preservation of the health and morals of apprentices and others employed in cotton and other mills and cotton and other factories.The whole act.
3 & 4 Will. 4. c. 103Labour of Children, etc., in Factories Act 1833An Act to regulate the labour of children and young persons in the mills and factories of the United Kingdom.The whole act.
7 & 8 Vict. c. 15Factories Act 1844An Act to amend the laws relating to labour in factories.The whole act.
9 & 10 Vict. c. 40Ropeworks Act 1846An Act to declare certain ropeworks to be within the operation of the Factory Acts.The whole act.
13 & 14 Vict. c. 54Factories Act 1850An Act to amend the Acts relating to labour in factories.The whole act.
16 & 17 Vict. c. 104Factories Act 1853An Act further to regulate the employment of children in factories.The whole act.
19 & 20 Vict. c. 38Factory Act 1856The Factory Act, 1856The whole act.
24 & 25 Vict. c. 117Lace Factory Act 1861An Act to place the employment of women, young persons, youths, and children in lace factories under the regulations of the Factories Acts.The whole act.
26 & 27 Vict. c. 40Bakehouse Regulation Act 1863The Bakehouse Regulation Act, 1863The whole act.
27 & 28 Vict. c. 48Factory Acts Extension Act 1864The Factory Acts Extension Act, 1864The whole act.
29 & 30 Vict. c. 90Sanitary Act 1866The Sanitary Act, 1866The following words in section nineteen, "not already under the operation of any general Act for the regulation of factories or bakehouses".
30 & 31 Vict. c. 103Factory Acts Extension Act 1867The Factory Acts Extension Act, 1867The whole act.
30 & 31 Vict. c. 146Workshop Regulation Act 1867The Workshop Regulation Act, 1867The whole act.
33 & 34 Vict. c. 62Factory and Workshop Act 1870The Factory and Workshop Act, 1870The whole act.
34 & 35 Vict. c. 19Factory and Workshop (Jews) Act 1871An Act for exempting persons professing the Jewish religion from penalties in respect of young persons and females professing the said religion working on SundaysThe whole act.
34 & 35 Vict. c. 104Factory and Workshop Act 1871The Factory and Workshop Act, 1871The whole act.
37 & 38 Vict. c. 44Factory Act 1874The Factory Act, 1874The whole act.
38 & 39 Vict. c. 55Public Health Act 1875The Public Health Act, 1875The following words in section four, "more than twenty," and the words "at one time," and the following words in section ninety-one, "not already under the operation of any general Act for the regulation of factories or bakehouses".
39 & 40 Vict. c. 79Elementary Education Act 1876The Elementary Education Act, 1876Section eight and the following words in section forty-eight, "the Factory Acts, 1833 to 1874, as amended by this Act, and includes the Workshop Acts, 1867 to 1871, as amended by this Act, and".

Legacy

The act was described as a Consolidation Act.

Subsequent minor acts

The ' gave additional powers for the regulation of white-lead manufacture and bakehouses ; in the same session a private member's bill intended to prohibit the employment of female children in the manufacture of nails was defeated at Second Reading.
The '
affected the choice of full-day holidays in Scottish burghs; formerly they had been the sacramental fast days specified by the local church – they could now be specified by the burgh magistrates.
The ' set limits on temperature where cotton cloth was being woven.
The '
allowed the secretary of state to make regulations for the purposes of giving effect to the recommendations of the report dated 17 February 1897 of the committee appointed 28 March 1896 to inquire into the working of the Cotton Cloth Factories Act 1889

Inadequate resources for strict enforcement

The TUC had few complaints about the act, but complained that the inspectorate enforcing it was too small and lacking in 'practical men'. The latter complaint was partially addressed by changing the recruitment process and appointing a number of former trade union officials to the inspectorate. The total number of inspectors increased from 38 in 1868 to 56 in 1885, but these had to cover the more than 110,000 workplaces registered and attempt to detect unregistered workplaces falling within the scope of the act: 16 out of 39 districts in England had no registered workshops and only half the registered workshops had been inspected in 1881. When, after several unsuccessful attempts to extend some of the protections of the act to shopworkers, Sir John Lubbock succeeded in securing passage of a at the end of the 1886 session, the act made no provision for enforcement by inspection. The Evening Standard thought that this meant the act would be a dead letter, given experiences with the Factory Acts:
The Factory Acts are enforced by an elaborate machinery of inspection. Anyone who has taken the trouble to inquire into the matter knows perfectly well that without this stringent inspection they would be absolutely worthless. Even as it is they are contravened openly every day, because the best inspection must, from the nature of the case, be somewhat spasmodic and uncertain. When an Inspector discovers that the law has been broken he summons the offending party; but, as a rule, if he does not make the discovery himself, no one informs him of it. The chief provisions of the last Factory Act are hung up, legibly printed on white cardboard, "plain for all men to see", in every room of every factory. No one can be ignorant of them; yet when they are disregarded, as they are constantly, it is the rarest thing for any of the women affected by the illegality to give information.

Repeal

The whole act was repealed by the Factory and Workshop Act 1901, which consolidated the act with subsequent amendments.