Though eight-year-old Aidan and his friend Gussie want to go to school,
like many other children in 1903, they work twelve hours, six days a
week, at a cotton mill in Pennsylvania instead. So when the millworkers
decide to go on strike, the two friends join the picket line. Maybe now
life will change for them. But when a famous labor reformer named Mother
Jones comes to hear of the millworkers' demands, she tells them they
need to do more than just strike. "Troubled by all she had seen, Mother
Jones wanted to end child labor. But what could she do? Why, organize a
children's march and bring the message right to President Theodore
Roosevelt at his summer home in Oyster Bay, of course!"
Written by Monica Kulling, with vibrant illustrations by Felicita Sala,
this nonfiction picture book uses an entertaining story about fictitious
characters to bring a real event in history to vivid life. The actual
march raised awareness across North America and contributed to the
passage of the first child labor laws. It offers an excellent model for
how ordinary people, including children, can make a difference by
standing up for what's right. For lesson planning, there's more about
Mother Jones, the march and child labor laws at the end of the book.
There's also information about child labor today and concrete
suggestions for getting involved and helping, making this book perfect
for discussions about social justice, activism and citizenship.