Keywords
work
- "Strike, But Hear Me!", by [Unknown], April 6th, 1861
- 'They're Weel off Ut Con Wark for Their Livin'', by R. R. Bealey, 7/1/65
- A Broken Saw, by [Unknown], May 10th 1862
- A Lancashire Doxology., by Miss Muloch, October 21st 1864
- A Night with the Brother of "Mine Host" of "Who Could Have Thought It?" Grimshaw Park, Blackburn, by W. M. Billington, July 30, 1864
- A Song of the Cotton Famine, by unknown, November 8th, 1862
- A Workman's Wooing, by John Plummer, 13th December 1862
- A Wreath of Amaranths for the Brow of Toil., by Joshua Clarkson, August 1st 1861
- America, by J. R., Wednesday, October 15, 1862
- Bill Harvey's Song, by Ebeneezer Elliot, September 17th, 1864
- Can You Help Us a Bit?, by Mr. W. Stitt Jenkins, October 25th 1862
- Droylsden, by [Unknown], Jan 31st 1863
- Farewell Old Year, by Thomas Hodson, Dec 26th 1863
- Few Can Work and Many Must Weep, by R. R. B., December 27, 1862
- Food or Work, by [Unknown], July 2nd, 1864
- For Home and Love, by J. O., November 23rd, 1861
- Give Us Our Daily Bread, by Thomas Hodson, November 30th 1861
- God Help the Poor, by W. H. Webb, April 5 1862
- Harben’s Love Song., by Unknown, October 18th 1862
- Hard Times, by John Plummer, Wednesday, November 05, 1862
- Harvest and Vintage, by A. J. Duganne, 16th August 1862
- Heaw to Ged Rich, by W. Billington, July 16, 1864
- Heroes, by Richard Rawcliffe, March 21, 1863
- Home is Home, However Lowly: A Proverb Paraphrased, by Alaric A. Watts, February 1st 1862
- Hurrah for the Light, by J. Burgess, Sept 30th
- In Memoriam.Washington Wilks, Died 27th June, 1864, by unknown, July 2, 1864
- Jack Strike, by A Working Man, April 6th, 1861
- King Cotton's Remonstrance (from Punch), by unknown, Nov 2nd 1861
- Lancashire Distress, by [Unknown], June 28th 1862
- Let Us Labor, One and All, by WM. Billington, March 2, 1861
- Let us Hope for Better Days, by William Billington, Sunday, July 31, 1861
- Lines, by Samuel Laycock, November 12th, 1864
- Monday Morning, by Henry Yates, February 27, 1864
- Oh, Ring The Factory Bell, by J. B. L., May 17 1862
- Old Shuttle, by W. F. M., Wednesday, July 09, 1862
- Our Fathers Are Praying for Pauper Pay, by Gerald Massey, April 1, 1865
- Owd Barber Periwig's Solilokwy, by Samuel Laycock, Nov 21st 1863
- Readings, etc., at the Mechanics’ Institution., by Unknown, November 8th 1862
- Relief for Lancashire, by A Lankyshir Lad, February 28th 1863
- Remember the Poor, by Edwin Waugh, 24th January 1863
- Rest, by unknown, February 22nd 1862
- Rest To-Morrow, by Samuel Laycock, August 6th 1864
- Settling th'War, by Williffe Cunliam, 22nd August 1863
- Short Time, Come Again No More" (from a Street Broadside), by [Unknown], 1866
- Squandered Lives, by Bayard Taylor, 22nd August 1863
- Sympathy with Lancashire, by [Unknown], Thursday, October 23, 1862
- Th' Owd Pedlar, by Joseph Ramsbottom, 1864
- Th' Petched Shirt, by Williffe Cunliam, 20th June 1863
- Th' Shurat Weaver's Song, by Samuel Laycock, January 10th, 1863
- Th' Surat Weyver, by William Billington, 1977
- The Cotton Mill, by unknown, September 24th 1864
- The Cream of Punch – 'Men and Bees', by unknown, 23/11/61
- The Cry of the Unemployed, by Gerald Massey, Jan 2, 1864
- The Factory Lass, by Joseph Ramsbottom, 1864
1864
- The Happy Wife's Evening Song, by unknown, 31st October 1863
- The Lancashire Famine. A Contrast. Then and Now; Or Past and Present. Then, or Past, by Y. Stonmarket, January 17, 1863
- The Poor Rich Man to the Rich Poor Man, by Thomas Barlow, July 9th 1864
- The Silent Mills of Lancashire, by Rev. J. Baker, Dec 27 1862
- The Song of a Frame, by X, February 6, 1864
- The Spinner's Song, by H. N., January 4th 1862
- The Spinning Frame, by unknown, 28th June 1862
- The Work Shall Fill the Mills Again, by John Plummer, Nov 15 1862
- Threads, by unknown, August 29th 1863
- To the Factory Girl, by Ambrose Tomlinson, May 17 1862
- To the Lords of Land, Mills, and Money, by Starvation, October 8, 1864
- To the Workmen of the Land, by William Stitt Jenkins, March 26TH 1864
- Will the War Be over Soon?, by unknown, May 20th 1865
- Work, Lads, and Think, by Williffe Cunliam, 7th November 1863