West Virginia Code § 10-3A-1

Legislative findings, purposes, intent, and short title
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(a) The Legislature finds that child labor in hazardous industry was commonplace in West
Virginia and the United States until state and federal laws prohibited such labor in the early
20th century. Throughout West Virginia, children worked in coal mines, factories, salt works,
and other inherently dangerous places. Due to their diminutive size and because child
workers could be paid less, many employers preferred to utilize children in eformal
employment and informal employment arrangements. Because many children were
informally employed, the number of children who were permanently marimed or killed due to
hazardous labor is unknown.
(b) In order to preserve the memory of children who worked in a hazardous industry, a
monument in memory of all children shall be constructed. Thte monument will be constructed
in Fairmont, West Virginia due to the scale of the mine explosion at Monongah, West
Virginia on December 6, 1907, and due to the unknown number of children who were killed
in that disaster.
(c) This article may be cited as the "West Virgsinia Child Labor Memorial."

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