![]() ![]() When ten-year-old Lyddie and her younger brother are hired out as servants to help pay off their. Newbery winner Katherine Paterson has rendered with intriguing historical accuracy life in industrial New England during the mid-19th century. Lyddie by Katherine Paterson - book cover, description. ![]() But if she does, she could lose her dream and everything she has worked for. ![]() When a friend is threatened by one of the factory managers, Lyddie knows it is time to speak up. But as Lyddie earns a reputation for being a hard and thrifty worker, she watches the grinding work at the factory sap the vitality of young girls-some no more than eight or nine-who were once healthy and strong. In spite of the deafening noise of the machines, the sweltering heat, and the choking air thick with lint and dust, Lyddie holds onto her dream: to save enough money to pay off the family debts and bring everyONE back home-together. Six days a week Lyddie struggles at the back-breaking looms. Desperate, Lyddie makes her way to Concord, Massachusetts where she becomes a factory girl, working as a weaver in a textile mill. Far from home, she despairs of ever seeing her loved ones again. Lyddie Worthen is only 13 when her family is split up and she is forced to hire herself out at Cutler's tavern. ![]()
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