Mule sweeping is noted as being one of the worst occupations in history due to the work conditions. The danger of being beneath the machines meant that they had to constantly pay attention to its movements to avoid serious injury. An 1840 novel by
Frances Trollope describes the work of a scavenger: While there were no requirements for factory owners to keep any records about the majority of accidents on their premises there are many anecdotal cases of scavengers suffering serious and sometimes fatal injuries. Some lost fingers or a hand, others are said to have been decapitated. A record held at the
Quarry Bank Mill, now a museum, states: Research by
Jane Humphries, a professor of economic history at the
University of Oxford, revealed that a mill near Cork had such a poor safety record that six people died and 60 others were mutilated over a four-year period.
Robert Blincoe, a scavenger who went on to found his own cotton-spinning business, described the life of a
child labourer in his book
A Memoir of Robert Blincoe. He wrote about the mistreatment of workers at the cotton mills and the poor conditions that they had to endure. He claims that on one occasion he was nearly crushed by the machine and that, despite the injuries to his head, he was beaten for not completing the sweep in a single turn. ==Legislation==