The standards or school grades in which these working children were enrolled and the total enrollment for the year ended August 31, 1898, were as follows:[28]

Working ChildrenTotal Enrollment
No Standard329
1st standard 3,8902,875,088
2d standard11,686723,582
3d standard24,624679,096
4th standard36,907590,850
5th standard37,315421,728
6th standard21,975212,546
7th standard6,38266,442
Ex-7 standard3827,534
Not stated536
Total144,0265,576,866

The occupations followed by these children were divided into three main groups, and each of these groups was further divided into three classes. These divisions and the number of children in each were as follows:[29]

Piecework, chiefly BoysTime-work, chiefly BoysDomestic Employment, girls only, with One or Two Exceptions
Selling newspapers15,182In shops or running errands for shopkeepers76,173Minding babies11,585
Hawking goods2,435Agricultural occupations6,115Other housework, including laundry work, etc.9,254
Sports, taking dinners, knocking-up, etc.8,627Boot and knife cleaning, etc. (house boys)10,636Needlework and like occupations4,019

The return revealed a surprising variety of occupations followed by these children—about 200 different kinds in all.

Hours per WeekNumber of Children
Under 1039,355
10-2060,268
21-3027,008
31-409,778
41-502,390
51-60576
61-70142
71-8059
Over 8116
Not stated4,434
Total144,026

The number of hours per week devoted by these children to the various employments will be found in the above table; it should be remembered that these hours were given to work in addition to the time spent at school.[30]

It was recognized that the figures given by this parliamentary return did not represent the real situation, but nevertheless its revelations were sufficiently startling to show the need of further investigation. Accordingly in 1901 there was appointed an interdepartmental committee which after careful study reported that the figures in the parliamentary return were well within the actual numbers, but that the facts it contained were substantially correct.[31] This committee estimated the total number of children who were both in attendance at school and in paid employments in England and Wales at 300,000;[32] it declared that cases of excessive employment were "sufficiently numerous to leave no doubt that a substantial number of children are being worked to an injurious extent."[33]

Referring to the amount of time devoted by the children to gainful employment outside of school, the committee reported, "On a review of the evidence we consider it is proved that in England and Wales a substantial number of children, amounting probably to 50,000, are being worked more than twenty hours a week in addition to twenty-seven and one-half hours at school, that a considerable proportion of this number are being worked to thirty or forty and some even to fifty hours a week, and that the effect of this work is in many cases detrimental to their health, their morals and their education, besides being often so unremitting as to deprive them of all reasonable opportunity for recreation. For an evil so serious, existing on so large a scale, we think that some remedy ought to be found."[34] The committee estimated the total number of children selling newspapers and in street hawking at 25,000.[35]

With reference to conditions in Edinburgh, an English writer says, "Of the 1406 children employed out of school hours in Edinburgh, 307 are ten years of age or under. Four of them are six years old, and eleven are seven years of age. We hear of boys working seventeen hours (from 7 A.M. to 12 P.M.) on Saturday. For children to work twelve, thirteen and fourteen hours on Saturday is quite common. The average wage seems to be three farthings an hour, but one hears of children who are paid one shilling and sixpence for thirty-eight hours of toil."[36]