 We could learn to find more about it. This is an excellent book and we did not have a chance to do every single photo analysis of every photo, but we showed you might even want to look through this book to see even more. So if you're wondering more about your picture, this would be the place to do it. Now, who was the man who really then helped get child labor laws to be all over the United States? In 1924 is when they really started happening in the United States. So in 1924 it started making these kids doing illegal things. They said no, they have to go to school, they have to get an education. So, out on the timeline, what do you think we should put out there? Child labor laws started in 1924. A few states had them before then, but not all the states did. So if we put that on there then we'll say in 1924 we know these things happened before or after that. Before or after that? Before. Because after 1924 were they allowed to do that anymore? No. Alright, lots of people have things that they would like to say. Right. Possibly could have lasted longer, couldn't it? Yeah, true. Zach. I have a question with that picture. It's in children that work and it's in that picture. Right, we have a guy in the reading group who's reading the book called Children at Work. And a lot of those pictures, you're right, are Lewis Hine's pictures in your book and guys are reading too. Great connection. That little square box on the corner is that girl on this little girl right here. They just did a close up on her, didn't they? Yes. I have a question. On it, when you go around that town, where would you go? If you were a baby, you mean? Well often, if you notice this lady right here, that's her mom. So they took the babies to work with them. If they were babies, they might put them like in a little tap-hoof thing and tie them to them like in those blankets. Have you seen those before when a mother holds a tie on to them? They would take the small children with them. That's why when they were old enough to do something, they started working too. On the front, is that like someone taking off those bottoms? Yes, it is. It's a doctor. You're correct. Yes, they were. Right. So women are still working for some equal rights, aren't they? Didn't come overnight. Just like if we learned that any amendment just changed everything just like that. No, people had to vote for it. It took some time. So you're right, the laws started there. But then they had to start enforcing them to get it to stop. Like the 16th amendment, Abraham Lincoln, he was, I mean the 13th amendment. I was thinking of his president. You were thinking of the year of the president. He was the 16th president. You're right. Slavery is not illegal in America. It took like three years or something or even more to change that law. Yeah, because what started happening then? Segregation. Yeah, segregation. And how long did segregation last? A hundred years. Right.