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Today

10:00 - 17:00

Opening times

Museum, boutique and bistro

  • Tuesday till Wednesday 10:00 - 17:00

  • Thursday 10:00 - 19:00

  • Friday till Sunday 10:00 - 17:00

  • Monday closed

Library

  • Tuesday till Wednesday and Friday 10:00 - 18:00

  • Thursday 10:00 - 19:00

  • Saturday till Monday closed

The library is closed from 20.12.2025 to 5.1.2026

Special opening times

  • Today 10:00 - 17:00

  • Christmas Eve 24.12.2025 10:00 - 14:00

  • Christmas 25.12.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • St. Stephen´s Day 26.12.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • 27.12.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • 28.12.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • 29.12.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • 30.12.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • New Year´s Eve 31.12.2025 10:00 - 17:00

  • New Year´s Day 01.01.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Saint Berchtold 02.01.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Good Friday 03.04.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Kars Saturday 04.04.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Easter 05.04.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Easter Monday 06.04.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Sechseläuten 20.04.2026 closed

  • Labour Day 01.05.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Ascension Day 14.05.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Whitsun 24.05.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Whit Monday 25.05.2026 10:00 - 17:00

  • Swiss National Holiday 01.08.2026 10:00 - 17:00

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Born into poverty. Child labourers

National Museum Zurich | 19.12.2025 - 20.4.2026
published on 17.12.2025

The new exhibition at the National Museum Zurich presents the history of child labour in Switzerland, from children having to make a vital contribution to the family finances, to being exploited in factories. It also takes a look at the worldwide debate on the topic in the present day.

Child labour was an integral part of everyday life even before the industrial era. As parents didn’t earn enough to support the whole family, children had to make a contribution, whether at home, on the land, or in cottage industries. While this represented a way of being involved, their exploitation only increased from the Industrial Revolution onwards, when children as young as six worked in dangerous conditions, often up to 16 hours a day, spinning and weaving in stuffy textile factories, in the silk industry, or in fabric printing plants in the canton of Glarus. It wasn’t until 1877 that the Federal Factory Act banned children under 14 from working and limited working time to 11 hours a day.

The exhibition at the National Museum Zurich sheds light on this chapter in Switzerland’s social history. It shows how children had to work on farms, in the household and in institutions, and how society’s perception of child labour has evolved. The exhibition also recognizes those who campaigned for the education and protection of children. The introduction of compulsory schooling in 1874 was a milestone towards a new notion of childhood – moving away from economic need and towards education and development. And yet it was a long process: until well into the 20th century, children from poor families had to work in strangers’ households – as chimney sweeps in Italy or as maids, labourers or farm hands in Southern Germany. Or they were forced into foster care by the authorities. 

The exhibition ends with a look at the present. Across the world, millions of children still have to work – in mines, on cocoa plantations and in textile factories. Forms of child labour even exist in Switzerland, when young people from poor families have to contribute to the household budget or give up their entire apprentice wage. The statue of Justitia with a Superman cloak evokes the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, signed by Switzerland in 1997, which grants every child the right to protection, education and participation in decisions that affect them. The exhibition invites visitors to reflect on poverty, responsibility and on the value of childhood – both in the past and the present.

Images

Milking and Herding

Alpine farming also helped small-scale farmers to survive. Milking was done by hand. The dairyman was assisted by a shepherd boy. High up in the mountains and after a hard day of work, these children were at the mercy of the dairyman’s whims. Dairyman and boy, 1890 - 1930, Ticino alp, photo by Rudolf Zinggeler-Danioth, Kilchberg, Swiss National Museum

Producing and Selling

Around 1900 in the Bernese Oberland, lace-making and selling went hand in hand. Girls produced their ware by the roadside in the Lauterbrunnen Valley and sold their lace in stalls directly to tourists who, in those days, still used horse-drawn carriages for travelling. Swiss National Museum

Children’s Tools

Kids and youngsters who habitually helped their parents in farming used smaller work tools fitted to their size and made specially for them, which underlines the responsibility they bore already at a young age. Back frame from Anzonico in the Leventina, 1900 – 1980, hazel wicker / spruce

© Swiss National Museum

Straw plaiting in a farmhouse living room

In rural areas such as the Freiamt, the Sense district, the Onsernone Valley, the Valais, or the Zurich Lowlands, straw plaiting emerged as an industry from the 16th century onward. Children would take on simple jobs, often all day long, even until late at night. Straw braider family in the Aargau FreiamtCa. 1840, unknown painter. Swiss National Museum

Embroidery as cottage industry

By the end of the 18th century, tens of thousands of men, women, and children worked in the textile industry – 95 per cent of them from home. Children helped parents by winding on, threading up, winding off, and cleaning silk. Besides school, they often worked up to six hours a day and until late at night. Adult at the hand embroidery machine, boy at the threading machine, around 1912, probably Appenzell. Swiss National Museum

Children in the factory

Industrialization ushered in the exploitation of children as factory workers. They were given simple jobs that were not particularly physically demanding, but occasionally dangerous and poorly paid. The Federal Factory Act was narrowly passed in 1877. A new provision prohibited children under the age of 14 from working. The normal working day was limited to eleven hours. Group photo of staff at a furniture factory in Glarus, 1903, unknown photographer. Swiss National Museum

Working Far from Home

Until 1981, local authorities removed tens of thousands of children from their families without legal proceedings. Authorities sent the children to work on farms as cheap labourers, or placed them in the care of children’s homes, closed institutions or borstals. They were often forced to perform hard labour. Sexual exploitation was common, and many of them suffer from the effects of the physical and psychological violence they experienced to this day. Fetching fresh water from a spring, 1947, Unteriberg, photo by Theo Frey, Schwyz.

© Theo Frey Archiv / Fotostiftung Schweiz, Winterthur

Keep Fighting

After their parents divorced, Christian Tschannen (b. 1971) and his brother were hired out to a farm where they had to do physically demanding work and live in a tiny, cold room. The boys were beaten and abused. In his art, Tschannen seeks to come to terms with what he experienced. Cantonal disability insurance, Solothurn crime scene images, 2019–22, Christian Tschannen, Solothurn, acrylic marker on sticking plaster.

© Christian Tschannen

Underway on Foot

From 1801 to 1914, poverty drove boys and girls from their homes in the Grisons and eastern Switzerland to Upper Swabia every year. There the children worked for board and lodging – and a very modest wage – on farms between April and October. The boys tended cattle, while the girls helped with household chores and looked after their hosts’ young children. and go barefoot until autumn. Children’s ankle boots with hook and eye closure, 1900 – 1925, cowhide

© Swiss National Museum

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