05-04 TABLE of CONTENTS:
No Talking Permitted While at Work
Manufacturers Decline to Safeguard
Women Mill Workers
Disguises Herself as a Male Soldier
to Find Her Husband
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTE by
Eleanor Smeal, Amelia Barr, Minna Antrim, Clemence Dane, and Margaret
Atwood.
No Talking Permitted While at Work
Some typical regulations for girls and women working
in the early 19th century New England mills:
"The bell to call the people to work will
be rung 5 minutes and tolled 5 minutes; at the last stroke the entrance
will be closed and a fee of 12 cents exacted of anyone for whom it may
be opened... No person can be allowed to leave work without permission
of the overseer... No talking can be permitted. while at work, except on
business."
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Manufacturers Decline to Safeguard Women Mill Workers
The Massachusetts Committee on Manufactures headed
by Lowell Courier owner William Schouler hears testimony from Sarah Bagley,
Eliza Heming- way, Judith Payne, and other textile-mill workers in 1845
about the evils of the 14-hour work day at low wages in unhealthy conditions.
The women give the example of 150 people working in
one large room lighted by 293 small lamps and 61 larger lamps, with as
many as 30 girls per day overcome by the fumes of the lamps.
It is the first investigation into working conditions
in U.S. history. The employer committee issues a report stating that the
factory girls are healthy:
"The remedy [for long hours]
does not lie with us," it says. "We
look for it in the progressive improvement in art and science, in a higher
appreciation of man's destiny, in a less love for money, and a more ardent
love for social happiness and intellectual superiority."
But the women press for the defeat of Shouler, and even though women
cannot vote he is defeated in his bid for reelection in the fall.
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Disguises Herself as a Male Soldier to Find Her Husband
According to her book The Female Soldier
that was published in 1741, Hannah Snell, at 27, left her child and family
disguised as a man to find her sailor husband.
She joined the army and was part of the loyalist regiment
that fought the supporters of Bonnie Prince Charlie. She deserted the army
life after being whipped for an infraction and took a ship to India.
She wrote that she was wounded in the groin in a battle
with the French and found a woman who did doctoring as well as midwifery
to remove the shot.
Later, in Portugal, she heard her husband had died
in Italy and she returned to Britain.
As part of the theatrical promotion of her book, she performed the military
drill in full dress uniform.
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05-04 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and EVENTS
B. 05-04-1749, Charlotte Smith - English novelist and poet who
raised 12 children withthe proceeds of her writings.
Her accomplishment is all the more remarkable since
the prejudices against women publishing was so strong that one man could
write with impunity during that period (describing the poetry of Anne Bradford)
"Your printing of a Book beyond the customs
of your Sex, doth rankly smell."
CS was highly praised by Sir Walter Scott and
did very well although modern critics dismiss her as being in the romantic
tradition of women. (What is the difference between senseless shot 'em
up violence that appeals only to some men and something that only appeals
to women? But one is treated with respect by male critics and the latter
with contempt.)
She dared write about the love of a man for a married
woman and the equality of people. Her husband was a ne'er do well who escaped
England to avoid his debts. She got him out of hock, he came back, and
then left him when he started the same spendthrift way again
B.05--04-1820, Julia Tyler - U.S. First Lady, the second wife of
John Tyler, the 10th president of the United States. Chosen/bought
by the older Tyler for her youth, glamour, and extravagance, she is roundly
criticized for what she was while Tyler never suffers criticism for his
old man ego that believed a younger, glamorous woman chose him for his
charms. JT became an ardent supporter of the Confederacy.
B. 05-04-1884, Agnes Morgan - U.S. biochemist amd nutritionist
who did major researched toxicity of pesticides.
While she was at the University of California (1915-1954)
she developed the nutrition, home economics, and food science departments.
She was also a biochemist for the Agricultural Experiment Station 1938-1945
examining agricultural imports for vermin and pests.
B. 05-04-1896, Mary Ellis Peltz - U.S. journalist, author, lecturer,
opera promoter, publications director of the Metropolitan Opera Guild,
and first editor of Opera News (1936-1957).
In "retirement," MEP organized the archives
of Metropolitan Opera Association; co-wrote Opera Guide (1930) and
wrote Behind the Gold Curtain (1950), as well as a history of the
Met, among other books.
B. 05-04-1898, Joy Bright Hancock - U.S. naval
officer.
JBH was director of the United State Women's Auxilliary
Naval service (WAVES).
On June 12, 1948 when the Armed Services Integration
Act went into effect, she became a permanent Lieutenant Commander, sworn
in as one of the first eight women commissioned in the regular Navy.
She had enlisted in the women's naval reserve in World
War I (all women discharged at the end of the war). She continued to work
for the Navy in various capacities. In 1928 she qualified for the civil
pilot's license and joined the Navy's Bureau of Aeronautics.
In 1942 at the beginning of World War II, JBH joined
the new women's naval reserve, the Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency
Service (WAVES) as a lieutenant. She became a lieutenant commander in 1943,
and a commander in 1945.
In 1946, after a five months stint as assistant director
of the WAVES, she became director with the rank of captain.
Although the WAVES actually passed out of existence
under the provisions of the Women s Armed Services Integration Act of June
12, 1948, she continued as ex officio director of the WAVES while
she was officially assistant chief for women of the Bureau of Personnel
in the U.S. Navy. Her autobiography is Lady in the Navy (1972).
She married in 1924 and her Naval aviator husband was killed in a dirigible
accident within the year.
(See Hallaren
below.)
B. 05-04-1903, Anna Bidder - co-founder and first president of Lucy
Cavendish College, Cambridge, UK.
Lucy Cavendish is the only college at either Oxford
or Cambridge dedicated to mature women students.
The following dates are correct... it's hard to believe,
but they are correct. Women's rights - even the right to an education in
a "modern" country - are young and tender.
The Electronic Telegraph's obituary read:
"Anna Bidder became
convinced of the need for a new women's college partly as a consequence
of her own experiences as an undergraduate at Newnham in the 1920s. Newnham
was one of only two women's colleges at Cambridge at the time, the other
being Girton.
"Anna Bidder went
up to Cambridge in 1922 after spending a year at University College, London,
and found to her dismay that attitudes to women students left much to be
desired: 'Individually, male undergraduates were beautifully polite,' she
recalled, 'but collectively, they were often atrociously rude. In some
subjects, if a girl came in late to a lecture, they would stamp their feet
in time for every step she took and then slam their notebooks on to their
desks as she sat down.'
[WOAH note: Such descriptions of real
actions of men destroys the legends that men before today's generation
with polite and decent. Men have always treated women who went outside
their prescribed boundaries and challenged men's absolute power with utmost
rudeness and even violence. Also, any women who were not under the care
or a man were also fair game.]
The obituary goes on,
"This was in marked contrast to University
College, where there had been two women to every three men, and
'a happy, co-educational atmosphere'. 'It's
difficult to convey just how disagreeable some male attitudes in Cambridge
were by contrast,' she recalled.
"Prejudice against women was not confined to
male undergraduates. For decades the university authorities refused to
accept women as full members of the university or to award them degrees.
"But the achievement of membership in 1948 had
a galvanising effect, encouraging women academics to press for improved
representation. In 1951 Anna Bidder suggested to her close friends, the
medievalist Katherine Wood Legh and the philosopher Margaret Braithwaite
that they should form a dining club as an 'embryo' high table for a new
women's college. The group, which became known as 'the
high table in search of a college', soon attracted
new members.
"With a grant of 2,000 pounds from Anna Bidder's
father, they raised enough to put down a deposit on a house; but they made
little headway with the university authorities to whom they wrote at intervals
asking for recognition: 'They said in effect
'run away little girls, run away until your little legs are longer and
your little wings are stronger',' Anna Bidder
recalled.
"For more than a decade, the university continued
to ignore their applications, and by the time approval was finally given,
in 1965, another women's college, New Hall, had already opened its doors.
Even then, though, only 10 per cent of Cambridge undergraduates were women.
"The university insisted that Lucy Cavendish
should not be a traditional college; instead, it was initially established
as a college for women employed at the university and given the 'experimental'
designation of an Approved Society.
"In its early years, the college was desperately
short of funds and could not afford to pay its president a salary. As Anna
Bidder had private means, she agreed to become president as an unpaid stop-gap.
She ended up doing the job for five years.
"Under Anna Bidder and her successors, Lucy Cavendish
College established its academic reputation and, in 1972, admitted its
first undergraduates. The College now occupies a three-acre site in central
Cambridge and remains one of only two colleges in Cambridge to exclude
men from membership altogether. In 1997 it acquired full collegiate status
and a Royal charter."
The obituary goes on to say,
"Among various publications, she co-wrote
a study of the Cephalopods of Grasse's Traite de Zoologie. On two occasions
she travelled round the world researching cephalopods at various zoological
institutions. She was curator of Mollusca at Cambridge University's Zoology
Department from 1963 to 1970.
"An active Quaker throughout her life, in the
early 1960s Anna Bidder contributed to Towards a Quaker View of Sex,
a book which was considered to be a breakthrough in its frankness. Over
30 years it sold 500,000 copies."
B. 05-04-1903, Bernice Goetz - U.S. explorer.
Saving as much of her salary as possible and using
her vacation time, at age 19 BG took her first exploration trip to the
ancient Maya ruins in the jungles of Mexico.
Lecturing and writing about her exploration earned
her money for further explorations that included Bolivia, Columbia, Ecuador,
Brazil, and Guatamala.
Although her fame and demand as a lecturer and travel
writer grew with each trip, she still augmented her resources by working
for the Red Cross and an oil exploration company.
All her her explorations were self-financed. Her artifacts
were donated to the Cleveland Public Library and the Cleveland Museum of
National History.
B. 05-04-1904, Irene Silva de Santolalla - Peruvian political leader
and educator.
IsdS was the first woman elected to Peruvian Senate
(1956). She was an active suffragist and instrumental in campaigns that
enabled women to finally gained enfranchisement in Peru on 09-07-1955.
She was an internationally recognized expert on family
education and founded (1952) the Preparation for Marital and Family Life
school.
B. 05-04-1905, Anna Chandy - Judge of the High Court of Kerala,
India.
Chandy was the first woman in India and probably the
second in the world to reach a high state court judgeship (1959).
She had been admitted to the bar in 1928 and became
the first woman judge in India, 1937. Her widowed mother supported her
two daughters and herself by teaching school.
B. 05-04-1907, Mary Agness Hallaren - U.S.
military commander.
With the rank of captain MAH commanded the first WAC
battalion of women to go overseas in WWII. Became director of the WACS
in May, 1947.
On June 12, 1948 when the Armed Services Integration
Act went into effect and the WACS became a component of the Regular Army,
Col. Hallaren became the first women to receive a commission in the Regular
Army.
She retired from the army in 1960 and in 1965 she
became director of the Women in Community Service division of the U.S.
Labor Department.
(See Hancock
above.)
B. 05-04-1916, Jane Jacobs - U.S.-Canadian author specializing
in studies about cities and urban life.
Her Downtown is For People in the Exploding Metropolis
1959) and The Economy of Cities (1969) are just two of her several
books that have been translated into all the major languages of the world
including Japanese.
B. 05-04-1919, Heloise - widely read columnist who specialized
in tips for domestic living and home keepers.
B. 05-04-1922, Dr. Eurgenie Clark - ichthyologist and research
director of the American Museum of Natural History.
B. 05-04-1928, Betsy Rawls - U.S. golfer who won the U.S. Women's
Open a record four times - a record that was tied by Mickey Wright in 1964.
[Brit Encly]
click
on image
to see full size
B. 05-04-1929, Audrey Hepburn - U.S.-Dutch actor.
AH is truly one of the most beloved stars of Hollywood
who spent her last years as an advocate for UNICEF. Even when dying of
cancer, she traved ceaselessly in Third World countries, always for the
children, never stinting, giving everything she had.
Answering a reporter's question about why she worked
so hard for UNICEF, she answered simply, "I
do not want to see mothers and fathers digging graves for their children."
One can only guess that she saw too much of
that when as a girl she was accidentally trapped in Holland during World
War II. She suffered extreme hardships during the war and several of her
relatives and friends were executed by the Nazis. AH acted as a courier
for the underground.
She even had to eat tulip bulbs when food supplies
ran out or they were confiscated by the Germans just before the Allied
troops freed the Netherlands.
While
playing a minor part on the London stage, she was discovered by the French
novelist Colette who said that she was the embodiment of Gigi and insisted
she move to New York to star in the Broadway production. AH electrified
Broadway in the role and then the nation fell in love with her in her screen
performance in Roman Holiday for which she won an Academy Award.
(Like many Broadway actors, she was not allowed to play Gigi on film.)
AH won the Tony for her performance in Ondine
(1954). She went on to create the delightful Holly Golightly in Breakfast
at Tiffany's (1961) and a permanent place in the hearts of filmgoers.
She received Oscar nominations for Sabrina, The
Nun's Story, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and Wait Until Dark.
Her boyish haircut plus her wardrobe of oversized
men's shirts worn with amazing feminity set a worldwide fashion trend.
Her elfin personality peeking out from under her gentile sophistication
made her a star.
Her mother was a Dutch baroness.
B. 05-04-1930, Roberta Peters - U.S. sopra acutissima
(very high) soprano.
The embodiment of feminity, she took up body-building
to strengthen herself for her operatic career. She received the coveted
Metropolitan Opera contract in 1950 at age 20 after turning down a half
dozen other lesser offers.
While still in training, she was suddenly called upon
to perform the role of Zelina in Mozart's Don Giovanni on five hours
notice. She had never performed professionally on a stage before. It was
a rousing success.
She calls Lucia in Lucia di Lammermoor "one
of the most difficult, most challenging, (and) most rewarding."
B. 05-04-1942, Ellen Stiskin Hurwitz - president Albright College,
Reading, PA.
B. 05-04-1956, Ulrike Meyfarth - West Germany winner of the gold
at the 1972 Olympics.
B. 05-04-1956, Pia Zadora - U.S. singer-actor.
Event 05-04-1960: the birth control pill was approved by the
FDA in the U.S. It was developed at the Worcester Center for Experimental
Biology. The work was financed by Katherine McCormick who gave the center
$150,000 a year from 1953 on to develop an oral contraceptive. McCormick
was the second woman graduate of M.I.T. She married into the McCormick
family and took over the International Harvester business when her husband
became hopelessly insane.
Event 05-04-1964: Jerrie Mock - received the U.S. Federal Aviation
Agency's Decoration for Exceptional Service for her record 29-day around
the world solo trip in a single engine plane.
right, Dawn Staley
B. 05-04-1970, Dawn Staley - U.S. athlete.
At 5'6", 125 pounds, DS is probably one of the
last "short people" to star in basketball. As a guard she led
the U.S. team to the gold at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics.
She founded the Dawn Staley Foundation to help inner
city kids of her native Philadelphia with positive input, a project of
such importance to the community that they painted a seven-story portrait
of DS overlooking her neighborhood of Eighth and Market Streets,
B.
05-04-1972, Gretchen Ulion - U.S. athlete.
GU contributed eight points and was the only U.S.
player to score a point in each of the six games on the way to the U.S.
gold victory in ice hockey at Nagano, Japan. She stands 5'2" and weighs
130 pounds.
She resigned from full-time teaching (she has a masters
degree) to train with the U.S. team. She returned to teaching after her
Olympic career.
B. 05-04-1972, Silvia Aleksieva - Bulgarian international grandmaster
of chess.
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QUOTES DU JOUR
SMEAL, ELEANOR:
"If there is to be
registration (for military draft), it must include women. Let's face it
- women are an established part of the modern military. We are a key part
of the trained and trainable pool of young people required to operate today's
military, which is more in need of brains than brawn... NOW is against
the registration of both young men and young women because it is a response
which stimulates an environment of preparation for war. But if there is
a draft, it must include women."
-- Eleanor Smeal speaking
as president of the National Organization for Women February 8, 1980.
BARR, AMELIA E.:
"ln my (entire) life
I have been sensible of the injustice constantly done to women. Since I
have had to fight the world single-handed, there has not been one day I
have not smarted under the wrongs I have had to bear, because I was not
only a woman, but a woman doing a man's work, without any man, husband,
son, brother or friend, to stand at my side, and to see some semblance
of justice done me. I cannot forget, for injustice is a sixth sense, and
rouses all the others."
-- Amelia E. Barr (1831
1919), Scottish-born- U.S. author writing in All the Days of My Life
(1913).
Her husband and three children had died of Yellow
Fever and she was left widowed, nearing 40 with three daughters to support.
She had with no income other than what she earned herself. One daughter
was sent to her grandnmother but AB moved the other two to New York where
against all odds, she became a successful writer and poet.
ANTRIM, MINNA:
"Experience is a good
teacher, but she sends in terrific bills."
-- Minna Antrim (1856-1950).
U.S. writer.
DANE, CLEMENCE:
"...when conditions
are evil it is not your duty to submit... when conditions are evil, your
duty, in spite of protests, in spite of sentiment, your duty, though you
trample on the bodies of your nearest and dearest to do it, though you
bleed your own heart while, your duty is to see that those conditions are
changed.
"If your laws forbid you, you must change your
laws. If your church forbids you, you must change your church. And if your
God forbids you, you must change your God."
-- Clemence Dane (1861-1965).
ATWOOD, MARGARET:
"Men are not to be
told anything they might find too painful; the secret depths of human nature,
the sordid physicalities, might overwhelm or damage them. For instance,
men often faint at the sight of their own blood, to which they are not
accustomed. For this reason you should never stand behind one in the line
at the Red Cross donor clinic."
-- Margaret Atwood, Canadian
novelist, poet, and critic.
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