It is difficult for the twenty-first century mind to grasp the endless drudgery of the daily lives of nineteenth century workers, especially the masses of the poor, and particularly women. While the status of mother or wife was better than that of domestic servant, there was little else separating them from the constant toil of Read More
Posts with the tag: Women Workers
The Archivist’s Nook: ‘Labor’s True Woman’ – Leonora Barry
Posted in: Blogs Digital Scholarship Humanities The Archivist's Nook University Archives | Tags: John W. Hayes, Knights of Labor, New York, Pennsylvania, Temperance, Terence V. Powderly, Women Workers, Women's History, Women's Suffrage | Comment
The Archivist’s Nook: “Mother” Millar’s Mission – Catholic Women’s Service in WWI
Imagine you purchased a box of used books and found buried within a tattered satchel dating from the First World War. What would you do with it? This scenario played in the summer of 2016, when a thrift store benefiting an Alabama-based women’s shelter contacted the CUA Archives. Hidden within a box of cookbooks – Read More
Posted in: The Archivist's Nook University Archives | Tags: American Expeditionary Forces (AEF), Fr. John Burke, Margaret Richards Millar, National Catholic War Council, NCWC, USCCB, Women Workers, World War I | Comment