Women in Industry is a critical examination of labor history of women in the United States from colonial times to the turn of the 20th century. Since its first publication a century ago, it has received hundreds of citations and had a formative influence in fields as diverse as labor history, gender studies, and economic history methodology. Women in Industry examines working conditions, wages and other forms of compensation across industries and professions. While firmly rooted in economics, Abbott does not overlook the social causes and implications of shifting patterns of female employment nor the organized opposition such changes attracted by established interests. Using masses of carefully compiled evidence, Abbott's work forcefully made the point that, contrary to popular belief, women did not suddenly replace men in industrial employment sometime in the 19th century. Rather, women and children were a regular and prominent feature of American industries in general and manufacturing in particular. Forming the first comprehensive account of female employment in a developing manufacturing economy, Abbott's extensive primary research and dispassionate interpretation make this essential reading for students of economic history. Academically rigorous yet accessible, Women in Industry remains unsurpassed in the reach of its coverage and the depth of its scholarship: It is fairly recognized as a timeless work and a source of inspiration for contemporary economic historians everywhere.
Introductory Note
Preface
Chapter I - Introduction
Chapter II - The Colonial Period
Chapter III - The Period of Transition
Chapter IV - The Establishment of the Factory System
Chapter V - The Early Field of Employment
Chapter VI - The Cotton Industry
Chapter VII - Early Mill Operatives: Conditions of Life and Work
Chapter VIII - The Manufacture of Boots and Shoes
Chapter IX - Cigarmaking
Chapter X - The Clothing Industry
Chapter XI - Printing
Chapter XII - The Problem of Womens Wages
Chapter XIII - Public Opinion and the Working Woman
Appendix A - Child Labor in America Before 1870
Appendix B - Concerning the Census Statistics of Industrial Employment
Appendix C - Tables of Womens Wages in the Cotton Mills
Appendix D - Early Corporation Rules and Regulations
Appendix E - List of Occupations in Which Women Were Reported to be Employed 1900
Appendix F - Trial Bibliography of Books and Magazine Articles relating to the industrial employment of women in England and America INDEX