Thursday, April 2, 2015

Women's Changing Role in Society (1914-1939)


                Fresh from the Gilded Age, women took a new role in American society. One thing that helped bring this was Prohibition. Prohibition brought in the speakeasies that sold alcohol to anyone who wanted it. Speakeasies were a place where men and women frequented and got along very well. Women also got the right to vote in 1920. This empowered them more. With the new change in society with no one caring about anything but themselves, women gained much ground.


Women in the Workplace

Traditional family structure was completely changed by the First World War.
Many married women were forced into the workplace by the death of their husbands.

Other women were drafted into industries that had been depleted by military conscription.

Over the course of the war:

  • 200,000 women took up jobs in governmental departments.

  • 500,000 took up clerical positions in private offices.

  • 250,000 worked on in agricultural positions.

  • 700,000 women took up posts in the munitions industry, which was dangerous work.

  • Many more women did hard heavy work, including ship building and furnace stoking. These types of jobs had excluded women prior to the war.

In July 1914, before the war broke out there were 3.2 million women in employment. This had risen to 5 million by January 1918.

1910-1919- 23.4% of women in work force, women began doing jobs previously done by men because of the war (police officers, mechanics, and truck drivers.)

1920-1929- 25% of women working, 30% of these women in clerical or sales. Women paid low wages.

1930-1939- Great depression, women discouraged from taking jobs. 22% in work force.


                Between 1920 and 1930, women in the labor force rose from 23.6 percent to 27 percent. World War I had opened up new doors for women, with many rising to white-collar office and support-staff positions. Women worked in manufacturing and textiles, domestic services and agriculture.
Education
The 1920s saw the first generation of female college graduates and women earning careers in nursing, education and social work.

 

During the 1920s, women's fashion was revolutionized with changing music trends. Women adopted more casual modes of dress, including shorter dresses and skirts that were often frowned upon in public. Flappers epitomized the 1920s through their fashion, short-bob haircuts, dance moves, cosmetics and public smoking. By 1923, dance marathons featuring the Shimmy and the Charleston were all the rage.


Obviously, not all 1920s women were flappers. By the end of the twenties, 38 states featured nearly 150 elected female officials in Congress and state legislatures.
 
 
What did World War 1 do for Women?

The war meant women had to take on a number of traditionally male roles. Their ability to do this led to a change in attitudes.

World War 1 caused:

  • Emmeline Pankhurst (leader of the Women’s Social and Political Union) called for a temporary ceasefire in their campaign so the country could focus fully on the war effort.
 

 

  • Syliva Pankhurst and her Women’s Suffrage Federation were more radical and wanted the struggle to continue in spite of the situation.


When the war ended in November 1918 8.4 million women were granted the right to vote.

The Eligibility of Women Act was also passed in November 1918. This meant that some women could now be elected as members of Parliament.

World War 1 was undoubtedly the final catalyst for women to be given the vote. However, women would have to wait until 1928 to be granted the vote on equal terms with British men. This was brought by the Representation of the People Act, which stated all women over the age of 21 could vote.
 
                When the United States entered the European War on April 6, 1917, it marked the first time in the history of the country that regular Army and Navy military nurses served overseas—although without rank—and the first time, women who were not nurses were allowed to enlist in the Navy and Marine Corps. A handful of women also served in the Coast Guard. The US Army, however, refused to enlist women officially, relying on them as contract employees and civilian volunteers.
Negative public opinion and hesitant military leaders limited women's roles, but the country needed their skills to pursue the war effort and to move male soldiers out of office jobs and onto the battlefield.
 

 

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Women and Abortion 1865 - 1914


Abortion has been a controversial topic from the beginning of time. In the 1800's it was legal for women to terminate their pregnancy until the first fetal movement was detected. This ban was adopted by the original British common law. Abortions got a bad reputation for being unprofessional because of the people performing the procedures. It was common for irregular doctors and midwives to perform the abortion procedure, rather than general physicians.

 
 

Abortion numbers increases between the years of 1850 - 1860. The ratio between Abortions and live birth is 1:5. This spike in numbers of abortions quickly pushed anti- abortion laws in congress. People didn't like the idea of abortion and had very strong views opposing it. In the 1840's it was more likely for the middle - upper class women to have the abortion procedure. It was because they wanted to limit their family size to stay in their socioeconomic status. In this time families started to live in more rural areas which caused the families to live a more urban lifestyle. They  no longer needed to have large families to help farm and grow their crops. They no longer relied on the work of their children in the fields or family business. This was a huge change in culture at this time. Small families became the social norm of urban life. Some people against  abortion would say that it was the women's selfishness that lead them to abort their babies.  They limit their family size for fear of their socioeconomic status.

 

Stated in the article called Mid-1800s and After: States Begin Outlawing Abortion, "In the late 1800s, the newly formed American Medical Association (AMA) argues that abortion is both immoral and dangerous."

 
The Boston surgeon, Horatio Robinson Storer, M.D. (1830-1922) was known for leading the  "Physicians' Crusade Against Abortion" in 1857. He carried out extensive research and concluded in the 1859 American Medical Association Report that “thousands and hundreds of thousands of lives are… directly at stake, and are annually sacrificed” as a result of abortion. 

 

In 1910 the AMA set strict rules banning midwives and homeopaths from performing abortions. During this time, every state had strict laws against aborting the baby otherwise to save a mother's life. These abortions were only done by Doctors.  After the strict  banning of abortions, "back- alley" abortion numbers skyrocketed. More women died from these illegitimate procedures in this time than any other time in history. Women did not have enough money to have the doctor carry out the procedure so many women were forced to have "back- alley" abortions which resulted in complications. 

 


Even in this day and age, Abortion still raises some heated arguments. There are two sides; Pro-Choice and Pro-Life. And most will argue very passionately their views.  

 

Statistics among abortions and classes of women are far more different today. In the 1840's it was most likely for a women of higher class in the socioeconomic status to go through with abortions. Now in today's society, lower class women are more likely to get abortions. According to the Guttmacher Institute, "Forty-two percent of women obtaining abortions have incomes below 100% of the federal poverty level ($10,830 for a single woman with no children). Twenty-seven percent of women obtaining abortions have incomes between 100–199% of the federal poverty level."
 

Statistics today show that in white women there are 138 abortions in every 1,000 births. In black women there is a ratio 501:1,000. This goes hand-in-hand with stereotypes of low income and race. Most people have stereotypes of the black women in poverty getting abortions. 73% of women said that they couldn't afford a baby at the time 48%  said that they did not want to be a single mother or were having relationship problems