Sources on Maine working women have been singled out for examination for a variety of reasons. The highly rural-agricultural and coastal-fishing nature of the state\u27s economy necessitates a concept of worker broad enough to encompass those employed in non-industrial pursuits. Both published and unpublished secondary works indicate that women have played a varied and significant role in Maine\u27s economy from the colonial period to the present. James Douglas The Status of Women in New England and New France, is a brief social and demographic survey of women\u27s conditions in seventeenth century New England and French Canada.In contrast, Helen Coffin Beedy\u27s Mothers of Maine, contains a wealth of social and economic information o...
Approximately one-third of Maine businesses are owned by women. With a look at the self-made, Portl...
This book recreates the life-and-times of thirteen inspiring and independent women in fascinating, b...
The article reviews the history and impact of, and response to, the Women\u27s Department section of...
Sources on Maine working women have been singled out for examination for a variety of reasons. The h...
The history of Penobscot Bay is one of tradition, grounded in the sameness of the origins of settl...
The study of labor conditions, especially in relation to women, is a comparatively untouched field i...
In 1887 the Maine legislature responded to pressures from the Knights of Labor and an increasingly a...
Fourteen essays on Maine women\u27s history. Taken together, their stories enrich our understanding...
This study explores the transformation of women's wage work in New England between 1820 and 1900 wit...
The article discusses primary source materials that may be available to a researched interested in t...
Fewer than 3 percent of workers in Maine\u27s construction trades are women, a figure that hasn\u27t...
Between 1860 and 1900 the economy of Penobscot Bay communities changed dramatically, from the steady...
Women\u27s roles were in flux during the late nineteenth centuury and early twentieth century. Faced...
By the mid-nineteenth century hundreds of New England women were living abroad the nation’s whaling ...
With support from a Women In Curriculum research grant, Pauleena MacDougall, Associate Director of t...
Approximately one-third of Maine businesses are owned by women. With a look at the self-made, Portl...
This book recreates the life-and-times of thirteen inspiring and independent women in fascinating, b...
The article reviews the history and impact of, and response to, the Women\u27s Department section of...
Sources on Maine working women have been singled out for examination for a variety of reasons. The h...
The history of Penobscot Bay is one of tradition, grounded in the sameness of the origins of settl...
The study of labor conditions, especially in relation to women, is a comparatively untouched field i...
In 1887 the Maine legislature responded to pressures from the Knights of Labor and an increasingly a...
Fourteen essays on Maine women\u27s history. Taken together, their stories enrich our understanding...
This study explores the transformation of women's wage work in New England between 1820 and 1900 wit...
The article discusses primary source materials that may be available to a researched interested in t...
Fewer than 3 percent of workers in Maine\u27s construction trades are women, a figure that hasn\u27t...
Between 1860 and 1900 the economy of Penobscot Bay communities changed dramatically, from the steady...
Women\u27s roles were in flux during the late nineteenth centuury and early twentieth century. Faced...
By the mid-nineteenth century hundreds of New England women were living abroad the nation’s whaling ...
With support from a Women In Curriculum research grant, Pauleena MacDougall, Associate Director of t...
Approximately one-third of Maine businesses are owned by women. With a look at the self-made, Portl...
This book recreates the life-and-times of thirteen inspiring and independent women in fascinating, b...
The article reviews the history and impact of, and response to, the Women\u27s Department section of...