HIUS 713-Blog Discussion Thread: Growth in the Post Bellum Economy
The Postbellum American Economy was an irregular period of growth and change, both in the workforce and industry. The experience of American women in the workforce has always been diverse, generally drawing a stringent line between single women and their married counterparts. During a period of intellectual upheavals with the ending of the Civil War, the reforms of the Reconstruction period, changes in American Christendom, and the rising issues of African Americans seeking equality now that freedom had been gained. Often this line was drawn in as a means of defining one’s properness, stemming from “their health, their morals, and the sufficiency of the pay of those living away from home.” [1] Claudia Goldin states that it was indeed the actions and labor of single women that “shaped female labor force from 1870 to 1920.” [2] From Goldin’s Table: Labor Force Participation Rates of Single Women, 1890 , we...
Comments
Post a Comment