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Women and Social Research at Bryn Mawr College, 1915–40

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Extract

In 1911 M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr College, faced a golden opportunity. An alumna of the college had died suddenly, leaving Bryn Mawr its largest gift since Joseph Wright Taylor's initial endowment for the establishment of the college. Emma Carola Woerishoffer's unrestricted $750,000 donation provided Thomas unaccustomed freedom to expand Bryn Mawr's curriculum. In 1915 Thomas used a large portion of the bequest to establish the Graduate Department of Social Economy and Social Research for the training and certification of social workers and for the master's and doctoral education of social researchers. Bryn Mawr's department and program were unusual, as training schools for social workers were run largely by charity organization societies. The department's singularity was derived from its location within an academic institution and its determination to provide women the opportunity to pursue research in the social sciences.

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Copyright © 1993 by the History of Education Society 

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References

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9 M. Carey Thomas to Kingsbury, 28 Mar. 1913, reel 126 (quote), and Thomas to Kingsbury, 26 Mar. 1912, reel 123, M. Carey Thomas Papers, BMCA. Finch, Edith, Carey Thomas of Bryn Mawr (New York, 1947); Dobkin, Marjorie Housepian, ed., The Making of a Feminist: Early Journals and Letters of M. Carey Thomas (Kent, Oh., 1979); Meigs, Cornelia, What Makes a College? A History of Bryn Mawr (New York, 1956); and Taft, Barbara Bradfield, “More Steeply to the Heights: The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences,” in A Century Recalled: Essays in Honor of Bryn Mawr College, ed. Labalme, Patricia Hochschild (Bryn Mawr, Pa., 1987), 135–43. On alumnae and trustee distress, see “Department of Social Research,” BMAB 11 (Apr. 1917): 23. Flexner, Abraham, “Is Social Work a Profession?” Proceedings of the National Conference of Charities and Correction (n.p., 1915), 579. Google Scholar

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11 Bryn Mawr College, Carola Woerishoffer Graduate Department of Social Economy and Social Research (hereafter GDSESR), Graduate Courses in Industrial Supervision to Meet the War Emergency Demand (Bryn Mawr, Pa., 1918); Bryn Mawr College, GDSESR, Announcements, 1919–1920 (Bryn Mawr, Pa., 1919); GDSESR of Bryn Mawr College, 1915–1925, BMCA. See also Norton, Dolores Griffin, “Harkening to Uncommon Drums: The Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research,” in A Century Recalled , ed. Labalme, , 145–60; Lucy West to Katherine Lower, 9 Aug. 1982, School of Social Work and Social Research Papers (SSWSR), BMCA; Meigs, Cornelia, “History of the Carola Woerishoffer Department of Social Economy and Social Research,” file 2, box 1, Mildred Fairchild Woodbury Papers, BMCA. Google Scholar

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13 Kingsbury, Susan M. and Fairchild, Mildred, “The Carola Woerishoffer Department,” BMAB 25 (Dec. 1944): 58.Google Scholar

14 For quotation, see Muncy, , Creating a Female Dominion, xiv.Google Scholar

15 Kingsbury, Susan M., “Brief Historical and Statistical Account of the Carola Woerishoffer Graduate Department of Social Economy and Social Research,” c. 1924, box 7, Marion Edwards Park Papers, BMCA.Google Scholar

16 Abbott, Andrew, The System of Professions: An Essay on the Division of Expert Labor (Chicago, 1988). On social work programs, see Adams, Elizabeth Kemper, Women Professional Workers: A Study Made for the Women's Educational and Industrial Union (New York, 1921); and Brown, , Social Work. On academic social science, see Oleson, Alexandra and Voss, John, eds., The Organization of Knowledge in Modern America, 1860–1920 (Baltimore, Md., 1979); Jarausch, , ed., The Transformation of Higher Learning; Kuklick, Henrika, “Boundary Maintenance in American Sociology: Limitations to Academic ‘Professionalization’,” Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 16 (July 1980): 201–19. There were exceptions, of course—the Local Community Research Committee at the University of Chicago and the Institute of Human Relations at Yale, both of which received Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial funds for crossdisciplinary research; see Bulmer, Martin and Bulmer, Joan, “Philanthropy and Social Science in the 1920s: Beardsley Ruml and the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, 1922–29,” Minerva 19 (Autumn 1981): 347–407. Google Scholar

17 On the finances, see Kingsbury to Thomas, 10 June 1920, reel 162, Thomas Papers; and Thomas to Marion Edwards Park (her successor), c. 1922, Thomas to Mr. Wing (trustee), 29 Sep. 1922, Emma Bailey Speer to Rockefeller, John D., 23 Feb. 1923, and Kingsbury, , “Brief Historical and Statistical Account,” box 7, Park Papers.Google Scholar

18 On the school, see Heller, Rita, “Blue Collars and Bluestockings: The Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers, 1921–1938,” in Sisterhood and Solidarity: Workers' Education for Women, 1914–1984, ed. Kornbluh, Joyce L. and Frederickson, Mary (Philadelphia, 1984), 107–45; and for quotation, see Schneider, Florence Hemley, Patterns of Workers' Education: The Story of the Bryn Mawr Summer School (Washington, D.C., 1941), 67. Most of the workers came from industrial and textile factories; some from domestic work and some from clerical occupations were accepted. The one educational requirement was some grade schooling and the ability to read and write English. Ages ranged from eighteen to thirty-five. On fund raising, see Speer to Park, 26 Mar. 1926, box 7, Park Papers. Google Scholar

19 W. S. Richardson to Park, 26 May 1924, box 7, Park Papers; Thomas to Park, 14 May 1924, reel 28, and Kingsbury to Thomas, 12 Jan. 1925, reel 53, Thomas Papers; Arthur Woods to Park, 8 Apr. 1925, box 7, Park Papers; on some General Education Board administrators' belief that Bryn Mawr was “too small and too expensive,” see also Thomas to Manning, 18 Feb. 1930, reel 34, Thomas Papers. When Martha Chickering, head of the program in social work at the University of California at Berkeley, applied to the Rockefeller Foundation for support in the 1930s, the grant was denied, but the Heller Committee on Research in Social Economy got a one-year grant for research into California's labor market; see Chickering, , “Training for social work …,” file 716, box 1936, and John Van Sickle to Robert G. Sproul, 5 Jan. 1938, file 471, box 1938, Presidents' Papers (Sproul), University Archives, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. On Chicago and shifts in social science research, see Fitzpatrick, , Endless Crusade, 166–200; and on the Chicago case, see Costin, Lela B., Two Sisters for Social Justice: A Biography of Grace and Edith Abbott (Urbana, Ill., 1983).Google Scholar

20 Libby, Barbara, “Women in Economics before 1940,” Essays in Economic and Business History 3 (1984): 273–90.Google Scholar

21 Addams, Jane, Twenty Years at Hull-House, with Autobiographical Notes (New York, 1910), 94; Lonn, Ella, “Academic Status of Women on University Faculties,” Journal of the American Association of University Women 17 (Jan. 1924): 5–11; Hutchinson, Emilie J., Women and the Ph.D.: Facts from the Experiences of 1,025 Women Who Have Taken the Doctor of Philosophy since 1877 (Greensboro, N.C., 1929); Bernard, Jessie, Academic Women (University Park, Pa., 1964); Pollard, Lucille Addison, Women on College and University Faculties: A Historical Survey and a Study of Their Present Academic Status (New York, 1977), 155–91; Graham, Patricia Albjerg, “Expansion and Exclusion: A History of Women in American Higher Education,” Signs 3 (Summer 1978): 759–73; Hummer, Patricia M., The Decade of Elusive Promise: Professional Women in the United States, 1920–1930 (Ann Arbor, Mich., 1979); Carter, Susan Boslego, “Academic Women Revisited: An Empirical Study of Changing Patterns in Women's Employment as College and University Faculty, 1890–1963,” Journal of Social History 14 (Summer 1981): 675–99. Carter reexamined the data that Bernard and Graham used in their studies and found that contrary to their conclusions, patterns of women's academic employment show that, while women's employment at female colleges declined during the 1930s, it increased in the research-oriented land-grant universities. Bryn Mawr consistently employed women faculty in the social sciences throughout the period. Margaret Rossiter (Women Scientists) was among the first to articulate the kinds of strategies professional women used. Google Scholar

22 Kingsbury, Susan M., “Relation of Women to Industry,” in The Problem of Democracy: Papers and Proceedings, Fourteenth Annual Meeting, American Sociological Society, 1919 (Chicago, 1920), 14:141–58; and idem, “Social Process in Russia,” in Social Process: Papers Presented at the Twenty-sixth Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Society (Chicago, 1933) 27: 68–79; Kingsbury, with Fairchild, Mildred, Employment and Unemployment in Pre-War and Soviet Russia: Report Submitted to the World Social Economic Congress, Amsterdam, 23–29 Aug. 1931 (The Hague, 1931); and Factory Family and Woman in the Soviet Union (New York, 1935); Kingsbury, with Hart, Hornell et al., Newspapers and the News: An Objective Measurement of Ethical and Unethical Behavior by Representative Newspapers (New York, 1937). Kingsbury, Susan M., Economic Status of University Women in the U.S.A.: Report of the Committee on Economic and Legal Status of Women, American Association of University Women in Cooperation with the Women's Bureau, United States Department of Labor (Washington, D.C., 1939). Google Scholar

23 Hart's father worked for the Russell Sage Foundation. Hart finished his Ph.D. at Iowa State University, worked with Helen Thompson Woolley in the 1910s, taught at Iowa State, and did statistical research in juvenile delinquency, parole rehabilitation, and family intelligence using I.Q. scores for data before shifting to sociological method and theory. He left Bryn Mawr in 1933 for a position in ethics at Hartford Theological Seminary; in 1938, he took a professorship in sociology at Duke University. On Hart, see Faculty files, Duke University Archives, Durham, N.C. Google Scholar

24 Thomas to Anne Bezanson, 10 Apr. 1917 (quote), and 12 June 1917, reel 137, and “Memorandum of Arrangement for Miss Bezanson's Work,” reel 169, Thomas Papers. Bezanson received her doctorate from Radcliffe in 1929.Google Scholar

25 Helen Taft to Thomas, 10 Dec. 1919, and Taft to Thomas, 19 Feb. 1920 (quote), reel 162, Thomas Papers. Dulles, Eleanor Lansing, Chances of a Lifetime: A Memoir (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1980), 76, on Bezanson's personality and knowledge.Google Scholar

26 “Mildred Fairchild Woodbury,” obituary, Philadelphia Inquirer, 12 Feb. 1975, SSWSR. The Needs of Children in the World (Geneva, 1956) was her last major publication. Woodbury married late in her career.Google Scholar

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28 Beard, Belle Boone, Juvenile Probation: An Analysis of the Case Records of Five Hundred Children Studied at the Judge Baker Guidance Clinic and Placed on Probation in the Juvenile Court of Boston (New York, 1934). For example, Kingsbury to Richard Shryock, 27 Jan. 1936, Student files, SSWSR.Google Scholar

29 “Mabel Agnes Elliott,” and Kingsbury to Elliott, 12 Aug. 1924 (quote), Student files, SSWSR. Elliott, Mabel A., Correctional Education and the Delinquent Girl: A Follow-Up Study of One Hundred and Ten Sleighton Farm Girls (Harrisburg, Pa., 1928).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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31 From student files, SSWSR: Kingsbury to Feder, 5 July 1933, 18 Aug. 1933, and 29 Aug. 1933 (quote); Kingsbury to Beard, 10 May 1932; Hornell Hart to Elliott, 25 Feb. 1928; Hart to Arthur Todd, 7 Mar. 1928 (quotes); Kingsbury to Todd, 21 Mar. 1928; Kingsbury to Martha Falconer, 17 Mar. 1928.Google Scholar

32 Student files, SSWSR, have considerable correspondence between Kingsbury and students about these problems.Google Scholar

33 Kingsbury to Beard, 29 Jan. 1934, Student files, SSWSR. Beard's papers are at Sweet Briar College Archives and Lynchburg College Archives.Google Scholar

34 Feder to Kingsbury, 1 Sep. 1933, 21 Feb. 1934, 11 May 1934, and Kingsbury to Feder, 26 Feb. 1934 (quote), 27 Aug. 1934, Student files, SSWSR; see also Koempel file, ibid. Google Scholar

35 Fitzpatrick, , Endless Crusade; Muncy, , Creating a Female Dominion; Koven, and Michel, , eds., Mothers of a New World. The Women's Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics were but two sites for women researchers from the 1910s through the 1930s. Google Scholar

36 Muncy, , Creating a Female Dominion, 4546. On these characteristics of women's research and social service activity, see Gordon, , “Social Insurance and Public Assistance,” 36–40. Google Scholar

37 On women and professional culture, see Antler, Joyce, “The Educated Woman and Professionalization: The Struggle for a New Feminine Identity” (Ph.D. diss., State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1977), 120; Brumberg, Joan Jacobs and Tomes, Nancy, “Women in the Professions: A Research Agenda for American Historians,” Reviews in American History 10 (June 1982): 275–96; and Cott, Nancy F., The Grounding of Modern Feminism (New Haven, Conn., 1987), 217. Sklar's, Kathryn Kish “Hull House in the 1890s: A Community of Women Reformers,” Signs 10 (Summer 1985): 658–77, examines women reformers' sources of power, in using both separate female institutions and male-dominated institutions of higher education, politics, and labor organizations. The Bryn Mawr case presents interesting parallels. Google Scholar

38 Dulles, , Chances of a Lifetime, 75, 94, 87; these distinctions were reduced after President Park appointed a graduate dean and housed all the graduate students in one dormitory in 1929.Google Scholar

39 On the emergence of scientism in American social science, see Ross, , The Origins of American Social Science, 390470.Google Scholar

40 On the conference, see Robert T. Crane to Park, 2 Nov. 1931, box 28, Park Papers. Libby, , “Women in Economics before 1940,” 275. See also Libby, Barbara, “Women in the Economics Profession, 1900–1940: Factors in Their Declining Visibility,” Essays in Economic and Business History 8 (1990): 121–30.Google Scholar