ENGLISH BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Working Women in Large Cities, 4th annual Report of the Commission of Labor. Washington, 1878.
Theodore Stanton, The Woman Question in Europe. London, 1884.
Helen Campbell, Prisoners of Poverty, 1887. Prisoners of Poverty Abroad, 1889.
Woman's Work in America, edited by Annie Nathan Meyer. New York, 1891.
Sophia Jex-Blake, Medical Women. Edinburgh, 1871.
A. Huntley, Women and Medicine. London, 1886.
John Stuart Mill, Subjection of Women. London, 1869.
Eliza W. Farnham, Woman and her Era. New York, 1869.
Lester F. Ward, Dynamic Sociology, vol. i. pp. 597-664.
Maria S. Child, History and Condition of Women in various Ages and Nations. Boston, 1840.
INDEX.
- Abuses, in factories,
- Age, average, of working-women in Massachusetts,
- Agricultural labor, women press into,
- Agricultural Laborers' Union, women denied admission to,
- Alabama, women workers in,
- Alfred's "History of the Factory Movement,"
- American girls, percentage of, employed in Massachusetts,
- Andover ordinances,
- Appendix,
- Apprentices,
- Arbitration,
- Aristotle, "Politics" and "Economics,"
- Arizona, working-women in,
- Arkansas, working-women in,
- Atlanta, Ga., weekly wage in,
- Austria, hours of labor in,
- Authorities consulted,
- Bakeries, girls in,
- Baltimore, Md., weekly wage in,
- Beating,
- Beaulieu, Paul Leroy,
- Belgium, inquiry commission,
- Berlin Labor Conference,
- Betton, Frank, investigation of conditions in Kansas,
- Bibliography,
- Bishop, Commissioner,
- "Bitter Cry of Outcast London,"
- Blackwell, Dr. Emily, on restraints on women workers,
- Book-binding, women and children employed in,
- Boston, weekly wage in,
- Brain, relative sizes and weights of man's and woman's,
- Brassey, Lord,
- Broadcloth, weaving of, by women,
- Brooklyn, N.Y., weekly wage in,
- Bücher, Dr. Carl,
- Buffalo, N.Y., weekly wage in,
- California, average wage in,
- Calkins, Mary W., on profit-sharing,
- Capital has no complaint,
- Capitalist, and landlord absorb lion's share,
- Carpet-weaving, women employed in,
- Celibacy,
- Census Bureau, difficulties in work of,
- Charity adds insult to injury,
- Charlemagne,
- Charleston, S.C., weekly wage in,
- Chicago, weekly wage in,
- Child labor, efforts against,
- Chivalry,
- Cigar-making, women and children employed in,
- Cincinnati, weekly wage in,
- Cities, women's trades focussed in,
- Clement of Alexandria, on women,
- Cleveland, O., weekly wage in,
- Clothing-trade, women employed in,
- Colbert,
- Colorado, women workers in,
- Commodity, labor as a,
- Competition, among needle-workers,
- Conciliation, arbitration and,
- Conditions, general, in Maine,
- Congrès Féministe,
- Connecticut, women workers in,
- Cotton, first bale of,
- Cotton-goods trade, women in,
- Coxe, Tench,
- Credit,
- Crime and pauperism in labor reports,
- Criminal list fed by factory system,
- Custom hampers women workers,
- Cyprian,
- Dakota, working-women in,
- Daniel, Dr. Annie S.,
- Deaconesses,
- De Gournay,
- Delaware, women workers in,
- Diet, effect oil industrial efficiency,
- Distribution of wealth, conflict over,
- District of Columbia, working-women in,
- Divorces in Massachusetts labor reports,
- Domestic service,
- Donaldson, Principal,
- Dress-making,
- Drimakos,
- Dry-goods houses, abuses in,
- Dust in modern manufacture,
- Dynamic Sociology,
- Earnings, definition of,
- Economic question, the question of the day,
- Education, technical, as affecting efficiency,
- Efficiency, differences in, regulate wages,
- Embroidery,
- Emerson, Mary Moody,
- Emigration, Irish,
- Employment, fluctuation in, affects wages,
- Encyclical of Pope Leo XIII.,
- Engels, Dr., on proportion of subsistence to total expenses,
- Evils recognized,
- Evolution, woman's industrial activity in harmony with,
- Expenses, average of working-women in Massachusetts,
- Factory, system,
- Fair house, standard of,
- Families, condition of,
- Family life, demoralization of,
- Fawcett, Henry, opposition to women in trades,
- Fines, system of,
- Florida, women workers in,
- Fortescue,
- France, hours of labor in,
- Fry, Eleanor,
- Fuller, Margaret,
- Furriers,
- Habits, personal, as affecting efficiency,
- Half-time system for children,
- Harkness, Margaret,
- Harland, Sarah, on work for uneducated women,
- Harrison, Frederick,
- Health, in factory employments,
- Homes, of working-people,
- Hosiery and knitting, women employed in,
- Hours of labor, in Massachusetts,
- Huxley, Thomas, description of London parish,
- Idaho, working-women in,
- Ideals, alteration of, called for,
- Illinois, women workers in,
- Immobility of labor,
- Income, defined,
- Indiana, women workers in,
- Indianapolis, average wage in,
- Individual development,
- Industrial, education,
- Industries open to women in the United States,
- Infant mortality,
- Insanity among workers,
- Intellectual degeneracy of factory operatives,
- Intelligence, effect on efficiency,
- Intemperance produced by factory system,
- Iowa, women workers in,
- Irish, emigration,
- Iron law of wages, defined and denounced,
- Labor, degradation of,
- Laborer does not receive his share,
- Lace-making, women employed in,
- Lecky, W.H.,
- Leroy-Beaulieu, Paul,
- Levasseur, E.,
- Lille, cave-dwellers in,
- "London, Bitter Cry of Outcast,"
- Louis le Jeune,
- Louis, Saint, "Institutions" of,
- Louisiana, women workers in,
- Louisville, Ky.,
- Love, law of, ends conflict,
- Lowell factory-girl,
- Lowell, Josephine Shaw,
- Luther,
- Lynn, Mass., shoe-making industry of,
- Machinery, effects on woman's labor,
- Maine, Sir Henry,
- Maine, women employed in,
- Manual training, in California,
- [122.] (See also education.)
- Marriage,
- Married women in factories,
- Massachusetts, Bureau of Labor reports,
- Match-making dangers,
- Mazzini on freedom,
- Men oppose admission of women to trades,
- Men's furnishing-goods, women employed in,
- Michigan, women workers in,
- Millinery, women employed in,
- Mines, women in,
- Minnesota, women employed in,
- Mississippi, working-women in,
- Missouri, women workers in,
- Mobility of labor,
- Modern processes involve risk,
- Montana, working-women in,
- Mundella, Arthur, on arbitration,
- Nebraska, working-women in,
- Needle, resource of unskilled woman laborers,
- Nevada, women workers in,
- Newark, average wage in,
- New England, shoe operatives in,
- New Hampshire, women in shoe-making industry in,
- New Jersey, factory evils in,
- New Mexico, working-women in,
- New Orleans, average wages in,
- New York, Labor Bureau reports,
- New York City, average wage in,
- North Carolina, total women employed in,
- Nott, Mrs.,
- Nottingham lace manufacture,
- Parent-Duchalet,
- Pauperism and crime in labor reports,
- Pay, just, the first remedy,
- Peck, Charles F., work in New York,
- Pennsylvania, working-women in,
- Perkins, Mrs. Thomas,
- Philadelphia, average weekly wage in,
- Plato,
- Post-office, employment of women in, objected to,
- Potter, Beatrice,
- Poverty, no more desperate in Europe than in the United States,
- Prejudice, born of ignorance, etc., to be dismissed,
- Profit-sharing between employer and employed,
- Prostitution, fed by factory system,
- Providence, average weekly wage in,
- Ranke, on air required,
- Remedies, just pay the first,
- Reports, labor, six divisions of,
- [115.] (See also under various States.)
- Reybaud's "History of the Factory Movement,"
- Rhode Island, working-women in,
- Rice, Commissioner, deals with women wage-earners in Colorado report,
- Richmond, Va., average weekly wage in,
- Robinson, Henry A., Michigan Labor Bureau work,
- Robinson, Mrs. H.H.,
- Rogers, Thorold,
- Saleswomen,
- San Francisco, average weekly wage in,
- Sanitary conditions of factories and of operatives' homes,
- San José, average weekly wage in,
- Savannah, average weekly wage in,
- Savings of Massachusetts working-women,
- Seamstresses, in Paris,
- Seats in shops,
- Sewing-women, feeling stirred in behalf of,
- Sex, disability of, in the way of mobility of labor,
- "Sharing the Profits," by Mary W. Calkins,
- Shearman, T.G., on irregularity of conditions in the United States,
- Shirt-making, women in,
- Shoe-making, women in,
- Silk-growing,
- Silk industry, women and children in,
- Silk manufactory, women and children in, in Italy,
- Simon, Jules,
- Single and married, proportion of, among working-women,
- Smith, Adam,
- Social life of working-people,
- Society, women workers frowned on by,
- Solidarity of humanity,
- Soul-moulding, Mazzini on,
- South Carolina, working-women in,
- Spinning-classes,
- Statistics inadequate as to early conditions,
- Stevens, Dr., on increase of insanity,
- Stores, condition of women and children in,
- St. Louis, average weekly wage in,
- St. Paul, average weekly wage in,
- Straw-braiding in New England,
- Sully,
- Supply and demand,
- Sweating-system,
- Tacitus,
- Technical education, as affecting efficiency,
- Tenement-house manufacture,
- Tennessee, working-women in,
- Tertullian,
- Texas, working-women in,
- Textile industries, women in,
- Thucydides, opinion of,
- Tobacco trade, women in,
- Trades, admission of women to, barred by men,
- Tramp question, in labor reports,
- Trusts, alarm caused by growth of,
- Turgot,
- Tutelage, perpetual, of women,
- Umbrellas and canes, women employed in,
- Unemployed, condition of,
- Union, Working-Women's Protective,
- United States, Labor Bureau Reports on working-women,
- Unskilled labor, in majority,
- Utah, working-women in,
- Wage rates, present, in United States,
- Wages, why men receive more than women,
- [14,]
- [21;]
- effect of industrial efficiency on,
- iron law of,
- effort to make standard of life conform to,
- tendency to a minimum,
- Adam Smith for causes of difference in,
- in stores,
- final effect of woman's work on,
- not fixed,
- field,
- eighteenth-century,
- in France,
- in Russia,
- New York,
- decrease in,
- in clothing,
- in Connecticut,
- in Italy,
- in California,
- Colorado,
- Iowa,
- Kansas,
- Maine,
- Minnesota,
- Michigan,
- Rhode Island,
- average, per State,
- average, for all cities,
- average, by cities,
- definition of,
- Wages question the question of the day,
- Wales, women in industries in,
- Walker, Gen. F.A., on differences in efficiency,
- Ward, Lester F.,
- Wealth, ratio of increase greater than that of population,
- Weavers of Baltimore,
- Weaving, colonial,
- West Virginia, working-women in,
- Widows, proportion of, among other workers,
- Windows, nailing down of,
- Wisconsin, average wage in,
- Wives' earnings,
- Woman, primeval,
- Women-workers, percentage of, in Philadelphia, Pittsburg, New York, Lowell, Manchester, Wilmington, Del.,
- [108,]
- [109;]
- according to States,
- of Boston,
- industries open to, in large cities,
- development of her intelligence necessary,
- in German mines,
- why their wages are less than men's,
- their trades highly localized,
- entrance into trades barred by men,
- increase of, in the United States,
- total numbers of, in the United States, in 1860,
- [103;]
- in 1870,
- in 1880,
- occupations according to Census of 1880,
- Woollen and cotton industries,
- Working-girls' clubs, conditions of,
- Working-Woman's Journal,
- Working-Women's Protective Union,
- Working-Women's Society of New York, its aims,
- Worsted and woollen trades, women and children in,
- Wright, Carroll D.,
- Wyoming, working-women in,