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      <eadid publicid="-//us::mnsss//TEXT us::mnsss::mnsss119.xml//EN" countrycode="us" mainagencycode="mnsss">mnsss119</eadid>
      <filedesc>
         <titlestmt>
            <titleproper encodinganalog="245$a">Women&#x3A; Position and Progress Collection, 1804-2001</titleproper>
            <subtitle>Finding Aid</subtitle>
            <author encodinganalog="245$c">Finding aid prepared by mnsss.</author>
            <sponsor>Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.</sponsor>
         </titlestmt>
         <publicationstmt>
            <publisher encodinganalog="260$b">Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College</publisher>
            <address>
               <addressline>Northampton, MA</addressline>
            </address>
            <date encodinganalog="260$c">2003 </date>
            <p>Smith College. All rights reserved.</p>
         </publicationstmt>
      </filedesc>
      <profiledesc>
         <creation encodinganalog="500">Finding aid encoded using Perl scripts and edited in XMetal 2.0. Encoded by Laura Cutter.
        <date>2003-06-12</date>
         </creation>
         <langusage>Finding aid written in
        <language encodinganalog="546" langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn">English.</language>
         </langusage>
      </profiledesc>
      <revisiondesc>
         <change>
            <date normal="2005-09-23">2005-09-23</date>
            <item>mnsss119 converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02-5c.xsl (sy2003-10-15).</item>
         </change>
      </revisiondesc>
   </eadheader>
   <frontmatter id="front">
      <titlepage>
         <publisher encodinganalog="260$b">Sophia Smith Collection<lb />Smith College
        <lb />
            </publisher>
         <titleproper encodinganalog="245$a">Women&#x3A; Position and Progress Collection, 1804-2001
      </titleproper>
         <subtitle>Finding Aid</subtitle>
         <num>MS 431

      </num>
         <date>Revised 2010

      </date>
         
         <sponsor id="encoding_sponsor">Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.</sponsor>
         <p>&#169;  2003  Smith College. All rights reserved.</p>
      </titlepage>
   </frontmatter>
   <archdesc relatedencoding="MARC21" level="collection">
      <did id="main">
         <head>Collection Overview</head>
         <unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245$a">Women:  Position and Progress Collection</unittitle><unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" type="inclusive">1804-2001 </unitdate>
         
         <unitid label="Collection Number:" encodinganalog="099" repositorycode="mnsss" countrycode="us">MS 431</unitid>
         <physdesc label="Quantity:">
            <extent encodinganalog="300$a">4 boxes, 30 volumes</extent>
            <extent encodinganalog="300$a">(3 linear ft.)</extent>
         </physdesc>
         <repository label="Location:">
            <corpname>Sophia Smith Collection</corpname>
            <address>
               <addressline>Smith College</addressline>
               <addressline>Northampton, MA</addressline>
            </address>
            </repository>
         <abstract label="Abstract:" encodinganalog="520$a">Collection contains manuscripts and published material, including books dating from the early nineteenth century.  The collection consists primarily of published sources such as lectures, sermons, and printed material; but also includes a significant amount of unusual and unique material such as household bills and inventories, letters, lists, and notes.
      </abstract>
         <langmaterial label="Language of Material:" encodinganalog="546">
            <language langcode="eng">English.</language>
         </langmaterial>
      </did>
      <scopecontent id="scope">
         <head>Scope and Contents of the Collection</head>
<dao linktype="simple" actuate="onload" show="embed" href="http://www.smith.edu/libraries/libs/ssc/eadfiles/ssc6352.jpg" altrender="right">
<daodesc><p>"The American Woman's Home," <lb />pamphlet by Catharine E. Beecher <lb />and Harriet Beecher Stowe, 1870</p></daodesc></dao>
         <p> The Women:  Position and Progress Collection contains manuscript and published material, including books dating from the early nineteenth century.  It documents both  dominant attitudes about middle- and upper-class women's roles and gender-conscious women's and men's efforts to expand and overturn those roles, and illustrates the impact of such efforts on women's status and position in Western societies.  The collection consists primarily of published sources such as articles, printed lectures and sermons, newspaper clippings, and pamphlets; but also includes a significant amount of unusual and unique material such as household bills and inventories, letters, lists, and notes.</p>
         <p> About half the material in the collection dates from the nineteenth century.  The bulk of material consists of articles, books, and pamphlets that reflect the widely divergent views about women's roles that made "the woman question" such a visible and contentious issue in this period.  Prescriptive literature, such as advice books with titles such as How the Good Wife Taught Her Daughter, and The Young Bride's Book, and an assortment of printed lectures and sermons clearly illustrate the power and prevalence of traditional assumptions about women's "natural" maternalism and domesticity.  Emerging arguments about the need for women's equality and women's rights are also well-represented in the older segment of the collection by articles from magazines and newspapers, pamphlets, and printed lectures.  A few examples of personal letters, household bills, and lists of house rules for servants from a Worcester, Massachusetts home provide a small glimpse into the realities of daily life for upper- middle- and working-class women during the 1830s-80s.</p>
         <p> The twentieth century material reflects a similar range of opinions about women's social, political, and economic roles, and documents the dramatic shifts in women's status over the last hundred years.  Anti-feminist attitudes are primarily represented in a variety of  articles and essays from both scholarly and popular publications.   Feminist points of view as expressed in magazine and newspaper articles, scholarly essays, and speeches are far more evident in twentieth century material.  Unusual items from the twentieth century includes a typewritten outline of the history of the women's movement in the U.S. compiled in 1944 by Mary Williams, a professor at Goucher College; a few personal letters; and a toy catalog which probably dates from the 1940s or 1950s.</p>
      </scopecontent>
      <descgrp type="admininfo" id="admin">
         <head>Information on Use</head>
         <descgrp type="admininfo">
            <head>Terms of Access and Use</head>
            <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="admin-access">
               <p>The collection is open to research according to the regulations of the Sophia Smith Collection.</p>
            </accessrestrict>
            <userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="admin-use">
               <p>Material in this collection may be protected by copyright. It is the responsibility of the researcher to identify and satisfy all copyright holders. Permission to publish reproductions or quotations beyond "fair use" must also be obtained from the Sophia Smith Collection as owners of the physical property.
          </p>
            </userestrict>
         </descgrp>
         <prefercite id="admin-cite">
            <head>Preferred Citation</head>
            <p>Please use the following format when citing materials from this collection:</p>
            <p>Position and Progress Collection, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.</p>
         </prefercite>
         <accruals encodinganalog="584" id="admin-accruals">
            <head>Additions to the Collection</head>
            <p>Periodic additions to collection are expected.

        </p>
         </accruals>
         <descgrp type="admininfo">
            <head>History of the Collection</head>
            <acqinfo id="admin-acqinfo">
               <p>Materials in this "artificial" subject collection were either purchased or given to the Sophia Smith Collection by various donors. Some items may have been removed from other collections.  </p>
            </acqinfo>
            <processinfo id="admin-process">
               <p>Finding aid revised in 2010. Introductory text by Kate Weigand.  Recent additions may not be reflected in the finding aid. </p>
            </processinfo>
         </descgrp>
      </descgrp>
      <controlaccess id="subj">
         <head>Search Terms</head>
         
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Etiquette for women--History--Sources</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Housewives--History--Sources</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Manners and customs--Handbooks, manuals, etc.</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Marriage--History--Sources</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Middle class women--Attitudes</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Motherhood--History--Sources</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Women--Conduct of life</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Women--Periodicals</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Women's rights--History--20th century--Sources</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Women's rights--History--19th century--Sources</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Women--Sexual behavior--History</subject>
         <subject encodinganalog="650" source="lcsh">Women--Social and moral questions</subject>
	<corpname encodinganalog="710" source="lcnaf">Sophia Smith Collection</corpname> 
      </controlaccess>
       <dsc type="in-depth" id="list-contlist">
         <c01>
            <did>
               <container type="box">1</container>
               <container type="folder">1</container>
               <unittitle>Clippings<unitdate> 1889-1981</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
            </did>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <container type="box">1</container>
               <container type="folder">2</container>
               <unittitle>Exposition\ exhibitions<unitdate> 1876-1974</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
            </did>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <container type="box">1</container>
               <container type="folder">3</container>
               <unittitle>History of women--general<unitdate> 1910-1975</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
            </did>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <container type="box">1</container>
               <container type="folder">4</container>
               <unittitle>Magazine articles, 19th century</unittitle>
            </did>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <container type="box">1</container>
               <container type="folder">5a-c</container>
               <unittitle>Magazine articles, 20th century</unittitle>
            </did>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <unittitle>Pamphlets</unittitle>
            </did>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">1</container>
                  <container type="folder">6</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1804-98</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">2</container>
                  <container type="folder">7 a-c</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1900-40</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">8</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1941-43, n.d.</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">8a</container>
                  <unittitle>Postcards
                     <unitdate>n.d. (late 19th, early 20th century)</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <unittitle>Manners and customs</unittitle>
            </did>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">9</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <title render="italic">American Woman's Home</title> by Catharine Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe <unitdate>1870</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">10</container>
                  <unittitle>Green, Mary: household bills<unitdate> 1833-35</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">11</container>
                  <unittitle>Green Hill, Worcester, MA: household lists<unitdate> 1874-88</unitdate>; rules for young school girls<unitdate>n.d.</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">12</container>
                  <unittitle>May, Samuel J.: three letters to wife Lucretia<unitdate> 1835</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">13</container>
                  <unittitle>General and miscellaneous<unitdate> 1848-1969</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <container type="folder">14-14a</container>
                  <unittitle>Pamphlets and booklets<unitdate> 1845-1959, 2001</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <unittitle>Books</unittitle>
            </did>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">4</container>
                  <container type="folder">1</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <title render="italic">Lectures on Female Education and Manners</title> by J. Burton. Baltimore <unitdate>1811</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">4</container>
                  <container type="folder">2</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <title render="italic">Noble Deeds of Woman; or, Examples of Female Courage and Virtue</title> by Elizabeth Starling.<unitdate>1850</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">4</container>
                  <container type="folder">3</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <title render="italic">Woman, in her Social and Domestic Character </title>
                     <unitdate>1833,</unitdate> and <title render="italic">New every morning, a year book for girls</title>
                     <unitdate>1886</unitdate> by Mrs. John Sandford</unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">4</container>
                  <container type="folder">4</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <title render="italic">The Ladies Album</title><unitdate> 1856</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">4</container>
                  <container type="folder">5</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <title render="italic">Maternal instruction</title> by Elizabeth Helme <unitdate>1804</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">4</container>
                  <container type="folder">6</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <title render="italic">How the goode wif thaught hir daughter</title>, extracted from Hindley, Chas., ed. <title render="italic">The Old Book Collector's Miscellany</title>, v.2 <unitdate>1872</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <unittitle>Books on Shelf</unittitle>
            </did>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Bracken, Peg.  <title render="italic">I Try to Behave Myself: Peg Bracken's Etiquette Book</title>
				<unitdate>1966</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Bragdon, Elizabeth, editor.  <title render="italic">Women Today:  Their Conflicts, Their Frustrations and Their Fulfillments</title> 
				<unitdate>1953</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Cole, Wolliam and Florett Robinson.  <title render="italic">Women are wonderful!  A history in cartoons of a hundred years</title>
				<unitdate>1956</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Copley, Esther.  <title render="italic">Female excellence, or hints to daughters designed for their use from the time of leaving school till their settlement in life</title>
				<unitdate>circa 1850s</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle><title render="italic">The Cosmopolitan Report: The Changing Life of American Women</title> <unitdate>1986</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Dahl, Arlene.  <title render="italic">Always Ask a Man: Arlene Dahl's Key to Femininity</title>
				<unitdate>1965</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Donnelly, Eleanor C., editor.  <title render="italic">Girlhood's Handbook of Woman:  A Compendium of Views</title>
				<unitdate>1898</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Dye, Judith Levett.  <title render="italic">For the instruction and amusement of Women:  the growth, development, and definition of American magazines for women 1780-1840.</title> University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D. 
				<unitdate>1977</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Farmer, Lydia Hoyt, editor.  <title render="italic">The National Exposition Souvenir: What America Owes to Women</title>
				<unitdate>1893</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Gilman, Charlotte Perkins.  <title render="italic">The Manmade World or Our Andocentric Culture</title>
				<unitdate>1911</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle><title render="italic">The Good Housekeeping Woman's Almanac: The Book With All the Answers for Women</title> by the editors of World Almanac
				<unitdate>1977</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle><title render="italic">The habits of good society: a handbook for ladies and gentlemen</title>
				<unitdate>1860</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Hankins, Mary Louise.  <title render="italic">Women of New York</title>
				<unitdate>1861</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Hersey, Heloise.  <title render="italic">To Girls: A budget of letters</title>
				<unitdate>1901</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Holtby, Winifred.  <title render="italic">Women and a Changing Civilization</title>
				<unitdate>1935</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Hosmer, William.  <title render="italic">The Young Lady's Book</title>
				<unitdate>1852</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle><title render="italic">Life Magazine: The American Woman</title> (special issue)
				<unitdate>Dec 24 1956</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Martineau, Harriet.  <title render="italic">Household Education</title>
				<unitdate>1867</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Massachusetts Review.  <title render="italic">Woman: An Issue</title>
				<unitdate>1972</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Melendy, Mary.  <title render="italic">The Ideal Woman for Maidens, Wives, and Mothers</title>
				<unitdate>1911</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Michelet, M.J.  <title render="italic">Woman</title> (translated from the French by J.W. Palmer)<unitdate>1860</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Rogers, Agnes.  <title render="italic">Women are here to stay</title>
				<unitdate>1949</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Royden,  Maude.  <title render="italic">Women's Partnership in the New World</title>
				<unitdate>1941</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle><title render="italic">"This Crisis in History": Report of the Third Annual New York Herald Tribune Women's Conference on Current Problems, </title><unitdate>1933</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Thornwell, Emily.  <title render="italic">The ladies guide to perfect gentility</title>
				<unitdate>1856</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Tobias, Roscoe Burdette and Mary E. Marcy.  <title render="italic">Women as Sex Vendors: or, why women are conservative, being a view of the economic status of women</title>
				<unitdate>circa 1918</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Vann.  <title render="italic">The Five Talents of Woman: A Book for Girls and Women</title>
				<unitdate>1895</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>West, Jane.  <title render="italic">Letters to a Young Lady in Which the Duties and Character of Women are Considered</title>
				<unitdate>1806</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle>Wilcox, Ella Wheeler. <title render="italic">Men, Women and Emotions</title>
				<unitdate>1893</unitdate>
			</unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
	<c02>
		<did>
			<unittitle><title render="italic">Women: Pro and Con</title>, a compilation of quotes about women illustrated by Jeff Hill (Peter Pauper Press) <unitdate>1958</unitdate>
		       </unittitle>
		</did>
	</c02>
         </c01>
         <c01>
            <did>
               <container type="map-case">Flat File</container>
               <unittitle>"I'll be no submissive wife: a ballad" (sheet music), composed by Alex Lee <unitdate>1838</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
            </did>
         </c01>
      </dsc>
   </archdesc>
</ead>