Women Journalists and the Municipal Housekeeping Movement: Case Studies of Jane Cunningham Croly, Helen M. Winslow and Rheta Childe Dorr

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Date
1992Author
Gottlieb, Agnes Hooper
Advisor
Beasley, Maurine Hoffman
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While suffragists in the late nineteenth century
commanded a high profile in their fight for the vote,
other less militant women also advocated a wider sphere
for women. These semi-traditional women believed a
woman's place was in her home, but defined women's
"homes" as the cities in which they lived. Their natural
"sphere," therefore, involved "municipal housekeeping"
chores, which included helping women and children and
rooting out corruption, crime, filth and immorality in
the cities.
This dissertation uses a case study approach to
illustrate the involvement of three women journalists,
Jane Cunningham Croly, Helen M. Winslow and Rheta Childe
Dorr, in the municipal housekeeping movement. These women
were chosen because their careers, taken as a whole, show
how writing about municipal housekeeping evolved over
time from a plea for women to become more socially responsible into a logical argument for suffrage.
Croly, a founder of the women's club movement in the
United States in 1868, advocated a more public role for
women in her newspaper and magazine work, especially in
her magazines for club women, The Woman's Cycle, The
Home-Maker, and The New Cycle. Winslow, editor and
publisher of The Club Woman, and Dorr, a writer on reform
for Hampton's magazine, were affected by Croly's ideas
and, in turn, expanded them into publicity for women to
assume a wider sphere in public affairs.
The work of these women from Croly's articles in the
1860s to Dorr's militant reform writing in the 1900s
illustrates how journalists portrayed the municipal
housekeeping movement. All three believed in the concept
of a separate sphere for women, but they sought to expand
its limits. Croly's gentle reminders that women should
seek interests outside the home gradually gave way to
Winslow's argument in favor of women's involvement in
municipal government, which in turn was only a step away
from Dorr's advocacy of equal rights, including the vote,
for women. Thus, the municipal housekeeping journalism of
Croly and Winslow gradually merged into the suffrage
journalism of Dorr.