
Contents
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“An Outgrowth of Expediency”: Government Expansion of Female Employment “An Outgrowth of Expediency”: Government Expansion of Female Employment
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“Hard Working Women of America” Respond to the Opportunity “Hard Working Women of America” Respond to the Opportunity
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“A Juster Recognition of Woman’s Individuality”: Female Applicants of the 1860s “A Juster Recognition of Woman’s Individuality”: Female Applicants of the 1860s
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One I Wonder if I Cannot Make Application for an Appointment Too: Women Join the Federal Workforce
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Published:November 2017
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Abstract
Chapter One explores how women came to work for the federal government. During the early years of the Civil War, different supervisors, scattered across various executive departments, created individualized and ad hoc policies regarding female employees based on their immediate labor needs, budget constraints, and personal views on the wisdom of female federal employment. The demographic information in application letters, employee files, and department ledgers, show that women across the country and the socioeconomic spectrum responded to the opportunity of civil service work in overwhelming numbers. The federal government hired African American women as manual laborers and clerks, though in far fewer numbers than it hired white women. Women’s letters reveal that they yearned for intellectually demanding and high-paying jobs in a land of limited options for female employment.
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