Petition from the State Federation of Pennsylvania
General Federation of Women's Clubs
1904 - 1906 | |||
President: | |||
First Vice-President: |
Recording Secretary: |
Treasurer: | |
Second Vice-President: |
Corresponding Secretary: |
Auditors: | |
Industrial Committee | |||
Mrs. Ella H. Hill |
Mrs. Harriet M. Van Der Vaart 1224 W. 67TH ST., CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Miss Mary E. McDowell UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SETTLEMENT, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS |
Dear Sir:
Following a recommendation embodied in the President's message to Congress, the Secretary of Commerce and Labor has asked the Appropriations Committee for a special appropriation to enable a bureau of experts to make a scientific investigation into industrial conditions of women in the United States, This is the first Federal measure to be advocated by the Federated Clubs, and your attention is earnestly directed to the following reasons why the club-women of your State and all other States in the Union are advocating the investigation.
The United States census of 1900 reports 5,000,000 women engaged in gainful occupations, and of this number 3,000,000 are reported as working in manufacturing establishments.
This influx of women into the industrial field is a social phenomenon that gives rise to many complex questions. It is claimed that women have affected the labor market to the demoralization of wage-rates; that home life has been affected; that marriage has decreased; that divorce is increasing; and that the birth-rate barely exceeds the death-rate. It is both claimed and denied that the economic and social welfare of the country is menaced by this army of women wage-earners.
We feel that sane conclusions can be reached only by having accurate data. It is the facts that are sought through the proposed Government investigation.
No such investigation as this one asked for by the Federated Clubs has ever been made, and its execution by our country would put scholars and legislators of all countries in our debt for having made the first thorough examination into one of the most important sociological questions of the century. The results would be of great value as a basis for general as well as local legislation.
We earnestly beg your influence in behalf of the appropriation.
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.
This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
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