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Ruby Oram, "Home Work: Gender, Child Labor, and Education for Girls in Urban America, 1870-1930" (U Chicago Press, 2025)

Dec 27, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Ruby Oram, a historian and professor at Texas State University, dives into her research on the intersection of gender, child labor, and education for girls in urban America from 1870 to 1930. She reveals how middle-class reformers like Jane Addams shaped educational policies, often reflecting racial and class inequalities. Oram highlights the resistance of girls to domestic training, the complexities of women reformers, and the dual role of schools as tools for both advancement and social control. Her insights enrich our understanding of educational inequities and the history of girlhood.
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ANECDOTE

Discovery Of Flower Technical School

  • Ruby Oram discovered the Lucy Flower Technical School for Girls while searching National Register sites for women's history.
  • Researching that school launched her dissertation and eventually this book about gendered school reform.
INSIGHT

Child Labor Framed As Girlhood Problem

  • Mass public schooling reforms were not gender-neutral; they specifically targeted girlhood labor and bodies.
  • Oram argues child labor debates overlooked gendered anxieties about girls' futures, reproduction, and femininity.
ANECDOTE

Helen Cusack's School-Focused Exposé

  • Oram opens with Helen Cusack's 1888 undercover exposé of girls in garment factories.
  • Cusack concluded by calling for public school reform rather than direct factory regulation.
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