Faithful to our Tasks: Arkansas's Women and the Great War

TitleFaithful to our Tasks: Arkansas's Women and the Great War
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsHill, Elizabeth Griffin
Number of Pages270
PublisherButler Center Books
CityLittle Rock, Arkansas
Abstract

Faithful to Our Tasks provides the context for women's actions and reactions during the war. It incorporates the mitigating factors and experiences of American women in general and compares Arkansas women's Progressive Era actions with those of other southern women. The contextual underpinnings provide a rich tapestry as we attempt to understand our grandmothers and great-grandmothers' responses to wartime needs.

Primary records of the World War I era, accessed in archives in central Arkansas, reveal that the state's organized women were suddenly faced with a devastating world war for which they were expected to make a significant contribution of time and effort. "Club women" were already tackling myriad problems to be found in abundance within a poor, rural state as they worked for better schools, a centralized education system, children's well-being, and improved medical care.

Under wartime conditions, their contributions were magnified as the women followed a barrage of directions from Washington, DC, within a disconcerting display of micromanagement by the federal government. The important takeaway, however, is that the Great War created a scenario in which Arkansas's organized women--as well as women throughout the nation--would step forward and excel as men and governments stood up and took notice. After the war, these same organized women won the right to vote. [From the Publisher]

URLhttps://www.worldcat.org/title/faithful-to-our-tasks-arkansass-women-and-the-great-war/oclc/992534443&referer=brief_results
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992534443

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