UNEās Beth DeWolfe talks Maine womenās history in Maine Public panel

Īį°®³Ō¹Ļ Professor of History Elizabeth DeWolfe, Ph.D., recently served as a guest on a Maine Public panel discussion about the history of women in Maine in a series celebrating the stateās bicentennial.
DeWolfe took part in the panel, āThe History of Women in Maine: How Maine Has Been Shaped by the Work of Women Over the Centuries,ā on Sept. 4. She was joined by Eileen Eagan, associate professor of history at the University of Southern Maine; Anne Gass, a Maine historian and author; and Candace Kane, a journalist, historian, and former curator of the Maine Memory Network.
DeWolfe, co-founder of the Womenās and Gender Studies program at UNE, discussed the ways in which women composed much of Maineās textile workforce in the mid-19th Century. That period of time, she said, was a shift from the previous, home-based production of essential products to a period of increased industrialization led primarily by women.
āIn an earlier generation, these women ⦠would be working either in the field or at home. By the mid-century, it was simply cheaper to buy those products,ā DeWolfe said. āThe thought was: āYou have a group of young women who were not quite ready for marriage, but who have turned into sort of an economic drain at home ā so why not put their hands to good use?āā
The period of time was also one where the āmill girlsā started to recognize their financial independence, DeWolfe told the panel. Rather than simply sending all of their earnings home to their families, the young women began to pocket portions of their salaries to provide for themselves.
āInitially, the girls were very dutiful,ā she said. āBut mill girls very quickly learned the value of their own labor.ā
DeWolfe is a noted historian whose research explores āordinary women who find themselves in extraordinary situations.ā
She has talked at length of the importance of the Industrial Revolutionās importance to Maineās sustainability as a state. She has also documented womenās contributions to Biddefordās mill history, particularly during āThe Great Turn-out of 1841,ā the first known labor strike in Maineās history, which was led entirely by young women.