Overview
Papers of writer Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
Dates
- Creation: 1846-1961
Language of Materials
Materials in English.
Access Restrictions:
Access: Originals closed; use digital images.
Conditions Governing Use
Copyright. The papers created by Charlotte Perkins Gilman are in the public domain. Copyright in other papers in the collection may be held by their authors, or the authors' heirs or assigns.
Copying. Papers may be copied in accordance with the library's usual procedures.
Extent
16.98 linear feet ((29 boxes, 2 card file boxes, 1 folio box, 1 folio+ box, 1 oversize box) plus 2 supersize folders, 10 photograph folders)The present collection adds to the published evidence illumination primarily of Gilman's personal life, but also shows the consistency of her ideas throughout her life and, in the unpublished manuscripts, their later development. For the early years the journals and diaries are useful, but in the 1880s and 1890s entries are often sporadic due to her periods of illness, and after 1903 there are only engagement books, with at most very brief entries. The two "Thoughts and Figgerings" folders (16, 17) provide revealing glimpses of her plans, hopes, and her attitude toward herself and her life, as do the letters to Houghton and the later years of her life. The correspondence and newsclippings show her impact and the often extreme reactions she aroused, ranging from grateful adoration to vituperation (always anonymous), though her habit of destroying most personal letters leaves some perhaps unanswerable questions about her closer relationships.
N.B. Where labels or dates noted by Katharine Stetson Chamberlin (mostly on newsclippings) seemed to us to be inaccurate, the cataloguer has added alternative information, enclosed in square brackets. Charlotte Perkins Gilman is referred to in the folder headings by the name she used at the time: "Charlotte Anna Perkins" from 1860-1884; "Charlotte Perkins Stetson" from 1884-1900; and "Charlotte Perkins Gilman" after 1900.
BIOGRAPHY
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, independent thinker, prolific writer, and gifted speaker, was the intellectual leader of the women's movement from the late 1890s through the mid-1920s. Influenced by Lester F. Ward's gynaecocentric theory and Edward Bellamy's Nationalism, she was a socialist but not a Marxist; a Deist with no concern for an afterlife, considering God an impersonal working power; an advocate of economic independence for women, with the ballot of secondary importance. She believed that sex differences were overemphasized at the expense of a humanness common to men and women, and that mankind had become debased by sexual over-indulgence. She considered ethics not a religious matter but a social science, and the group, not the individual, the basic unit in both ethics and economics. In place of the dictum, "He who does not work shall not eat," she suggested that "He who does not eat cannot work": that if people's needs were satisfied they would work because they wanted to. Though she rejected cooperative living and strongly supported the private home, she believed it should be a place to rest--not a place to work; that cooking, cleaning and child-rearing should be done by professionals; and that children should be treated as rational human beings, allowed a good deal of freedom, and dressed to allow for movement and activity. Sensible dress and shoes for women was among her earliest interests, as was physical fitness: at 21 she arranged for the first women's gym in Providence; at 65 she was still an impressive swimmer. Her lecturing was always in essence preaching, her writing--even poems, plays, novels, and stories--always didactic. Her interests and views remained fairly constant throughout her life, as did her decidedly rational and optimistic outlook. In later years, however, there were some new interests, notably Freud, birth control, and immigrants. Freud she attacked for his "sexolatry," which seemed to her to promote the views of sex she had argued against all her life. She approved of birth control as a means to greater freedom for women and to improvement of the race, but disapproved of it as promoting sex for pleasure rather than procreation. She deplored the increased influx of immigrants, whom she felt to be unassimilable and a threat to true "Americans."
Gilman was born Charlotte Anna Perkins on July 3, 1860, in Hartford, Connecticut. Her mother, Mary Fitch Westcott, had married a second cousin, the well-known librarian and bibliophile, Frederic Beecher Perkins, grandson of Lyman Beecher, nephew of Henry Ward Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe. Gilman herself and others attributed her lifelong talent for speaking--and especially preaching--with ease and power to her Beecher heritage. Her brother, Thomas Adie, was 14 months older; there were two siblings who died in infancy.
Charlotte's childhood was characterized by poverty, almost continual moving from place to place (her mother's list of "movings" in folder 1 includes places in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and Rhode Island), and the absence of her father, the last being the cause of the other two conditions. He apparently left when she was an infant, taking posts as head first of the new Boston Public Library and later of the San Francisco Public Library, paying only rare visits to his family and sending very little money. When Charlotte was 13 the family of three settled in Providence, Rhode Island, and remained there, at various addresses, until she herself moved away. Her formal schooling was sporadic, a total of four years between the ages of 7 and 15, two years at the Rhode Island School of Design and, in her early twenties, a course with the Society for the Encouragement of Studies at Home (see folders 160 for school essays, 315-321, volumes 9-11 and oversize folders 4o and 4af+ for her drawings). Meanwhile she read widely on her own, largely in the fields of history and evolution, with some guidance from her father (see folder 26 for a reading list in his handwriting), and strove diligently and systematically to improve her character, with the aim, conceived in childhood, of helping and improving the human race. Some of this process is recorded in volumes 15 to 19.
In 1882 she met a young artist, Charles Walter Stetson. Though she loved him and felt him to be a kindred spirit she struggled for months with the question, not of whether she wanted to marry him, but of whether she should, for she felt she had serious work to do (though not yet sure what it was) and that to choose personal happiness was wrong. She did choose it, however, and married Walter Stetson on May 4, 1884. Their daughter, Katharine Beecher Stetson (later married to F. Tolles Chamberlin), was born March 23, 1885. Even during the first months of marriage, Mrs. Stetson suffered from frequent periods of depression and enforced idleness, which increased after the birth of the child. On the doctor's advice, she took a trip west from October 1885 to March 1886. She visited her brother in Ogden, Utah, and her father in San Francisco, and spent the winter with her friends the Channings (including her life-long friend, Grace Ellery Channing) in Pasadena, California. Her condition improved as soon as she left home, but, the depression returning full force upon her return to Providence, the Stetsons decided in the fall of 1887 that separation was inevitable. After a long visit from Grace Channing in the summer of 1888, during which they wrote the first of several plays together and planned future work (see folders 214-216), Charlotte took Katharine and returned to Pasadena with Grace in October of that year. Walter followed them in December and stayed for over a year, till both realized it was useless. Attempts at divorce, complicated by the fact that there were no obvious grounds, finally succeeded in April 1894. Walter Stetson thereupon married Grace Channing, the Stetsons and Charlotte remaining friends and sharing Katharine's upbringing.
Charlotte Perkins' first published work was the poem, "One Girl of Many," which appeared in The Alpha, probably in 1880; The Woman's Journal also published some of her verse in the 1880s (see oversize volume 7o). In Pasadena, recovering from the mental turmoil of her married life and thrown on her own resources, she began to write and speak professionally, earning enough to keep herself and Katharine. In 1890 alone she wrote 33 articles and 23 poems, and she spoke to women's clubs, Nationalist groups, and others. Soon after attending a meeting of the Pacific Coast Women's Press Association (PCWPA) in San Francisco, she moved to Oakland, in the summer of 1891; during the next four years its monthly paper, The Bulletin, and editing it--with Helen Campbell--under the title The Impress from 1893 to 1895 (see folder 238, volumes 1o and 2o). Her mother came to live with her but died in March 1893 of cancer.
During these years she continued to lecture, give classes (see folders 163-172), and write prose and verse, some of it published (in the Union Signal, Christian Register, Kate Field's Washington, etc.), some of it not (see volume 23). In 1892 her story of insanity, "The Yellow Wallpaper," was published in New England Magazine, winning her attention both positive and negative, the former notably from William Dean Howells. Her poems meanwhile were collected into a small volume, In This Our World, published in Oakland in 1893 (folder 269). In 1894 she moved to San Francisco, sending Katharine to the Stetsons; Frederic Perkins, who was then leaving San Francisco, accompanied the child on the train to Providence.
In 1895 The Impress ceased publication and Charlotte Perkins Stetson, rather discouraged by her lonely life, the years of poverty, and the sometimes vicious press reaction to her divorce and the supposed abandonment of her child, accepted a long-standing invitation from Jane Addams to visit Hull House. She spent the rest of the 1890s traveling and lecturing: attending a suffrage convention in Washington, D.C., in January 1896 (when she first met Lester F. Ward); going to England in July 1896 to the International Socialist and Labor Congress (and meeting Alfred Russel Wallace, George Bernard Shaw, the Webbs, Jaures, William Morris and other leading socialists: see folder 5); and again to the International Women's Congress in London in 1899 (folder 6). All through these years, she continued to write prose and verse--becoming contributing editor of The American Fabian (Volume 3o) in December 1896--and also to suffer periodically from bouts of weakness and depression.
In March 1897 she called on her cousin George Houghton Gilman at his law office in New York, for advice on getting a royalty payment from a dishonest agent. Houghton's mother, Katharine Beecher Perkins Gilman, was the sister of Charlotte's father, and the two cousins, she seven years his senior, had visited and corresponded years earlier (see folders 33 and 38). Their new friendship soon blossomed into romance; fortunately, Houghton saved the hundreds of letters (folders 40-86) Charlotte wrote him during the next three years (though she did not keep his); they make a valuable record of her professional activities, the development of her thought, and the often stormy oscillations of her feelings; in fact, they reveal a side of her nature--as a woman of passion, less than one-hundred percent independent--which otherwise, even in her autobiography, she kept carefully hidden. Again she struggled with her doubts as to her right to be happy, but Houghton held firm, they were married in Detroit on June 11, 1900, an in her subsequent life she apparently managed successfully to reconcile her work for women and humanity at large with her own private happiness.
Meantime, in the summer and fall of 1897, she had written the book that brought her fame, Women and Economics. It was published the next year, together with an enlarged edition of In This Our World. Though Gilman herself considered Human Work, written during the winter of 1898-1899, her most important contribution, Women and Economics, with its argument that women need economic independence--and not just the ballot--to be truly free and equal, and that society as a whole would be better for their full participation, had the greater impact.
The Gilmans settled in New York, where they lived, moving further uptown every few years, until 1922. During the summer of 1900 Gilman wrote Concerning Children; it was published later that year, while Human Work, much rewritten, was published in 1904 and The Home in 1903. Katharine lived with the Gilmans during much of this time, and alternately with the Stetsons. For several months, Gilman was treated for her mental ailment by Dr. Mary Putnam Jacobi, with some positive results.
Besides extensive lecture trips in the United States, she attended the International Congress of Women in Berlin in 1904 (folder 7) and the International Woman Suffrage Congress in Budapest in 1913 (folder 8), and made a lecture tour of England, Holland, Germany, Austria, and Hungary in 1905 (see newsclippings in folders 288-292). After 1894 she spoke extemporaneously, so that we have no further written speeches (except a few in print in oversize folder 2af+ and two late ones in folder 173), but there is an abundance of articles from this period (folders 175-177, 180, 250, and oversize folders 1o and 1af+) in addition to the three books mentioned above.
Dissatisfied with the reactions of editors to her contributions, she launched her own monthly magazine, The Forerunner, in November 1909. She wrote, edited, and published it virtually single-handed until she gave it up in 1916, partly because she was "written out" and partly because she felt that, as there was an insufficient market for it (it never paid for itself), it was wrong to continue publishing it. It included several full-length books in serial form and numerous stories, articles, reviews, and poems, always emphasizing her ideas in the fields of economics, ethics, women's rights, and child-rearing (see folders 239-242, 331). Of the serialized books, The Crux, The Man-Made World, Moving the Mountain, and What Diantha Did were published separately by the Charlton Co. (Charlotte plus Houghton), which published The Forerunner.
During 1919 she wrote a series of articles for the New York Tribune syndicate (folders 129, 252) and many articles were published in the 1920s, but demand for her lectures, and later her articles too, began to decline after the passage of the 19th amendment. She published one more book, His Religion and Hers, in 1923, wrote and rewrote her Social Ethics (there are four versions, folders 227-230), and made plans, which never materialized, for a new edition of all her works (folder 20). Her friend Amy Wellington compiled a new volume of poems, also never published (folders 35, 125, 185-96). Her autobiography, The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, was published posthumously in October 1935.
In 1922 the Gilmans moved to the Gilman house in Norwich Town, Connecticut; Charlotte at least was relieved to leave New York, with its majority of "non-Americans." Houghton died suddenly on May 4, 1934; in September Charlotte moved to Pasadena to be near her daughter, who lived there with her husband and two children (Dorothy and Walter). She gave some lectures and classes that winter but her health was failing. In 1932 she had learned that she had breast cancer; on August 17, 1935, realizing that she could no longer be well or useful, she ended her life with chloroform (see folder 226 for her writings on euthanasia and suicide).
ARRANGEMENT
The collection is arranged in nine series:
- Series I. Biographical and miscellaneous. Folders 1-25.
- Series II. Family correspondence. Folders 26-113.
- Series III. General correspondence Folders 114-158.
- Series IV. Writings. Folders 159-281, volumes 1o-4o 5, 6.
- Series V. Newsclippings. Folders 282-313, volumes 7o, 8o.
- Series VI. Drawings. Folders 314-324, volumes 9-11.
- Series VII. Photographs. Folders 325-335.
- Series VIII. Notebooks and diaries. Folders 336-342, volumes 12-77.
- Series IX. Oversize and memorabilia. Folders 1o, 1af+, 2o, 2af+, 3o, 3af+, 4o, 4af+, 5o, 5af+, 5b+, 343-344.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Accession number: 72-128
The papers of Charlotte Perkins Gilman were deposited with the Schlesinger Library by her daughter, Katharine Beecher Stetson Chamberlin, in 1971 and 1972.
Related Material:
There is related material at the Schlesinger Library; see Charlotte Perkins Gilman Papers , 1846-ca.1975 (MC 588).
CONTAINER LIST
- Box 1: Folders 1-12
- Box 2: Folders 13-28
- Box 3: Folders 29-47
- Box 4: Folders 48-62
- Box 5: Folders 63-76
- Box 6: Folders 77-86
- Box 7: Folders 87-102, 104
- Box 8: Folders 105-126
- Box 9: Folders 127-138
- Box 10: Folders 139-146
- Box 11: Folders 147-159
- Box 12: Folders 160-166
- Box 13: Folders 167-172
- Box 14: Folders 173-181
- Box 15: Folders 182-203
- Box 16: Folders 204-218
- Box 17: Folders 219-227
- Box 18: Folders 228-232
- Box 19: Folders 233-235, 237-249
- Box 20: Folders 250-269
- Box 21: Folders 270-278
- Box 22: Folders 279-292
- Box 23: Folders 293-308
- Box 24: Folders 309-324
- Box 25: Folders 336-342, volumes 5-6, 9-16, 18
- Box 26: Folders 336-338, volumes 19-31
- Box 27: Folders 339-342, volumes 32-44
- Box 28: Volumes 45-58
- Box 29: Volumes 59-77
- Card File Box 30: #343m (death mask)
- Card File Box 31: #344m (hands)
- Folio Box 32: Volume 1o - Volume 3o
- Folio+ Box 33: 1af+ - 5af+, Volume 8o
- Oversize Box 34: 1o - 5o, Volume 4o, Volume 7o
INDEX
N.B. Folder or volume numbers usually refer to letters by the person named, but may refer to letters to, articles by, photographs of him or her, etc.
- Abbott, Alexander H, Alexander W., Alice 114
- Adams, Maude 149
- Addams, Jane 137, 138, 155
- Aley, Maxwell 93
- Allen, Agnes Beecher 36
- Allen, Charles Dexter 137
- American Fabian 155, volume 3o
- American Women 146
- Amidon, Beulah M. 146
- Anthony, Susan Brownell 137, 155
- Archer, William 243
- Aschermann, Rose Bassett 141
- Atherton, Percy Lee 146, folder 5o
- Baldwin, Elizabeth 107, 108
- Baldwin, Emily 107, 108
- Barbour, Charlotte A. 129
- Barnett, Avram 142
- Barry, James H. 138, 269
- Bartnett, W.J. 138
- Bate, Florence E. 130
- Bay, J. Christian 155
- Beecher, Henry Ward 265
- Beecher, Mary F. 11
- Bellamy Edward 137, volume 3o
- Black, Alexander 116, 266, 267, 271
- Blackwell, Alice Stone 20, 141, 147
- Bland, Edith Nesbit 150
- Blatch, Harriot Stanton 147
- Bowker, R.R. 137
- Boyesen, Hjalmar H., 2nd 126
- Bristol, Julia Silliman Gilman 36, 84, 110
- Bruère, Martha B. 117, 270
- Bruère, Robert W. 117
- Burrows, Herbert 5, 271
- Bynner, Witter 134, 139
- Campbell, Helen 76, 141, 266
- Canby, Henry S. 129
- Carlberg, Frigga 152
- Carruth, Hayden 133
- Catt, Carrie Chapman 147, 149, 153, 156, 270, 284
- Chamberlin, Katharine Beecher Stetson 34, 87-106, 111, 127, 148, 156, 156a, 157, 203, 205, 212, 224, 234, 239, 318, 325
- Chamberlin, Walter S. 36, 105a, 153
- Chautauqua Institution 138
- Clark, Thomas Curtis 145, 146
- Clegg, Susan 150
- Coats, Daisy Baumerman 147
- Commander, Lydia Kingsmith 138
- Connolly, Margaret 133
- Cooley, Stoughton 129
- Corbett, Katherine M. 85, 212
- Davies, Walford 150, 155
- Dawson, Julia 133
- Day, Alice H. 50, 110
- Degler, Carl N. 156, 266
- Democratic National Committee 142
- Dodge, Hannah 146
- Dow, Marietta A. 82
- Dowie, Annie 150
- Doyle, William Theodore 3, 156
- Dreiser, Theordore 126
- Eberle, Abostenia St. L. 147
- Eberle, Louise E. 133, 139
- Elder, Helen Irene 142, 143
- Eschenbrenner, Josephine J. 141, 196
- Farmer, Sarah J. 137
- Fawcett, Mrs. M. G. 150
- Feakins, William B. 140, 334
- Fillmore, Parker 93, 213
- Gale, Zona 118, 127, 153
- Gates, Susa Young 81, volume 7o
- General Federation of Women's Clubs 155
- Gillette, William 137, 145, 296
- Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (letters from) 28, 37-105, 110, 112, 122, 129, 131-134, 141-143, 145-147, 152-154, 157, 193
- Gilman, Edward W. 113
- Gilman, Elisabeth 36
- Gilman, Francis 36, 110, 114
- Gilman, George Houghton 1, 2, 22, 23, 33, 38, 40-86, 91, 92, 94, 100, 106, 140, 196, 212, 270, 283, 296, 321, 325, 326, 331, 332, 334, volume 77
- Gilman, Julia Silliman 36, 84, 110
- Gilman, Katharine Beecher Perkins 36, 108, 109
- Gilman, William Coit 36, 113, volume 7o
- Grant, Jane 149
- Green, Mary B. 146, 153, 205
- Grove, Harriet (Hamburg Women's Club) 143
- Grover, Edwin Osgood 144, 145
- Hale, Edward Evertt 36, 113
- Hale, Emily 84, 110
- Hall, Bolton 137
- Hamilton, Ethel Beecher 100
- Hardie, J. Keir 150, 335
- Harvey, W. W. 145, 147
- Hearn, James A., and Son 141
- Hedge, Charlotte A. 142, 153
- Herford, Oliver 129, 145
- Herne, James A. 137
- Herrod, George D. 137
- Higgins, Edwin W. 119
- Hill, Caroline M. 143
- Holder, Charles Frederick 205, 237
- Holt, Hamilton 128, 153
- Hooker, Isabella Beecher 36
- Hooker, John H. 36
- Howe, Harriet 78
- Howe, Louise C. 147
- Howells, William Dean 120
- Howes, Durward 146
- International Congress Against Alcoholism 9, 142
- International Woman Suffrage Congress 8, 152
- Irwin, Inez Haynes 143, 146, 147
- Jastram, Edward P. 115
- Johnson, W. H. 129
- Johnston, Mary 141, 142, 143
- Jones, Brummell 137
- Jordan, David Starr 137
- Jordan, Elizabeth 126
- Joy, Jason S. 144
- Kaneko, Kiichi 139
- Kansas Equal Suffrage Association 44, 137
- Kelley, Ethel M. 126
- Kelley, Florence 137
- Kitchelt, Florence Ledyard Cross 147
- Knapp, Adeline E. 137
- Kramers, Martina G. 152
- Laciar, S. L. 129
- [Lane?], Chester 142
- Lane, Martha Jessie Luther 147, 149, 205, 213
- Lee, Vernon 243, 300, volume 6
- Vinville, Henry R. 110
- Lorimer, George H. 127, 133
- Lummis, Charles F. 137, 138, 325
- McClure, Robert 130
- McClure, S. S. 130
- MacKinlay, Antoinette Sterling 150
- McMillan, R. 152, volume 7o
- Mann, Prestonia 203, 205, 280
- Marholm, Laura 279
- Marshall, Benjamin T. 110
- Martin, Prestonia Mann 203, 205, 280
- Merrill, A. A. 139
- Millikin, V. V. 155, 204
- Mitchell, S. Weir 267
- Moore, Frances 152
- Morris, May 151
- Morris, William 275
- Morse, Cora A. 78
- National American Woman Suffrage Association 137, 141, 155, 156
- National Child Labor Committee 141, 143, 271
- National Woman's Party 153
- Nelson, N. O. 138
- Neuhauser, May 141, 142
- New York Times 153, volume 7o
- New York Tribune 129, 252
- Norman, Méme Muriel 150
- Norwich Americanization Institute 143, 144
- O'Neil, James B. 146
- O'Neil, Rose Cecil 121
- Open Forum Speakers Bureau 143
- O'Shea, M. V. 143
- Pacific Coast Woman's Press Association 285, volume 1o, 2o
- Page, G. H. 142, 212
- Page, L. C. 129
- Palmer Photoplay Corporation 143
- Perkins, Basil C. 31, 102
- Perkins, Elna 31
- Perkins, Frederic Beecher 26, 37, 107, 296, 314, volume 7o, 12
- Perkins, Lucy Fitch 36
- Perkins, Margaret Gardiner 30
- Perkins, Mary Fitch Westcott 1, 109, volume 14
- Perkins, Thomas Adie 27-29, 113, 265, 315, 331, 339, volume 26, oversize folder 5
- Perkins, Thomas, Jr. 32
- Phelon, Mary Dana 91
- Phelps, William Lyon 146
- Pinkham, Wenona Osborne 142
- Pironti, Carolina di Conti 152, volume 6
- Pond, James B. 10, 137, 138
- Putnam, G. H. 129
- Radcliffe-Whitehead, Ralph 53
- Reedy, William Marion 141
- Reynolds, Paul R. 138
- Rhodes, Eugene Manlove 142, 143, 145
- Riesz, Helene 152, 155
- Romero (James), Concha 143
- Ross, Edward Alsworth 139, 141, 145, 147
- Ross, Rosamond C. 139
- Ruedy, Augus 146, oversize folder 2
- Sanders, Frederic W. 141
- Sanger, Margaret 146
- Schmalhausen, Samuel D. 122
- Schwimmer, Rosika 152, 266
- Scudder, H. E. 126
- Senter, Augusta 138
- Shaw, Mary 142, 189
- Shelby, Edmund P. 24, 123
- Shively, George 112
- Sinclair, Upton 267
- Small, Albion W. 126
- Smith, Reed 147
- Snowden, Ethel 139
- Solomons, S.? 78, 137
- Sparling, May Morris 151
- Speirs, Frederic W. 126
- Spurr, Aimée E. 141, 155, 326, 331
- Stetson, Charles Walter 1, 39, 205, 282, 315, 317, volumes 18, 20, 21, oversize folder 4
- Stetson, Grace Ellery Channing 21, 127, 138, 214-216, 243, 244
- Stokes, John Graham Phelps, 147, 332
- Stowe, Charles Edward 36, 157, 265
- Stowe, Elizabeth 36
- Stowe, Hilda Robinson Smith 35
- Stowe, Lyman Beecher 35, 111, 112, 156, 264
- Stritt, Marie 7
- Sumner, Francis B. 83, 213
- Swain, Elizabeth 137
- Tapley, Rober 129
- Thurston, William R. 158, 270
- Tower, James E. 126
- Tutwiler, Julia R. 139
- Tyner, Paul 110, 137
- Unwin, T. Fisher 133
- Upton, Harriet Taylor 137
- Vance, Arthur T. 126, 132, 133, 153
- Walker, John B. 126
- Wallace, Alfred Russel 150
- Ward, Julia P. 149
- Ward, Lester Frank 124, 267, 280
- Warwick, Lady Frances Evelyn 149, 150
- Webster, Mary L. 83
- Wellington, Amy 84, 125, 185-195
- Wells, Herbert George 150
- Wheeler, Alice Gilman 36
- White, Trumbell 126
- Whiting, Lillian 155
- Whitner, Annie B. 146
- Whitney, Margaret D. 110
- Whitney, Marian P. 36
- Whitney, Parkhurst 131
- Wildman, Edwin 133
- Willard, Frances 137
- Williams, Anna L. B. 153, 155
- Williams, John L. B. 127
- Wilson, Rose Cecil O'Neil 121
- Wing, Willis Kingsley 112, 127, 146, 147, 156
- Wolinski, Pauline 147
- Woman's Committee for Political Action 144
- Woman's Peace Party 141, 142
- Women's Congress Association of the Pacific Coast 4, 285, oversize folder 1
- Workman, Mrs. Hoyle 146, 147
- Wright, Alice A. 137
- Yoder, A. H. 138, 146
- Young, Daniel K. 137
- Zangwill, E. 150
Processing Information
Processed: December 1972
By: Eva Moseley
Updated: 2010
By: Jenny Gotwals
Genre / Form
Topical
- Authors
- Birth control
- Breast--Cancer--Patients--United States
- Child care
- Clothing and dress--Physiological aspects
- Divorce
- Economics
- Family records
- Feminism--History
- Feminists--Intellectual life
- Lecturers
- Mothers and daughters
- Physical fitness for women
- Sex role
- Social ethics.
- Women's rights
- Women--Social conditions
Subject
- Addams, Jane, 1860-1935 (Person)
- Anthony, Susan B. (Susan Brownell), 1820-1906 (Person)
- Blatch, Harriot Stanton, 1856-1940 (Person)
- Catt , Carrie Chapman, 1859-1947 (Person)
- Gillmore, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970 (Person)
- Schwimmer, Rosika, 1877-1948 (Person)
- Title
- Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, 1860-1935. Papers of Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1846-1961: A Finding Aid
- Author
- Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
- Language of description
- eng
- EAD ID
- sch00019
Repository Details
Part of the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute Repository
The preeminent research library on the history of women in the United States, the Schlesinger Library documents women's lives from the past and present for the future. In addition to its traditional strengths in the history of feminisms, women’s health, and women’s activism, the Schlesinger collections document the intersectional workings of race and ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and class in American history.