Woman's Club, Modern Interior |
The history of this building really begins with the formation of the Spokane Women’s Club in 1905. Shortly thereafter, the Club organized itself under the General Federation of Women’s Clubs (GFWC). These larger women’s organizations were by and large a product of the late nineteenth century Progressive Era in which women, unable to vote until 1920, instead exerted influence through a variety of associations on a wide range of causes such as temperance, children’s education, better sanitation, and better working environments. Woman’s Club scrapbooks going back to 1910 (currently archived at the Spokane Museum of Art and Culture) indicate that its members were involved in all of these causes and others. According to a Spokesman Review article from 1912, women also used the Club for more recreational pursuits, such as china painting, water color design and other things classified as “women’s education” in the early twentieth century. In the mid-1930s, the Woman’s Club hosted a wide variety of programs under the auspices of the Works Progress Administration, created in the midst of the Great Depression by the Roosevelt administration to get people back to work.[2]
It seems that the Club members had substantial clout with the community, too. Membership rolls from as far back as 1905 suggest that the Club had a consistent and vibrant membership neighborhood from its inception, including prominent residents of the affluent Browne’s Addition. Indeed, the Woman’s Club and others like it likely played a significant role in securing Women’s Suffrage in the State of Washington in 1910, a full decade ahead of the nineteenth Amendment.[3]
Modern Interior |
[1] City of Spokane Historic
Preservation Office, “Roosevelt Apartments,” and “the Paulsen Building,” http://properties.historicspokane.org/; “The Garland Theater” from the
Cinema Treasures Website, http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/11431;
[2] “Secrets of Spokane Woman’s Club
Allurements Discovered and Divulged by Merciless Males,” Spokane Spokesman
Review, December 8, 1912; “Adult Classes Liked by Many (1936),” Wallis and Mary
Kimble Northwest History Database, Washington State University Archives; Set
Style Show for Friday Night (1937),” Wallis and Mary Kimble, WSU Archives; “WPA
Classes Display Work (1938),” Wallis and Mary Kimble, WSU Archives.
[3] “Women’s Suffrage” from the Washington
Women in History website, http://www.washingtonwomenshistory.org/themes/suffrage/default.aspx;
[4] “The General Federation of
Women’s Clubs” from the GFWC website, http://www.gfwc.org/gfwc/default.asp.
No comments:
Post a Comment