Text by Candace Kanes
Images from Maine Historical Society and Maine Historical Society/MaineToday Media
Within a year of its formation in 1920, the Portland Business and Professional Women's Club had more than 500 members. By 1922, the club had 655 members and was the largest in the country in proportion to its city's population (about 70,000).
Business and Professional Women's Convention program, Portland, 1925
Maine Historical Society
Portland and Maine in general were enthusiastic supporters of the BPW concept. The group, which began nationally in 1919, was a federation of some existing and some newly created organizations of women who worked in business and professional fields.
It sought to promote and assist their activities and to promote ethical business dealings.
Maine led the eastern U.S. in the formation of BPW clubs for some six years in the 1920s.
The stories of Portland and Maine's business and professional women of the post World War I era offer one example of asking questions of the available evidence to provide a more complete and more nuanced story of the past.
The immediate evidence:
Two types of evidence -- written and visual -- are available. The written evidence, records of the Portland club and census data provide some details about the organization and its members.
The visual evidence, mostly glass plates, complements the written evidence, but does not necessarily match it.
• A program from the July 1925, seventh annual convention of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs, hosted by the Portland and the Portland Business and Professional Women's Club.
The welcome from NFBPWC President Adelia Prichard used the analogy of a garden and flowers to welcome convention-goers. She discussed love, loyalty, hope for the future, courage and endurance, development and growth.
"Six years of careful cultivation, of earnest devotion, has increased the size of this Federation Garden, has added to its beauty, its influence …, Prichard wrote.
Also in the program are oval portraits of the various officers and conference officials, many of which reveal fancy necklines and pearls.
The convention's first two activities were teas, one at the Portland Country Club and one at Brantwood, Blackstrap.
Resort locations and clothing and department stores are the majority of advertisers in the program, which also includes a schedule of business meetings and entertainments.
• A collection of 110 glass negatives taken by a Portland newspaper photographer of BPW convention delegates shows women arriving at the Grand Trunk Railroad station, in other locations in Portland, at a Peaks Island clambake and in Old Orchard Beach.
Business women's convention, Portland, 1925
Maine Historical Society/MaineToday Media
The train station photos suggest a pride of place, with delegates dressed in costumes appropriate to their home states, or carrying or wearing signs that indicate where they traveled from. They suggest a sense of playfulness and of camaraderie, important clues to the nature of the organization and the unidentified women pictured in the images.
One photo, for example, shows a group of women at the train station, all wearing fashionable women's hats, and many with pointed party hats with "Kansas" written on them, worn on top of the other hats.
The newspaper photographer apparently was taken with the costumes. There are photos of a group of women from Oklahoma, all wearing "Indian" headbands and feathers and a group from Connecticut in colonial garb, some dressed as men, some as women.
One shows two young women, one holding a child, dressed in bloomers and blouses with neck ties or scarves.
What do these sources suggest?
The immediate evidence rarely answers all the questions a historian poses. The historian examines the evidence, asking the "who, what, when, why and how" questions of it, then following those answers to seek new evidence and raise additional questions.
• The program lists vice presidents in each of 42 states, suggesting BPWs appeal and reach.
• Interests also were wide-ranging with committees on Legislation, Publicity, Finance, Personnel Research, Education and Health.
• As hosts for the 1925 convention, the Portland Club split into more than 20 committees that oversaw various local arrangements.
• Most of the advertisements in the program are aimed at a fairly traditional idea of women – department store ads for clothing, corsets, shoes, household products, shops catering to women, and ads directed to women as family consumers.
• Teas, music, receptions, and sight-seeing were interposed with committee meetings, and hour-long introductions to parliamentary law.
• The substantive activities of the convention are hidden from view in the program.
• Many women traveled with other women from across the United States – apparently with no male escorts.
• The women seemed to enjoy a certain camaraderie, as evidenced by the costumes and the entertainments.
• They seemed to court publicity, judging by the number of photographs taken at several events and locations.
• The large numbers of women in some photos, along with the range of home states, suggests an organization that resonated with many women.