9.5" x 7" x 1"

The 1894 Columbian Exposition or Chicago World's Fair was an exciting moment in history. This World's Fair featured an expansive building specifically created and designed to display accomplishments of women from across the world.

A Board of Lady Managers was organized to determine how women would be represented at the fair. At first there was some debate whether women’s accomplishments should be integrated among the men’s, but The Board agreed women would be best represented in a separate Woman’s Building. Bertha Palmer, the head of The Board, chose female architect Sophia Hayden to design and construct the Woman’s Building. Hayden, a recent MIT graduate, was under immense pressure to create a building that successfully represented women of the late 19th century. The final product, built in Italian Renaissance style, was met with controversial reviews from architectural journals and the public. Some critics thought the building was too simple and unassertive compared to the male-designed buildings at the fair. Other criticized the building for being too feminine and delicate.  Hayden was subjected to such intense scrutiny for the Woman’s Building that she never practiced architecture again.

The Board devoted the interior of the building to women’s successes in arts, literature, and culture. The building included a library that featured 7,000 books by female authors, including 47 translations Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The building hosted a large conference attended by about 200,000 women that focused on a variety of “women’s topics”, the most popular being a session on women’s clothing and dress reform. The Board was also very intrigued and excited about the shifting roles of women in the work place across the world, and they sought to learn more about, “the new avenues of employment that are constantly being opened to women, and in which of these they are most successful by reason of their natural adaptability”.  The Woman’s Building displayed a wide range of items produced and invented by women, from mechanical dusters to Spanish cigarettes rolled by female laborers. Women were finally getting public recognition for their accomplishments and contributions to society.

This book (Art and Handicraft in the Woman's Building) was published in 1893 by Rand McNally and Company to showcase the Woman's Building.  It it filled with photographs of the women behind the scenes, as well as a proliferation of photographs of the art, writings, and other items showcased in the building.

A fascinating look into history.

RARE copy of a book for any vintage library.