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Women Wage-Earners - Their Past, Their Present, and Their Future by Helen Stuart Campbell
page 72 of 244 (29%)
Men's Clothing | 160,813 | 4,801 | 5,037 | 159
Women's Clothing | 25,192 | 1,030 | 8,833 | 137
Cotton Goods | 185,472 | 3,457 | 4,914 | 1,629
Men's Furnishing Goods | 11,174 | 1,140 | 8,560 | 300
Hosiery and Knitting | 28,885 | 2,602 | 6,130 | 1,268
Millinery and Lace | 25,687 | 1,120 | 8,637 | 243
Shirts | 6,555 | 1,481 | 8,000 | 513
Silk and Silk Goods | 31,337 | 2,992 | 5,232 | 1,776
Straw Goods | 10,948 | 2,991 | 6,850 | 154
Tobacco | 32,756 | 4,544 | 3,290 | 2,166
Umbrellas and Canes | 3,608 | 4,169 | 5,152 | 679
Woollen Goods | 86,504 | 54,544 | 3,395 | 1,174
Worsted Goods | 18,800 | 5,431 | 5,038 | 1,540
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In obtaining these averages, it was found necessary to equalize the
returns of Pittsburg and Philadelphia, the former having but 4.55 per
cent of women workers, while Philadelphia had 31. This resulted from the
fact that the industries of Philadelphia are the manufacturing of
textiles and other goods, which employ women chiefly; while Pittsburg
has principally iron and steel mills. New York was found to have 31 per
cent of women workers; Lowell, Mass., had 47.42, and Manchester, N.H.,
53; Pittsburg and Wilmington, Del., having the lowest percentage.

The gain of women in trades over the census of 1870 was sixty-four per
cent, the total percentage of women workers for the whole country being
forty-nine. The ten years just ended show a still larger percentage; and
many of the trades which a decade since still hesitated to admit women,
are now open, those regarded as most peculiarly the province of men
having received many feminine recruits. These isolated or scattered
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