The Evolution of Getting a Living in MiddletownMain MenuIntroductionMachine Made: The Rise of Industrial Work in MuncieRusty Muncie: Deindustrialization in MiddletownInvisible Experiences: Making a Living as a Minority in MuncieWomen's Work: 9 to 5 and BeyondWomen's Work Introduction
Working Together
12022-12-08T17:30:06+00:00Katrina Partlowbb1f1150c789ba002bf4aef4a165fdf5031add5e32plain2022-12-08T17:31:47+00:00Katrina Partlowbb1f1150c789ba002bf4aef4a165fdf5031add5eWomen were often segregated from men when working in industrial occupations, therefore separating the "men's work" from the "women's work."
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1media/Unidentified Women Inside Factory_thumb.jpg2022-12-06T23:57:11+00:00Katrina Partlowbb1f1150c789ba002bf4aef4a165fdf5031add5eUnidentified Women Inside Factory3Women inside a factory in Muncie, IN sometime between the 1910s and 1930s. Possibly a woodworking or furniture factory.media/Unidentified Women Inside Factory.jpgplain2023-02-07T19:15:53+00:001910s-1930sMuncie and Delaware County Historic Photographs Collection, Ball State Digital Media RepositoryCory Balkenbusch1813df9caeea31c6742588d0733c7e303d399f25