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International Women's Day: Women at Work

Posted 2:02 p.m. Friday, March 8, 2024

Kindergarten in Main Hall in 1909 (today the Chancellor's Office).

La Crosse Normal 1909

By Teri Holford, interim Outreach Librarian

For International Women’s Day, we turn to women at work with a “flashback Friday”.

It’s 1909 and La Crosse Normal just opened its doors. 

This cartoon depicts the new La Crosse Normal School as the young child on the floor, cherishing playthings with small regard for their aspirations.

How many women were teaching and working in the new teacher training school in Main Hall, the only building on campus?

The first senior class graduating created the first yearbook of the school. Below are photos of most of the women employed at the new La Crosse Normal school, their department, and their alma mater: 

Dora E. Carver
Bessie B. Hutchison
Esther C. Mohr
Juliann A. Roller
Ada F. Thayer
Margaret Spence
Myrtle E. Shanks
Lillian Bettinger
La Verne Garratt
Minnie E. Marshall
Lottie L. Deneen
Clara D. Hitchcock

Florence Wing was the first librarian (University of Wisconsin Madison, Illinois State Library).

Florence Wing

On page 76 of the yearbook is an essay written by senior student Ethel Oltman, Senior Class Orator and called “The Woman of Today”.

Ethel Oltman

Despite the fact that it was written in 1911, Oltman’s words remain uplifting, relevant, and inspiring:

“The woman of today, then, is simply the woman of yesterday stepping out into and taking advantage of the richer opportunities of the present.”

All yearbooks have been digitized by our digitization team, and can be easily accessed online in the Murphy Library Digitization Collections.


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