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Wives
of Steel Voices
of Women from the Sparrows Point Steelmaking Communities
By
Karen Olson
September 2005 | 6 x 9
228 pages | 20 illustrations
History, American Studies, Women's Studies
Hardcover: $45.00 SH
ISBN: 987-0-271-02685-5
“Wives
of Steel addresses a key failure of most studies of industrial
communities. Too often scholars assume that male-dominated industries
and their communities are shaped by men who hold the industrial
jobs. By placing women at the forefront of the Sparrows Point story,
Olson shows how women experienced deindustrialization differently
than men. Forced to join the workforce to help families survive
the loss of well-paying union jobs, many women discovered the rewards
of increased independence and autonomy. The result is a more complicated,
and more persuasive, picture of America’s postindustrial
communities. Wives of Steel will find an eager audience
among labor, women’s, community studies scholars; students; and the general
public.” —Laurie Mercier, Washington State University,
Vancouver
“Wives
of Steel makes a compelling and sure-to-be noticed contribution
to a very rich and lively literature on the community experience
of deindustrialization. Employing rich ethnographic and interview
data, Olson demonstrates forcefully the need for a more gendered
appreciation of the impact of large-scale economic transformation.”
—Michael Frisch, SUNY–Buffalo
During
its heyday in the 1950s and 1960s, the Bethlehem Steel mill at
Sparrows
Point near Baltimore was one of the world’s largest steel
plants, employing as many as 30,000 workers. But these glory years
were short-lived as the American steel industry soon collapsed,
taking with it the high-income industrial jobs that many Sparrows
Point workers had come to enjoy. This familiar tale of decline in
America’s industrial heartland is only part of the story,
however. In response to downsizing and job loss at Sparrows Point,
many women entered the workforce to fulfill the needs of their
families
living in the adjacent communities of Turners Station and Dundalk. Wives of Steel tells the story of these women who broke
traditional gender roles and, in the process, contributed to the
economic survival of their communities. Wives
of Steel is based on more than eighty formal interviews conducted
over a fifteen-year period with women and some men, both white and
black, all of whom were part of Sparrows Point as workers, spouses,
or longtime residents of the local communities. Through the stories
they tell, we see how a male-dominated industry has influenced personal,
family, and social experiences over several generations. We also
see the distinct differences and surprising similarities between
the lives of black and white women, which often reflect the complicated
relationships among black and white steelworkers in the plant.
Deindustrialization has transformed many of America’s cities
and communities, often in devastating ways. For women in particular,
the changes in family and work life have been far more complex
and
in many ways more positive in their consequences than many studies
have led us to expect. Combining consummate research with vivid
firsthand accounts, Wives of Steel tells a story that continues
to be played out in communities across America as working-class
families are forced to cope with a globalizing economy.
Contents
Introduction
1. Sparrows Point, Turners Station, and Dundalk: The History of the
Mill’s Communities
2. The Gendered World of Steel: It’s a Man’s World Inside
the Sparrows Point Mill
3. Boarders and the Long Turn in a Company Town: Sparrows Point Wives,
1887–1945
4. The Family Works the Schedule: Steelworkers’ Wives, 1945–1970
5. Women Steelworkers at the Point: Interlopers in a Man’s World
6. Deindustrialization at Sparrows Point: Disappearance of the Breadwinner-Homemaker
7. Renegotiating Families with Two Breadwinners: Partnership and Divorce
8. A Larger Circle of Neighbors: Deindustrialization and the Web of
Class, Race, Gender, and Location
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Karen
Olson is Professor of History and Anthropology at the Community
College of Baltimore County.