 | 

An Exhibition Celebrating Women's History
Sixty-Five: The Sophia Smith Collection of Women's History Archives is on view in Neilson Library, 1st floor Morgan Gallery, through December.
The
Sophia Smith Collection
(SSC), named after the founder of Smith College, is the oldest archive
devoted to the study of women's history in the United States. Founded
in 1942 by Margaret Storrs Grierson, the SSC has grown to 575 collections
(9,000 feet) of primary source material and has been critical to the development
of American women's history.
| Date |
Exhibition/Event |
Exhibition:
Sep.-Dec., 2007 |
Sixty-Five:
The Sophia Smith Collection of Women's History Archives, 1942-2007
- see images below
Morgan Gallery, Neilson Library, 1st floor - hours |
Conference:
Sep. 28-29, 2007 |
Power of Women's Voices
- conference
schedule
Celebrating 65 years of collecting women's history at Smith. For more
information, see the Smith College press
release. |
Exhibition:
Sep.-Dec., 2007 |
The
Power of Women’s Voices: Selections from the YWCA and Voices
of Feminism Oral History Project
Sophia Smith Collection, Alumnae Gym - hours
|
IMAGES
FROM THE EXHIBITION
| Photograph
of Margaret Storrs Grierson by Eric Stahlberg, 1946.
Smith
graduate Margaret Storrs Grierson ’22 was the founder and
first director of the Sophia Smith Collection, 1942-1965. She also
taught English and philosophy at Smith College, 1930–1936,
and served as the college archivist, 1940–1965 and the executive
secretary of the Friends of the Smith College Libraries, 1942–1965.
Under
the inspired leadership of Margaret Storrs Grierson, the Sophia
Smith Collection evolved from a collection of works by women writers
into an historical research collection of material documenting the
lives and activities of women. |

|
| 
[click
to enlarge]
Women's Rights Collection
Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College |
Representative
Women: lithograph by Leopold Grozilier, 1857.
Here
are portraits of seven prominent figures of the abolitionist and
women’s rights movement, including Lucretia Mott, center,
and clockwise from top, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Abigail Kelley Foster,
Lucy Stone, Lydia Maria Francis Child, Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell,
and Maria Weston Chapman. This nineteenth-century print, published
by William C. Nell in Boston, alludes to Ralph Waldo Emerson’s
1850 essay Representative Men, which extolled the influence
of exemplary individuals.
Margaret
Storrs Grierson ’22 kept this framed lithograph in her office
during her tenure as director of the Sophia Smith Collection (SSC).
According to Grierson, the SSC “was intended not to sharpen
the distinction between sexes, but to lessen it by gathering imposing
evidence of the work of women, comparable in every way with that
of men” (Smith Alumnae Quarterly, winter 1984).
|
Olive
Gilbert. Narrative of Sojourner Truth, a Northern Slave,: Emancipated
from Bodily Servitude by the State of New York, in 1828. Boston:
Printed for the Author, 1850.
| 
|
Another
nineteenth-century abolitionist and women’s rights activist
was Sojourner Truth who joined the Northampton Association of Education
and Industry, a local utopian community, in 1843. With the help
of a benefactor, she published her Narrative of Sojourner Truth,
which was written for her by Olive Gilbert. Sojourner Truth supported
herself by selling the book and photographic portraits while she
spoke throughout the northeast. In 1850, she retired to Battle Creek,
Michigan.
Women’s
Rights Collection
Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College. |

|
Collector's
issue of MS., spring 2002.
Framed
gold record of I Am Woman by Helen Reddy (Capitol Records), 1972.
| In
1971 the Australian-born singer, songwriter Helen Reddy wrote “I
Am Woman” with Ray Burton. Capitol Records released the song
as a single in 1972. This record celebrating female strength sold
more than a million copies (mostly to women) and became the anthem
of the burgeoning feminist movement. After Reddy won a Grammy Award
for the song in 1973, she presented a gold copy of the re-issued
disc to Gloria Steinem, “who helped make ‘I Am Woman’
the no. 1 hit in the world!”
Smith
graduate Gloria Steinem ’56 co-founded Ms. magazine
in 1972. The July 1973 issue of the magazine included an article
on Helen Reddy by Susan Lydon. Steinem edited the feminist journal
for fifteen years and is currently a consulting editor. In 2002,
Steinem appeared on the cover of a special collector’s issue
of the magazine making the universal “womb symbol” with
her hands. Since 2001, Ms. has been published under the
umbrella of the Feminist Majority Foundation, a major national and
international research and action non-profit organization.
|

Gloria
Steinem Papers
Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College |
| 
|
Photograph
of Margie Adam by Linda Koolish, 1974.
Singer,
songwriter Margie Adam's career spans three decades of active involvement
in the women's liberation movement. Her biographical files and recordings
are part of the Women's Music Archives, founded by Lucia (Kim) Kimber.
This new addition to the SSC, includes recordings, printed material,
and memorabilia of woman-identified, woman-made music from the 1960s
to the present. Margie Adam's personal papers are also promised
to the SSC.
Women's
Music Archive
Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College |
| Imposing
Evidence, May 2007.
The
latest issue of the Sophia Smith Collection’s annual newsletter
is devoted to showcasing the records of the YWCA of the U.S.A.,
which were recently processed by Maida Goodwin ’83 and a team
of archivists and student assistants. The stated goal of the worldwide
YWCA movement is to “develop the leadership of women and girls”
and “to achieve human rights, health, security, dignity, freedom,
justice and peace for all people.”
The
historical records of the YWCA of the U.S.A. chronicle the struggles
and successes of the YWCA from 1860 to 2002. The 2½-year
processing project, funded by the NHPRC and a generous bequest by
Elizabeth Norris ’36, has made the nearly 600 feet of primary
source material available for research on a wide variety of topics.
Scholars
who are working on dissertations and books on the YWCA, include
Dorothea Browder (University of Wisconsin), Amanda Izzo ’99
(Yale University), and Nancy Marie Robertson (Indiana University–Purdue
University Indianapolis and author of Christian Sisterhood,
Race Relations, and the YWCA, 1906-46). These scholars are
featured in the Power
of Women’s Voices conference on September 29, 2007. |

[click
to view issue online]
|
Contact Sophia Smith Collection
Alumnae Gymnasium (413) 585-2970 ssc-wmhist@smith.edu
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