Protecting and Reforming Criminal Women

Dublin Core

Title

Protecting and Reforming Criminal Women

Description

As the first act of “practical work” initiated by the CWC, clubwomen lobbied for day matrons to be placed in police stations for the protection and care of incarcerated women. Clubwomen continued to advocate for night matrons to be stationed in jails and prisons, and worked with other clubs in advocating for female police. Throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the Chicago Woman’s Club lobbied to improve prison conditions and put criminal women under the protection and guardianship of other women. The CWC staunchly supported the idea that prisons be places for detention and reform rather than sites of punishment.

Source

Image: "The Street-Girl's End." In The Dangerous Classes of New York and Twenty Years’ Work Among Them by Charles Loring Brace. Wynkoop & Hallenbeck, 1872.
Literary Program: Annual Announcements of the Chicago Woman’s Club, 1876-1920. Loyola University Chicago. Women & Leadership Archives. Chicago Woman’s Club. Boxes 1-5.
Minutes: Chicago Woman’s Club Records, Chicago History Museum.
Newspaper: Chicago Daily Tribune (1872-1922).

Files

"The Street-Girl's End"
Literary Programs Related to Criminal Women
"Jail shall only be a place of detention for <br />
presumably guilty"
Desplaines Street Police Station "was disgusting and seemed unsafe"
"Urging a complete revision of our Penal Code"
Chicago Tribune: "Garrity Wants No Petticoat Police Chief"

Citation

“Protecting and Reforming Criminal Women,” Loyola University Chicago Digital Special Collections, accessed April 20, 2024, http://www.lib.luc.edu/specialcollections/items/show/918.