Description
This collection documents the academic and professional career of Brigid O'Farrell, an activist and independent scholar within
the women's labor rights movement. The material briefly includes her time as a student in graduate school, as a researcher
for the Center for Research on Women at Wellesley College, and as an active member in various tradeswomen and women's rights
organizations, such as Women's Policy Research (IWPR), the National Council of Women's Organization, and more, as an educator
herself who published material or was a part of establishing spaces for women within the field to grow, and material regarding
her involvement in politics. Materials include books, guides, manuals, correspondence, clippings, posters, buttons, pins,
and other documents in regard to women's labor rights within nontraditional jobs. It also includes her research material for
her book,
She Was One of Us (2010), which includes copies of photographs, correspondence with Pete Seeger, book reviews of her book, and other documents.
There are also material tradeswomen and women's labor rights written by others which were collected by O'Farrell over the
years. For digitized material related to all tradeswomen archives collections please consult the
Tradeswomen Archives Project .
Background
Brigid O'Farrell has served as an independent scholar and women's rights researcher since the early 1970s, where she has been
dedicated to uplifting women in nontraditional jobs and the organizations and unions that support them. After obtaining her
master in Sociology from Harvard Graduate School of Education in 1973, O'Farrell became more involved with labor history and
education. She was invited to attend the Union Women's Regional Summer School in Connecticut as a student. Barbara Mayer Wertheimer,
a professor at the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, invited O'Farrell to co-teach
in the second school at the University of Pennsylvania in 1977. Later, she co-directed the third school, in 1978, at the University
of Massachusetts, Amherst, with Harvey Friedman, long-time labor activist and director of the University of Massachusetts
Labor Relations and Research Center. O'Farrell stayed a part of the program, which set up workshops and informational classes
that taught women within nontraditional labor jobs their rights as workers and as women, until her move to Washington D.C.
in 1968, but she would return to the program in 2011, where she published reports on her findings within the institution.
After moving to California, in 2001, she attended the National Trades Women Conference in Denver, CO. The first Women Building
California State Conference was held in 2002. There, O'Farrell presented her first Women's Labor History Workshop for tradeswomen
at the third state conference in 2004 and began developing a working relationship with tradeswomen organizations in California
through 2010.
From 2011 to 2019 O'Farrell was involved in the National Tradeswomen Conference, now Tradeswomen Build Nations (TWBN) Conference,
in several different roles. First, O'Farrell developed an Eleanor Roosevelt Leadership Workshop for tradeswomen that was presented
at several conferences with enthusiastic attendance. Second, working with Carolyn Jacobson and the Berger Marks Foundation,
they attended TWBN and provided foundation materials for union women, especially around mentoring and women's committees.
Third, she served as a researcher working with Ariane Hegewisch, in which they conducted a focus group for a survey on tradeswomen
issues (Institute for Women's Policy Research) in 2012, distributed surveys in 2013, and presented results at a workshop in
2014 and 2015. At that time, they helped establish a Research Committee as part of the Task Force on Tradeswomen's Issues
which met as a caucus group at the TWBN conference with the goal of attracting more scholars to address tradeswomen's issues.
O'Farrell's interest in women's labor history and education is what lead her to begin her research on Eleanor Roosevelt for
her successful book, She Was One of Us. Throughout her career, she has served as a successful researcher and writer that has been cited multiple times in different
academic and scholarly articles.
Restrictions
All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Director of Archives
and Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical
materials and not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained.