Broadening of the campaigns for civil rights - Women's rights - OCR AFeminism

As the fight for civil rights intensified in the 1960s, women’s groups took inspiration and fought to improve women’s standards of living. although some fought to maintain their conservative values.

Part ofHistoryThe USA, 1945-1974

Feminism

Explore the role of women's, LGBT rights, Native American and Chicano rights groups.

Learn more about the lives of women in the USA in this podcast.

The changing role of women at work since World War Two

  • After World War Two, many women had to leave their jobs as men returned from fighting in the war and replaced them in the workforce.
  • In the 1950s, more women began to challenge their roles as mainly housewives and mothers.
  • Many were becoming frustrated with what they saw as a boring and limited life at home. They wanted to begin their own professional careers, often in jobs that had traditionally been male occupations.
  • By 1960, there had been an increase of 35 per cent in the number of women at work in comparison to ten years previously.
  • Over 22 million women were in employment - almost half of the whole country’s workforce.

Eleanor Roosevelt, the widow of President Roosevelt, had campaigned for women’s rights since the 1920s. In 1960, she set up a commission on the status of women at work. The report found that despite the increase in the number of women at work, they experienced substandard conditions and opportunities in comparison to men. Examples of this included:

  • Women on average earned less than half of what men earned, even for the same work.
  • More than 90 per cent of managers were men.
  • The most common role for women was clerical, such as secretarial or reception work.
  • Women could lose their job for getting married or becoming pregnant.
  • Less than 10 per cent of doctors were women.