Mary Morton Kimball Kehew

From New World Encyclopedia


Mary Morton Kimball Kehew (born September 8, 1859 – died February 13, 1918) was an American reformer, famous for her work in improving the living and working conditions of working women in Boston.

Biography

Mary Morton Kimball Kehew was born in Boston, Massachusetts, into a wealthy New England family. She was well-educated and began engaging in social activism early in life.

In 1886, Kehew joined the Women's Educational and Industrial Union of Boston, an association that gathered philanthropically minded women who fought to improve the working conditions of women in Boston. Kehew became the union’s director in 1890, and its president in 1892, succeeding on that position Abby Morton Diaz.

Kehew immediately started with reforms within the organization, making it more organized and effective in accomplishing its goals. Besides offering basic employment guidance and legal services, the Union started to organize courses in dressmaking (1895), housekeeping (1897), and salesmanship (1905). In 1905 the Union’s research department conducted a study of the living and working conditions of Boston women. The purpose of the study was to create a thorough study that would support the legislative proposals for the regulation of working conditions of women. <<what does this mean?The Union shop sold the work of women,>> and its kitchen provided inexpensive lunches for working women. The classes organized by the Union were later taken over by Simmons College.

Parallel to her work inside the union, Kehew was involved in propagating the work of the union among women. In 1892, she invited Mary Kenney O'Sullivan, who had been trained at the Hull House, to form the Union for Industrial Process with her. The Union helped organize several other unions, among others the union of women bookbinders and laundry workers (1896), the union of tobacco workers (1899), and the union of needle-trade workers (1901).

In 1903 Kehew was on the board of members who organized the National Women's Trade Union League in Boston. She was elected first president, while Jane Addams was serving as vice president.

Kehew was also actively engaged with numerous other projects. She supported the work of different philanthropic organizations, such as Simmons College, the Denison House settlement, the Public School Association, the Massachusetts Association for Promoting the Interests of the Blind, the Loan and Aid Society for the Blind, and the Woolson House.

Kehew served as the president of the National Women's Trade Union League until 1913, then as acting president and finally as board chair until her death. She died in 1918 in Boston.

Legacy

Kehew avoided public speeches and appearances, preferring to work behind the scenes. Her organizational skills and directorship, however, made her famous among social activists of her day. Her studies on the social and working conditions of women helped create labor reform legislation and bring important social changes. Kehew was thus regarded as one of the core members of the Progressive movement in Boston.

The Women's Trade Union League, which Kehew helped establish, was the first national association dedicated to organizing women workers. It played an important role in organizing massive strikes in the first two decades of the twentieth century, which in turn helped create the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union and Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America. The League’s campaign for women's suffrage resulted in improving the working conditions of women.

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