1904 - Ida Tarbell

Muckraker

THE PARADOX OF IDA TARBELL

The pioneer of investigative reporting, Ida Tarbell developed an approach to journalism that helped break up monopolies in the early 1900’s, and inspired a style of writing that 100 years later is still changing society (think Watergate and Spotlight).

Her creation of “muckraking” transformed journalism and earned her a place of honor in the history of the United States. While researching her journalism contributions for the Women Inventors and Innovators Mural, little did we know that Ms. Tarbell also would give us a wild ride through the complicated jungle of opinions about the gender gap in her day.

Ida Tarbell was best known for her 1904 book, History of Standard Oil Company, the compilation of a meticulously researched series she wrote for McClure's Magazine about the business practices and personal behaviors of the Rockefeller oil magnates. She also wrote biographies of President Lincoln and other nonfiction books, including, later in her life, two lesser known works on the topic of women, emphasizing their importance to their families.

She became a role model of leadership for women in her day, but many in the Suffragette movement were disenchanted by her later books that raised questions about women who sought mainstream work. Her book “The Business of Being a Woman” made some controversial statements about women, including questioning women’s emotional capability to make clear decisions in the business and political arenas.

At a time when women were just beginning to join the mainstream workforce in earnest, Tarbell waded into some murky, ambiguous topics with opinions not necessarily helpful to other women seeking to make an impact outside the home.“The Business of Being a Woman,” gives us a glimpse of the dilemmas, biases, and cultural attitudes women faced in 1912.

She wrote:about the “uneasy woman” who had trouble adjusting to the male world while trying to cope with her domestic duties;a Declaration of Sentiments outlining the “self-evident” truth of an unfair world where women were treated like property, even their wages and children legally belonging to their husbands (this part of her rant seemed pro-women’s rights)an assessment of women as superior performers in college and in the workplace, but later on “less inclined to experiment with her gifts, to feel her wings, to make unexpected dashes into life.”that women fail to reach the first rank in businesses because they have to sacrifice their “affectability” - emotions, intuition, vision - and become “atrophied ”that the home is the most important social institution and a “social laboratory” that must be run by women.the man’s income should be turned over to the woman to manage household finances, as was the custom in the day.the instinct to have nice clothes is tyranny and can lead women into financial trouble.men unconsciously learn the code for public affairs while women unconsciously learn the code for private affairs, hence labor is naturally divided.Many women in her day recoiled from her words, as many women today might as well. Yet in muckraking tradition, Ms. Tarbell boldly spoke her opinion and in so doing gave us a glimpse into conditions and attitudes a century ago, some of which are carried forward in subtle ways that continue to create dilemmas for women today. Here is an excellent think piece from a history professor at Ida Tarbell's alma mater, Allegheny College, examining the complex disconnect between Ms. Tarbell's role as an innovator and her view of the potential for women in general.

 

RELATED ARTICLESExplain
Women Inventors & Innovators – Map
PEOPLE
1904 - Ida Tarbell
1890s to 1920s - Progressive Era
Media
GIVING VOICE
1778- Molly Pitcher
1781- Mum Bett
1793 - Catharine Greene
1804 to 1806- Sacagawea
1811- Sophie Germain
1814- Dolley Madison
1830s- Sarah & Angelina Grimke (Sisters)
1842- Ada Lovelace
1849 - Harriet Tubman
1849- Elizabeth Blackwell
1853- Sojourner Truth
1868- Susan B. Anthony
1880s- Clara Barton
1880s- Nellie Bly
1890s - Marie Curie
1893- Henrietta Swan Leavitt
1900s- Isadora Duncan
1905- Bertha von Suttner
1905- Nettie Stevens
1907- Julia Morgan
1915- Hellen Keller
1916- Margaret Sanger
1919- Alice Hamilton, M.D.
1920- Carrie Chapman Catt
1920- Emmy Noether
1920's- Lillian Moller Gilbreth
1926 - Mary Parker Follett
1926- Grete Hermann
1928- Mother Teresa
1930s- Billie Holiday
1930s Eleanor Roosevelt
1931- Jane Addams Hull
1935- Irene Joliot-Curie
1936 - Inge Lehmann
1937- Amelia Earhart
1939- Lise Meitner
1942- Hedy Lamarr
1942- Margaret Mead
1943- Gertrude Blanch
1943- Rosa Parks
1944- Bletchley Park Women's Team
1946 - ENIAC Programmers
1947 - Indra Devi
1947 - Mária Telkes
1947- Gerty Cori
1950s- Barbara McClintock
1950s- Chien-Shiung Wu
1950s- Esther Lederberg
1950s- Jane Goodall
1952- Grace Murray Hopper
1952- Mary G. Ross
1953- Rosalind Franklin
1955- Ann Landers & Abigail Van Buren
1955- Del Martin & Phyllis Lyon
1957- Gertrude Belle Elion
1960s- Grace Slick
1960s- Joni Mitchell
1960s- Mildred Dresselhaus
1960s- Ursula Franklin
1962- Malvina Reynolds
1962- Rachel Carson
1962- Virginia Satir
1963- Betty Friedan
1963- Maria Goeppert Mayer
1964 - Stephanie Kwolek
1964- Dorothy “Crowfoot” Hodgkin
1965- Lilli Vincenz
1966 - Mary Douglas
1967- Erna Schneider Hoover
1967- Jocelyn Bell Burnell
1969- Katherine Johnson
1970s- Anna Halprin
1971 - Margaret Hamilton
1972- Barbara Gittings
1972- Gloria Steinem
1972- Yvonne Brill
1973- Adele Goldberg
1973- Billie Jean King
1973- Judith Estrin
1974 - Betty Ford
1979 - Lenore Walker
1980s - Joanna Macy
1980s- Angeles Arrien
1980s- Gopika Kannan
1981- Dianne Pennica
1982- Nancy Margulies
1983- Françoise Barré-Sinoussi
1984- Virginia Uribe
1985- Christa McAuliffe
1986- Oprah Winfrey
1986- Susan Solomon
1987- Lucy Suchman
1990s- Rita Colwell
1991- Joy Mountford
1994- Susan McGee Bailey
1996- Eve Ensler
2000 - Jennifer Lopez
2001- Lene Hau
2001- Sally Ride
2005 - Arianna Huffington
2006- Amy Jussel
2007- Claudia Welss
2007- Taylor Swift
2009- Margarita Quihuis
2010 - Beyoncé
2011- Jane McGonigal
2013 Sheryl Sandberg
2014- Malala Yousafzai
c. 370- Hypatia
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