There is no reason why women can not work in architecture or civil drafting. Anyone with the skills and interest for those professions should be able to do the work.
The Civil war changed public opinion about the capabilities of women. While the men were away at war, women took over the farms and plantations, as well as working in factory jobs that were thought to be inappropriate for women.
If working in war, they were allowed to sew uniforms and work as a nurse. If working at home, they would care for there children and work for the family.
The Constitution ignored native Americans; women and partially slaves because of the 3/5 provisions.
The answer depends on what the number of working women is being compared to:working women to working men?working women to non-working women?Also, by "working women" do you mean only paid work?
Groups still fighting for civil rights today are black people and women.
The answer will depend on what exactly you are trying to measure:working women in the US as a percentage of women in the US,women working in the US as a percentage of women working in the world,working women in the US as a percentage of worker in the US.There are probably other possibilities.
Working Women's Forum was created in 1978.
Actually, no they didn't. It wasn't because there hair was short, but because women were needed in the Confederacy and Union as nurses. There were very few "known" female fighters since back then civil rights wasn't as good as present day. Women during the Civil War was mostly involved in working in factories, which eventually showed them the outside world and the amendment giving them the right to vote.
working women are a great asset to any family
i think it is working women because they have a job and they have to also do the housework
Mainly women were nurses, but they also housed troops, spies, laundresses, vivandieres, sanitary and Christian commission workers, newspaper writers, and undercover soldiers. One ex-slave spied on Jefferson Davis by working for him as a maid! Women played a big role in the Civil War; if there weren't women nurses, many more men would have died.
Women typically were home makers before and after the American Civil War.