Most married women and upper class single women did not work outside of the home in the 1800's. The women who did work were mostly employed as nurses, teachers, or maids.
these upper class women of the 1800's didn't really have jobs the just watched the miserable maids do all their work for them
Most Hungarians took with them the skills or jobs that they had in the motherland. Hungarian Men, Women, and Children also worked in factories
because women wouldn't get wouldn't be able to get jobs
Elizabeth Blackwell's first jobs were in the United States because she was born in Bristol, England, in the 1800's. Back then, women were not treated the same as men.
they had farming jobs or jobs that could get them further in with what they liked.
Passing wind
The differences in education and employment opportunities for women in the early 1800's were women weren't allowed to continue school after grammar school. If they wished, they had to do so privately because women were considered feeble minded back then. Employing women for jobs in the early 1800's was a rare opportunity until the 1820s when farm girls were needed.
Women could do several things in the 1800's. Some women practiced nursing, teaching, seamstress, and others were just mothers and housewives.
Women had the jobs of: A nurse A mother House wives...
Most women learned languages and basic math in school in the 1800's.
women
They cut cane,