Mrs. Russell Sage: Women's Activism and Philanthropy in Gilded Age and Progressive Era America

Author:   Ruth Crocker
Publisher:   Indiana University Press
ISBN:  

9780253220455


Pages:   525
Publication Date:   30 July 2008
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Mrs. Russell Sage: Women's Activism and Philanthropy in Gilded Age and Progressive Era America


Overview

This is the biography of a ruling-class woman who became a major American philanthropist. The wife of robber-baron Russell Sage (partner of Jay Gould) and in her husband's shadow for 37 years, Olivia Sage took on the mantle of active, reforming womanhood in New York voluntary associations. When Russell Sage died in 1906, he left her a vast fortune. Already in her 70s, she took the money and put it to her own uses. An advocate for the rights of women and the responsibilities of wealth, for moral reform and material benefit, Sage used the money to fund a wide spectrum of progressive reforms that had a lasting impact on American life, including her most significant philanthropy, the Russell Sage Foundation.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ruth Crocker
Publisher:   Indiana University Press
Imprint:   Indiana University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.40cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.880kg
ISBN:  

9780253220455


ISBN 10:   0253220459
Pages:   525
Publication Date:   30 July 2008
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments A Note on Sources Introduction Part I. A Liminal Place: 1828-1869 1. Slocums, Jermains, Piersons-and a Sage 2. Distinctly a class privilege : Troy Female Seminary, 1846-1847 3. I do enjoy my independence : 1847-1858 4. A Bankruptcy, Three Funerals, and a Wedding: 1858-1869 Part II. Becoming Mrs. Russell Sage: 1869-1906 5. The Work of Benevolence? Mrs. Russell Sage, the Carlisle School, and Indian Reform 6. I live for that work : Negotiating Identities at the New-York Woman's Hospital 7. Some aggressive work : The Emma Willard Association and Educated Womanhood, 1891-1898 8. Converted! Parlor Suffrage and After 9. Wiping her tears with the flag : Mrs. Russell Sage, Patriot, 1897-1906 Part III. Just beginning to live : 1906-1918 10. A kind of old age freedom 11. Inventing the Russell Sage Foundation: 1907 12. Women and education-there is the key 13. Nothing more for men's colleges : E. Lilian Todd and the Origins of Russell Sage College 14. Splendid donation 15. Send what Miss Todd thinks best Conclusion Abbreviations Notes Select Bibliography Index

Reviews

Through diligent research, primarily in the archives of the Russell Sage Foundation and the Emma Willard School, Crocker has recovered the life of this remarkable woman who moved from genteel poverty to great wealth, all the while maintaining a sense of responsible benevolence... This book breaks new ground... Choice Historians, scholars of philanthropy, and biographers will all profit from Mrs. Russell Sage. Indeed, this book reminds us that the life of an individual has the power to singularly elucidate the past. Journal of American History


Through diligent research,... Crocker has recovered the life of this remarkable woman who moved from gentile poverty to great wealth, all the while maintaining a sense of responsible benevolence... This book breaks new ground... Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. -Choice Historians, scholars of philanthropy, and biographers will all profit from [this book]. Indeed, [it] reminds us that the life of an individual has the power to singularly elucidate the past. -Journal of American History Crocker has mined archives and the literature of social welfare... to produce a readable and extensive... story of a remarkable woman and the role she played in the swirling cross-currents of a turbulent era in American history. -Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly ... a fascinating case study on the elusive subject of philanthropic motivation, highlighting a perceived need to give respectability to rapidly acquired wealth. Its continuous theme is the use of philanthropy as a form of activism and a central thesis the idea that 'spending is a form of speaking'. Yet it presents the double-edged sword that when philanthropists are also activists their own beliefs and prejudices may be at work. And it is perhaps a cautionary tale for modern philanthropists demonstrating that the political nature of giving means that they cannot assume that their money will speak for them. -Philanthropy UK Ruth R. Crocker has done a wonderful job in reconstructing the life of Olivia Sage, the widow of the niggardly timber baron Russell Sage, who used her inheritance to create the first social-science and social-welfare foundation, the Russell Sage Foundation, in 1907. Crocker... reminds us that while foundation philanthropy was almost entirely a male domain, there were significant female figures in what was also the first era of women's professionalization in the United States. I have worked in the foundation's records, and until I read this book in manuscript, I did not believe there was enough information for a biography. Crocker has done a stunning job of proving me wrong. -Stanley N. Katz, The Chronicle Review Crocker's work is a welcome addition to the growing hisstorical literature on gender and philanthropy... In depicting Sage as a socially prominent New York matron and a philanthropist, Crocker's work moves scholars closer to a deeper and broader understanding of the role that wealthy women played in women's activism in the United States, particularly their impact on welfare policies. -Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Ruth Crocker's wonderfully researched biography adds immeasurably to our understanding of growing scholarly work on oft-neglected elites during the Progressive era. Indeed her work can serve as a model to examine others who formed what Crocker labeled as 'the upstairs of the woman's movement' (p.312). -H-SHGAPE Well-written and thoroughly researched, this biography is a welcome addition to the history of women and philanthropy. -American Historical Review


Author Information

Ruth Crocker is Professor of History and Director of the Women's Studies Program at Auburn University and author of Social Work and Social Order: The Settlement Movement in Two Industrial Cities, 1889–1930. She lives in Auburn, Alabama.

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