Women Owned Businesses
Women have been midwives, healers, dowsers, photographers, and writers. Some have started businesses for which they hired other laborers such as knitters and dressmakers. Some women took in ironing, washing, or boarders. Women have also owned and managed restaurants throughout the twentieth century. See the blurbs below to learn a little more about some of the businesses that women owned in the region and the business women who owned them.
Basket Makering:
“I couldn’t remember how old I was, I was little. Very little and my grandmother gave me all the gauges and the material and everything and said, ‘Now you sit and you work, you learn how to make baskets, because sometime when you marry and have a family, its gonna come in handy, and believe me, it did.” –Madeline Tomer Shay (NA2383)
If you find this topic interesting, you may want to look at the finding aids for NAFOH MF 164, the Maine Pack Basket Makers Collection, which can be found on the research occupational folklore topic page.
Dowsing:
Dowsing, or water witching, is a traditional way to find a good place to dig a well. People who are known for having the ability to locate water are hired to find the best site. The photos below show dowsers demonstrating techniques.
- P00211: Mrs. J. Spurgeon Allaby, holding a water witching forked stick, demonstrating techniques of dowsing to find water. Passekeag, New Brunswick, July 1963.
- P00213: Mrs. J. Spurgeon Allaby. Passekeag, New Brunswick, July 1963.
- P05993: Margaret Forbes “programming” her dowsing/divining rods which are brass bracing rods, bent with copper tubing as handles.
- P01008: Marie Megquier, who said she did water witching for fun and not a fee.
- P01009: Marie Megquier.
- P01010: Marie Megquier.
“I spent one whole day water witching, and when I got home I was tired than I’ve ever been in my life. I’d had all the magic drained out of me.” -Sylvia Wichenback
Lobstering:
Maine Guide:
Opera Singing:
Whitewater Rafting:
![P06357 Joy Neily, whitewater guide in the rear of the raft, guides her group through the cribworks on the West Branch of the Penobscot. Her sister, Sandy Neily, is co-owner of Eastern Expeditions (printed on side of raft) a whitewater rafting company in Greenville. (P6357)](https://new.umaine.edu/folklife/wp-content/uploads/sites/312/2010/02/P6357-300x185.jpg)
Joy Neily, whitewater guide. Neily, in the rear of the raft, guides her group through the cribworks on the West Branch of the Penobscot. Her sister, Sandy Neily, was co-owner of Eastern Expeditions (printed on side of raft) a whitewater rafting company in Greenville. Written on back of the photo: “Joy Neily August 1982 first chute of the cribwork on the west branch of the Penobscot first commercial run forgot helmets so she gave hers to woman 2nd from front. Joy had fallen out in staircase rapids after gorge.”
Additional reading:
Bird, Caroline, Enterprising Women, (New York: Norton, 1976)
Dexter, Elisabeth Williams Anthony, Colonial Women of Affairs: Women in Business and the Professions in America before 1776, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1931).
Stage, Sarah, Female Complaints: Lydia Pinkham and the business of women’s medicine, (New York: Norton, 1979).