c.2021, Norton
$27.95
348 pages
Youโve had a lot on your plate this past year.
Lockdowns, virtual classes, and stay-at-home orders werenโt all bad, though; the hunker-down was an opportunity for a new hobby. Knitting busied your fingers. Reading engaged your mind. Newly discovered baking skills literally added to your plate and, as in โThe Secret History of Home Economicsโ by Danielle Dreilinger, Great-Grandma would be proud.
Our nation wasnโt but a few decades old when it became very clear that some citizens were lacking resources, to the point of โdisadvantage.โ Women, for example, were generally solely in charge of the home and everything about it, and that often made for a hard life. By the 1870s, though, help was coming: Ellen Swallow, a โcountry girlโ with an astounding drive to learn insisted on studying the growing new field of science. She then made it her lifeโs work to use what sheโd learned to better the lives of women.
Margaret Murray Washington saw the same need, but in a different way: born just before the Civil War ended, she knew that Black women likely already possessed housekeeping skills and needed no further instruction there. Washington, wife of Booker T., instead pushed for the creation of โdomestic scienceโ classes at Tuskegee, believing that a formal degree would ensure racial equality.
The idea of domestic science (or โhome economics,โ as it was later called) was not without detractors but ultimately, emphasis was placed on science and economics. Women learned efficiency in daily chores, but they also learned ways to save money and fix everything from clothing to appliances, not to mention food safety, gardening, sanitizing and healthy cooking. Professional home economists reached out to women to enhance communities. Women reached out to county professionals for tips during peacetime and war.
By the 1970s, feminism swept across the country and home ec โseemed practically to break loose from a corset.โ It became clear that such things werenโt just for women; still, by the end of the decade, home ec was becoming more quaint than quintessential.
Says Dreilinger, itโs high time we bring it back.
Thereโs one important thing youโll fully understand after youโve read โThe Secret History of Home Economicsโ: our foremothers were not to be trifled with. They were watchful, highly desirous of education, progressive, ingenious and humble about their ignorance. In short, as author Danielle Dreilinger shows, Great-Grandma was fierce.
Home ec, as it turns out, wasnโt originally just the homey, cooking-sewing-baby-care classes like those you had in high school. Adult women, both professionals and everyday housewives, fought hard to gain opportunities for all homemakers and to turn the job into one with esteem. Those warriors came from surprising corners to do that, and how they did it is a story complete with embedded racism, Eleanor Roosevelt, two women who were โessentially married to each other,โ and practice-babies.
Readers of womenโs history will love this book, as will general historians, feminists and anyone with an interest in domestic arts. Thereโs still work to do, so find โThe Secret History of Home Economicsโ and dish it up.

