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             During
            the first decade or so of the Silas Bronson Library’s history, all of the employees
            were men. This was true at most libraries. For most of the 1800s, middle class
            women were expected to stay at home, caring for their families and assisting
            their husbands or fathers in their careers. Poorer women had no choice but to
            work outside the home, typically as a domestic servant living in the household
            of their employer with only one partial day off per week.  
            Things
            began to change quickly during the 1870s. Unskilled work for women was widely
            available in the factories, and career opportunities for skilled workers began
            opening up for women. By the end of the century, women outnumbered men working
            as typists and stenographers, as well as nurses and teachers. 
            Women
            began working in libraries in large numbers during the 1870s. In 1877, the
            Boston Public Library reported in The
            Library Journal that two-thirds of its librarians were women and praised
            them for their ability to “soften our atmosphere, they lighten our labour, they
            are equal to our work, and for the money they cost…they are infinitely better
            than equivalent salaries will produce of [men].” Salaries were notoriously low
            for all librarians, men and women. William F. Poole, who had helped created the
            Silas Bronson Library’s first collection and later ran the Chicago Public
            Library, was a firm believer in women’s ability to do library work just as well
            as any man, and argued that they should be paid the same as men. 
            By
            1888, the only men working at the Silas Bronson Library appear to have been
            Homer F. Bassett, the Head Librarian, and the janitor, Walter Lawson, who later
            left to become a wood carver at Waterbury Clock Company. The first woman to
            join the library’s Board of Agents, the governing body for the library, was
            Alice E. Kingsbury in 1924. For the first half of the 20th century,
            the library staff was mostly women and the library board was mostly men. 
            The
            first women known to have worked at the Silas Bronson Library were Emma
            Angeanett Otis and Ellen Frances “Nellie” Knowles in 1883. Both were temporary
            hires, experts in the field of cataloguing, brought in from the Boston
            Athenaeum Library to supervise the creation of a catalogue for the Silas
            Bronson Library. Otis supervised the creation of an index of the library’s
            fiction collection—a 74-page book listing every title in the library’s
            collection. Knowles oversaw the creation of Waterbury’s first card catalogue.
            At the Boston Library, Otis and Knowles had assisted Charles Ammi Cutter,
            inventor of a system of classification which laid the groundwork for the
            Library of Congress classification system. The Silas Bronson Library used
            Cutter’s system for their card catalogue, and Melvil Dewey’s system for
            arranging the books on the shelves.  
              
            Page 3 of the Silas Bronson Library catalogue, 1870 
             
            The
            first women to hold permanent positions at the library were also hired
            in 1883.
            Helen Sperry and Mary C. Langdon were initially hired to help with the
            cataloguing of the library’s books, preparing the cards and a
            finding-list
            publication on the library’s typewriter, and stayed on as librarian
            assistants.
            Sperry would dedicate much of her life to the Silas Bronson Library,
            becoming the library's first female Head Librarian in 1902.  
            Two
            more women, Cora Laird and Nellie Shanahan, were hired in 1884 as assistants.
            Shanahan also worked briefly as a “janitress” (female janitor) for the library.
            Laird worked at the library from 1884 until about a year before her death in
            1903. She was 19 when she started at the library, the daughter of Waterbury’s
            police chief, William Laird, and Maria (Peck) Laird. She married Dayton Lasher
            in 1895, but was still frequently referred to by her maiden name, perhaps
            because she had been working at the library for ten years prior to her
            marriage. 
            Alice
            May Gibby was hired in 1887, at the age of 19 or 20. She was tasked with the
            tedious job of removing old numbers from the spines of books and writing new
            numbers in their place. It took a little over a year to complete the job, after
            which she moved to Brooklyn, NY for several years. She returned to the Silas
            Bronson in 1893 as a library assistant, eventually becoming the Chief of the
            Loan Department (circulation). Gibby married late in life, when she was in her
            early 50s, and retired from her work at the library at that time. 
            Jennie
            P. Peck was hired as a cataloger in 1895 and was the editor of the library’s
            monthly Bulletin. During the early 1900s, she was the Treasurer of the
            Connecticut Library Association. Peck worked at the library until 1907. 
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