|
The History of BPW IS the History of Working Women
Celebrate Women's History Month in March
History Of Business and Professional
Women/USA
The Foundation of a Legacy

BPW 1922: Executive
Committee Meeting in Kansas City, Missouri
While mobilizing for World War I, the U.S.
Government recognized the need for a cohesive group to
coordinate identification of women's available skills and
experience. A Women's War Council, financed through a
federal grant, was established by the War Department to
organize the resources of professional women. The National
Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs was
founded on July 15, 1919.
Throughout the years, three major issues
shaped BPW's legislative agenda:
-
elimination of sex discrimination in
employment
-
the principle of equal pay
-
the need for a comprehensive equal rights
amendment
1920s
"BPW Goodwill Tour" of Europe initiated the
founding of the International BPW Federation. With the
theme, "Better Business Women for a Better Business
World," National Business Women's Week was established to
celebrate and dramatize the contribution of women to the
country.
|

Women Celebrate the Passage of the 19th
Amendment
granting them the right to vote: Aug 26, 1920.
|
1930s
BPW worked to prohibit legislation or
directives denying jobs to married women. BPW lobbied
successfully to legislatively end the legal practice of
workplace preference for unmarried persons and, in the case
of married persons, preference for males.
|
|

National Business Women's Week storefront
display on the 1930s.
|
|
1940s
At the advent of World War II, BPW
developed a classification system for women with
specialized skills critical to the effort and supported
the formation of women's branches of the Armed Forces.
While wage discrimination has existed in the U.S. since
women and minorities first entered the paid workforce, its
prevalence was not felt until the massive influx of women
sought work during World War II. Immediately following the
war, the
Women's Pay Act of 1945
- the first ever legislation to require equal pay - was
introduced in the U.S. Congress. It would take another 18
years before an equal pay bill would make it to the
President's desk to be signed into law.
|
|
1950s
The national executive office relocated
from New York to Washington, as BPW became more active in
legislative issues.
The BPW Foundation was incorporated in
1956, creating a branch to provide research information,
career development programs, and scholarships to
disadvantaged women, workshops and other training
opportunities.
The Marguerite Rawalt Resource Center
opened, becoming a major resource on the history of women
and women in the workplace.
|

Dr. Minne Maffett, 1939/44 BPW President
shares mess with the Station Complement WAC Detachment at
Camp Crowder, Missouri. |
|

President John F. Kennedy signs the 1963
Equal Pay Act into law as 1962/63 BPW president Dr. Minnie
Miles watches. Dr. Miles received the first pen from the
signing. |
1960s
The establishment of "Status of Women"
commissions in the U.S. in 1963 was due largely to BPW
efforts. President Kennedy recognized BPW's leading role in
securing passage of the Equal Pay Act by giving BPW's
National President the first pen he used when signing the
Act into law.
Virginia Allan Young initiated the "Young
Careerist" Program to develop the business and presentation
skills of young women between 25-35 years of age.
The first National Legislative Conference,
held in 1963 in D.C., later developed into BPW's current
Policy & Action Conference, where members lobby Congress and
the Administration on BPW's legislative issues. |
|
1970s
BPW intensified efforts to eliminate
discrimination based on sex and marital status in credit,
capital, and insurance practices. A legislative strategy
was developed to achieve the Congressional votes needed
and the BPW Political Action Committee (BPW/PAC) was
formed in 1979 to endorse federal candidates.
|

Women march in Washington supporting
ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, which BPW first
formally endorsed on
July 17, 1937. |
|

1979/80 BPW President Julie K. Arri reports
to
President Jimmy Carter on the findings of the BPW
commissioned
Lou Harris poll of unratified ERA states. |
1980s
BPW tackled "comparable worth" by calling for
newspapers to stop the occupational segregation in
classified ads (clustering of women in a few restricted
occupations of
low-paying, dead-end jobs). Numerous state and municipal
governments revamped their pay scales, recognizing
dissimilar jobs may not be identical, but may be comprised
of tasks, educational requirements, experience and other
characteristics that are equivalent or comparable. In 1986,
San Francisco became the first in the nation to approve a
pay equity referendum, implementing $34 million in increases
for employees in female and minority-dominated jobs.
|
The
"Red Purse Campaign"
of 1988 drew national attention to wage disparity. Using
the "BPW" letters to represent
Better
Pay
for
Women,
BPW capitalized on the national media attention focused on
the red purse.
Continuing with BPW's focus on workplace
issues, BPW lobbied Congress for passage of the Family and
Medical Leave Act. After nearly a decade, the FMLA passes
in 1993.
At the Hartford, Connecticut Convention in
1985, BPW's Legislative Platform expanded to include the
Equal Rights Amendment Preamble. Also at this Convention,
BPW initiated the $2.65 million campaign to renovate the
national headquarters at 2012 Massachusetts Avenue
("Project 2012").
|

To underscore the economic inequity women
face in their jobs
BPW launched its Red Purse Campaign with the theme
"Better
Pay
for
Women"
in 1987. |
|
1990s
Discussions on "comparable worth" are
expanded to include enforcement and strengthening of
existing Equal Pay legislation. The Pay Equity Employment
Act of 1994, followed by the Equal Pay Act (introduced in
1994) and the Paycheck Fairness Act (introduced in 1997)
became BPW's focus legislation through the '90s.
Workplace equity issues including sexual
harassment, the glass ceiling, health care reform,
dependent care, tort reform, increasing the minimum wage,
lifetime economic security and pay equity continued to be
BPW's targeted issues. Then-Secretary of Labor, Elizabeth
Dole, and First Lady Barbara Bush addressed BPW's members
at the White House Briefing during the 1990 "Lobby Day"
event.
At the Minneapolis, Minnesota 1992
Convention, BPW/PAC announced the first-ever endorsement
of a presidential ticket by endorsing Clinton-Gore. BPW's
grassroots membership worked as never before in GOTV (Get
Out The Vote!) campaigns. From voter education forums,
working in candidate campaigns, fundraising for candidates
and registering women to vote, 1992 proved to be the "Year
of the Woman," electing a record 4 women to the U.S.
Senate and an unprecedented 24 women to the House. This
political activism continued to the 1996 elections where
BPW joined other women's groups endorsing the Women's Vote
Project.
BPW celebrated its 75th anniversary at the
1994 St. Louis, Missouri Convention with Gloria Steinem as
the keynote speaker. Also in October 1994, the syndicated
cartoon, "Cathy," celebrated National Business Women's
Week, one of BPW's Signature Events.
BPW battles attacks on affirmation action
throughout the nation: 1996 in California, 1998 in
Washington, and 1999 in Florida.
Social Security Reform became a
front-burner issue for BPW in 1999 and continues to be an
issue BPW follows closely. The wage gap contributes to a
$200,000 loss in social security benefits to the average
woman.
|
|
2000s
BPW expanded its '90s "Making Workplaces
Work" initiative to the "Working Family Values" Program,
and more recently, the theme of "Workplace Equity &
Work-life Balance," with education and awareness, focusing
on pay equity, dependent care, workplace flexibility, and
social security reform. BPW initiated "The Women & Social
Security Summit" in February 2001 and coalesced with the
National Council of Women's Organizations, OWL, National
Council of Negro Women and American Association of
University Women, to focus on one specific issue during
our annual "Lobby Day"-keeping social security a
guaranteed part of retirement.
BPW continues to be branded as the premiere
grassroots organization addressing the wage gap, with most
of our Local Organizations participating in events to
focus on Equal Pay Day, usually the 2nd Tuesday of April.
In 2002, the "Take the Pay Equity Pledge" Campaign asked
candidates for Congress to sign a pledge to support the
Paycheck Fairness Act. As pledge cards came in, BPW's
Local Organizations held press conferences and distributed
press releases on those candidates friendly to BPW's focus
issue-Pay Equity.
|
|
 |