2. ENTERPRISING
Published in association with
The Schlesinger Library
Radcliffe Institute of Advanced Study
Harvard University
by
Women
250 years of american business
The University of North Carolina Press
Virginia G. Drach m a n
Chapel Hill and London
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3. C H A P T E R F I V E
“Go ahead, go ahead, go ahead. Let’s go.”
Katharine Graham
– Women Take Charge
When Linda Alvarado walks onto a construction site, those unfamiliar with the petite
S woman with long black hair may conclude she is a trespasser onto male terrain. But
Alvarado has firmly planted her feet precisely where she wants them to be. As the founder and presi-
dent of Denver-based Alvarado Construction, Inc., she has literally and symbolically made the con-
struction business “women’s business.” She does what men have traditionally done—construct
commercial and industrial buildings—and she does it well.
Under her ownership, Alvarado Construction has left its mark on the landscape of Denver,
building the Colorado Convention Center, the ten-story administration office center at the new Denver
International Airport, and Mile High Stadium, home of the Broncos, Denver’s professional football
Betty Friedan Gulf of Tonkin Arab-oil embargo President Nixon Sandra Day Communist President Clinton women Senators
publishes The Feminine Mystique Resolution • War Powers Act passes resigns presidency over O’Connor appointed to regimes in eastern Europe signs law abolishing Aid for and women Members of
• Assassination of President • Civil Rights Act • Marion W. Edelman founds Watergate Supreme Court collapse Dependent Children the House serve in the th
Kennedy • The Beatles visit U.S.A Children’s Defense Fund • Equal Credit • Physicians recognize AIDS as • Berlin Wall razed • Madeleine Albright becomes Congress
• President’s Commission on • Roe v. Wade upheld by Opportunity Act worldwide problem first woman Secretary of State
the Status of Women issues Supreme Court • Women’s Educational • MTV premiers
report • Billie Jean King defeats Equity Act
Bobby Riggs
4. team with over four hundred employees, an office in San Francisco, and multimillion-
Out of Bondage
dollar annual revenues, Alvarado has extended the reach of her construction company
throughout the western part of the country. Moreover, her pioneering ventures do not Polly Bemis
stop with construction; she is part-owner of the Colorado Rockies, making her the first
olly Bemis (–) overcame the cruel circum- In , when she married Bemis (in the picture at
woman entrepreneur ever to bid for and win ownership of a major league baseball
team. From buildings to baseball, Alvarado has expanded the boundaries of women’s P stances of her youth to become one of the founding right she wears her wedding dress), she gained the legal
entrepreneurial success, and is a symbol of the pioneer enterprising woman of today. settlers and landowners in the Pacific Northwest. Born Lalu rights to American citizenship and to independent
Her accomplishments have not gone unnoticed. She sits on the boards of several major Nathoy, to peasants in China, she labored in the fields with property ownership in her own name. Meanwhile, her
corporations and has received numerous awards. It is no accident that the Horatio Alger her parents. She was either sold or captured and shipped successful boarding house business enabled her to buy
Association of Distinguished Americans honored her in for her initiative, hard across the Pacific Ocean to California, like thousands of land along the Salmon River in Idaho. Through her
work, and commitment to excellence and enterprise. Chinese immigrant women tireless work, she created Polly Place, a self-sufficient
Just as Madam C. J. Walker and Hattie Carnegie incarnated the American dream for of her time. Bought by a ranch, where she harvested fruit, grew wheat, ground
African American and Jewish immigrant women at the turn of the twentieth century, saloon owner, who re- flour, and raised livestock. Tenacity, hard work, and a
Linda Alvarado embodies the American dream for the twenty-first century, one with named her Polly, she relentless drive for independence, combined with the help
room for a Hispanic woman at the highest echelons of commercial construction and entertained his customers— she received from Charles Bemis, enabled Polly Bemis
professional baseball. To be sure, women have run successful enterprises in tradition- men who worked in War- to become a successful entrepreneur on the Western
ally male businesses for centuries, but most of them, such as Rebecca Lukens and rens, a mining town near frontier. S
Martha Coston, inherited their businesses. In contrast, Alvarado relied on individual Portland, Oregon.
initiative, not inheritance, to found her construction company. Having achieved on her Though she was but
own in arenas traditionally closed to both women and Hispanics, she is reanimating four feet tall, Polly over-
the American dream to be one that, as she proudly proclaims, “is not based on race or came the obstacles of her
gender.” 1 bondage and became a
While Alvarado’s story reflects much of the progress in the history of women entre- successful businesswoman.
preneurs—the opening of traditionally male areas of business to women and the expan- She was befriended by
sion of business opportunities to new minority women—Martha Stewart epitomizes the Charles Bemis, a saloon
continuity that links women entrepreneurs of the past, such as Elizabeth Murray, Ellen patron helped her open a
Demorest, and Elizabeth Arden to those of the present. Her market is women; her busi- boarding house. Polly
ness is lifestyle, the modern expression of the enduring feminine role of domesticity. The plunged into the endless
roots of her business lie in her childhood home in Nutley, New Jersey, where she learned work of cooking, sewing, and washing for her boarders.
to cook and sew from her mother and to garden from her father. Like so many other At the same time, she earned a reputation as a woman of
women entrepreneurs, past and present, Stewart has built a business based on that with warmth and generosity.
which she is familiar: women’s traditional roles.2
But Stewart has taken domesticity to new heights. While Murray sold dry goods to
colonial women, Demorest sold dress designs in the Victorian era, and Arden sold cos- At the same time, transportation, first by canals and later by rail, opened up new
metics in the age of the New Woman, Stewart sells a lifestyle—tips, products, and creative markets, making it possible to move greater quantities of goods more quickly and reli-
(page 148) ideas that help the homemaker with every facet of domestic life today. No area of home ably around the country and enabling migration from New England farms to urban
Katharine Graham, pub- life is omitted, from cooking and sewing to gardening and entertaining. Nor is anyone at areas and westward to unsettled territories. The railroad boom in the s and s lit-
lisher of the Washington home left out, from babies to wedding couples to grandparents at family gatherings. As erally transformed the nation’s landscape and provided the fast, regular transportation
Post newspaper and founder and CEO of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc., Martha has turned domes- needed to distribute a high volume of goods beyond local markets. The railroads that
owner of the Washington ticity into very big business. were first built in the s and s supplemented water-borne transportation and be
Post Company
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5. Pinkham was not the first to market an herbal remedy to women in the Boston area.
“If the men had some of the energy of that . . . lady, . . .
In the s, one Mrs. Elizabeth Mott built a women’s-health business that combined
California would have been a prosperous state.” bathing, mild exercise, and herbal remedies with frank and practical medical advice. Her
book, Ladies’ Medical Oracle: or Mrs. Mott’s Advice to Young Females, Wives, and Mothers, provided
Juana Briones
women with information on gynecological problems in a language that they under-
stood, while her therapeutic system of European Vegetable Medicine and her Medicated
hough she never learned to read, Juana Briones (ca.
T –; seen at right in a drawing by Robert Gebing)
Shampoo Baths offered women a regimen of hydropathy and botanical therapeutics.22
A half-century later, Pinkham followed in this tradition of marketing women’s
was a shrewd businesswoman. In the s, as the first
health. She took the traditional female approach, relying on herbs, cooking, and healing
female householder in Yerba Buena, now San Francisco,
to carve a niche in the male-dominated field of medicine. Still, she adopted bold mar-
she took advantage of the commercial opportunities avail-
keting practices to build her business. Officially launched with the registration of her
able to her in this pioneer community. Since her husband
label and trademark with the United States Patent Office in , the Lydia E. Pinkham
drank rather than provided for his family, Briones’s com-
Medicine Company was a one-product enterprise built around Pinkham’s Vegetable
mercial endeavors enabled her to support herself and her
Compound. The business began modestly, with Pinkham preparing the medicine at
children. She raised cattle, sold produce, ran a tavern, and
home as she always had done. From her local suppliers of botanical roots and herbs, she
provided tailoring services—all valuable commodities and care to anyone who sought
purchased the ingredients—unicorn root, life root, black cohosh, pleurisy root, and fenu-
commercial services for the region’s settlers as well as her help, regardless of
greek seed—all of which were believed to alleviate gynecological problems from painful
sailors docked in San Francisco Bay. their financial
menstruation to the threat of miscarriage. In her kitchen, Pinkham measured,
In , Briones left her husband. For three hundred circumstances. She
soaked, and mixed the herbs, percolated them in cloth bags, added
dollars, she purchased La Purisma Concepcion, a rancho in sheltered sailors from
approximately percent alcohol as a preservative, and then strained the
what is now Palo Alto, in Santa Clara county (see map, impressment and cared
liquid into glass bottles. While the Pinkhams were active temperance
above right). While the previous owner had been unable for indigent Indian chil-
advocates, Pinkham included alcohol in her Vegetable Compound
to manage the land, Briones turned the impressive tract of dren, but demanded their
because she believed it was therapeutically useful as well as a nec-
, acres into a thriving rancho, where she raised cattle labor in return. Loved for her
essary preservative. In the midst of the growing temperance cru-
and horses and farmed the land. Moreover, in an age when charity, she was deeply admired
sade, even the influential Woman’s Christian Temperance Union
most of the Californios—as the original Hispanic inhabi- for her accomplishments. As one
agreed.
tants of Northern California were then known—lost their sailor explained: “If the men had some of the energy of
In addition to preparing the Vegetable Compound, Pinkham
land, Briones protected her land with patents from the that buxom, dark-faced lady, California would have been a
was a master at public relations (colorplate ). As a married woman
United States, which also enabled her to sell and lease her prosperous state, even before it was annexed.” 1 S
who survived childbirth five times, she understood firsthand
land at will.
women’s most intimate fears about their health. She encouraged
Briones blended kindness with a hard-driving will to 1
Florence M. Fava, Los Altos Hills: the Colorful Story. Woodside, Calif.:
her customers to write to her about their health problems, and dili-
succeed. She was a skilled midwife, who provided medical Gilbert Richards Publications, , pp. –.
gently answered their letters, responding frankly to intimate questions about
Ledgers from the Lydia E.
women’s physiology and health. Her message was simple and appealing: women held
Pinkham Company and
the key to their own health. All they needed to do was adopt a healthy regimen of mild
packaging for Pinkham’s
underestimated, for trains radically transformed the distribution of goods and markets. exercise, a nutritious diet, and hygiene; wear loose-fitting clothing; and take her Veg-
Vegetable Compound
They provided dependable year-round transportation unavailable on roads and rivers, etable Compound when needed.
and they opened new markets, linking previously unreachable parts of the country. For Pinkham’s advice connected her to the broad popular health movement of the day,
Lukens, the railroads enabled her to transport her iron plate faster and farther. Orders which sought alternatives to the harsh therapeutics and surgical practices of regular
came in from Boston, Baltimore, Albany, New York City, and even New Orleans. The rep- doctors. More specifically, her advice placed her squarely within the tradition of
utation of her iron mill expanded as she increasingly supplied the iron plate for locomo- nineteenth-century women’s health reform. Her message echoed the views of women’s
tives and steamboats. By the mid-s, Lukens had staked out her position at health advocates, including female doctors, nurses, educators, and social reformers, who
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