- DoHistory Online Exhibit
- Martha Ballard
- Lady Detectives Post
- Manuscript Women's Letters and Diaries
- American Antiquarian Society, 1750-1950
- National Museum of Women in the Arts
- One Colonial Woman's World | The Life and Writings of Mehetabel Chandler Coit
- 1673-1758, Roxbury MA
- Pinterest - To see true board you must be signed in.
- Textile Research Post
- What Was Home Economics? From Domesticity to Modernity Online Exhibition
- Women and the World of Dime Novels Online Exhibition
- Women's Tasks Gallery
- Google Cultural Institute
- Women Working, 1800-1930 Online Exhibit
- Harvard University
- Books and Pamphelets
- Diaries and Memoirs
- Institutional Records
- Key Organizations
- Magazines
- Manuscripts
- Photographs
- Trade Catalogs
- Notable People
- Related Links
- Teacher Resources
- Timeline
- Genius of Marie Curie
- PBS.
- Rangoli Sand Painting
- ExplOratorium.
- See under DropMark Notebook (Link Above)
- "Part III: Households: Tracing Immigrant Women and Their Household Possessions in 19th-Century San Francisco" (PDF)
- Anthropological Studies Center, Sonoma State University.
Bold indicates books out of print.
Italicized indicates online/downloadable copy.
- The Age of Homespun: Objects and Stories in the Creation of an American Myth
- Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, First Vintage Books, 2002.
- The Eighteenth-Century Woman
- Olivier Bernier, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1982.
- Instruction Book on Ring Spinning
- Francis L. Lincoln, Herald Printing Company, 1885.
- Mere Equals: The Paradox of Educated Women in the Early American Republic
- Lucia McMahon, Cornell University Press, 2012.
- Mind Amongst the Spindles: A Miscellany, Wholly Composed by the Factory Girls, Selected from the Lowell Offering
- Harriet Martineau, Jordan, Swift & Wiley, 1845.
- Needlework in America: History, Designs, and Techniques
- Virginia C. Bath, Studio, 1979.
- No Idle Hands: The Social History of American Knitting
- Anne Macdonald, Ballantine Books, 1990.
- Textiles for Commercial, Industrial, and Domestic Arts Schools; also Adapted to those Engaged in Wholesale and Retail Dry Goods, Wool, Cotton, and Dressmaker's Trades
- William H. Dooley, Principal Lowell Industrial School, 1910-1914.
- Women's Work: The First 20,000 Years - Women, Cloth, and Society in Early Times
- Elizabeth Wayland Barber, W.W. Norton & Company, 1995.
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