Dayton, Ohio has a well known history that stretches back for Centuries. Sometimes, you take for granted the history of where you were born, but if you take a time line and look back, its clear to see how important it was to reflect on the different stages of triumph and victory that certain historical places like the one that will be talked about in this paper, that is The Woman’s Club. (This historical site) The Woman’s Club has been around for decades, and has been a very important tool for the history of Dayton. The history of this Club includes the survival of the Dayton flood and also the Great Depression which was around the 1930’s. You may think that The Woman’s Club was just for women but they did help men in some ways too but rooming was specifically, mostly only for women during the time when they rented rooms for overnight stay. An interesting fact about The Woman’s Club is that they have a ghost in their basement. Inside the basement there is a bar and this is where the men came to get a beverage. Going up into the main hall which is the historical part of the building where there is a wooden structure that is so beautiful and has a classical design to it. The history still lives in this beautiful structured building today. If the first owner of this beautiful structured place was still alive (Robert Steele) today, he probably would be happy to know that his classical, unique structured building was built for good use today and that people still value the history of The Woman’s Club as though it is something to remember. Today, The Woman’s Club is very important to Dayton because of its’ long lasting history. The history of The Woman’s Club starts out as the beginning of a brand new home, Robert Steele’s home who...
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... building, “if the old house could speak, it would remember its windows boarded up during the flood of 1913. For these reasons, the house deserves to be used and admired and preserved” (Scweller no page local history). Today, The Woman’s Club is very important to Dayton because of its’ long lasting history. The history of The Woman’s Club is very important because they were the pioneers in introducing women’s rights to be seen in a good light and to not be invisible in Dayton, Ohio.
Works Cited
“The Dayton Woman’s Club/ A Brief History” no date (the local history room)
“Historical account” The Dayton Woman’s Club (Dayton Daily News) 22 6 1975, no page.
“The Dayton’s Woman’s Club Notes” 2000, The Dayton Woman’s Club Notes.
Scweller, Adele. “Touch of Grace on Ludlow Street. ” Dayton Daily News :
no page
Davidson, Ray. Personal Interview. 30. March. 2012
Sklar, Kathryn Kish. “Hull House in the 1890’s: A Community of Women Reformers.” In Women and Power in American History, 3rd edition, edited by Kathryn Kish Skylar and
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