Financial History Issue 122 (Summer 2017) | Page 24

Illustration of an elegantly dressed woman examining a length of ticker tape to check on her stock prices, Vogue magazine, 1929. 22    FINANCIAL HISTORY  |  Summer 2017  | www.MoAF.org in better paying, professional positions as office managers, librarians, statisticians and advertising agents. One estimate, from 1914, had “about 200 women in the Financial District filling posts of these kinds.” Working behind the scenes, they lacked the visibility and glamour of stock- brokers, but earned good money, with annual salaries of $2,000 or more. The New York Times profiled one such woman, the college-educated Beatrice Carr, who was the manager of the financial statis- tics and mailing departments at the invest- ment house of Fisk and Robinson. Carr had risen during eight years on Wall Street from a $14-a-week position as an assistant librarian to her current post. She believed that new opportunities were opening up in financial firms for college educated women, and she encouraged such women to “turn to Wall Street.” Her optimism was some- what tempered by the fact that, however well women like her were paid, men were paid from 30-50% more “for the same work.” She hoped that this disparity, which she characterized as “a relic of barbarism,” would soon disappear. Despite Carr’s optimism, Wall Street did not rush to create workplace equal- ity. Some brokerage firms, however, did begin establishing women’s departments “to capitalize on the investment needs of women, some of whom were both inde- pendent and well-heeled.” Women were frequently hired to staff those depart- ments, creating new opportunities for careers in finance. The first woman to manage a wom- en’s department at a brokerage house was Alice Carpenter, a Boston native and Smith graduate who was active in the suf- frage movement and settlement work. She managed her own substantial inheritance so effectively that in 1914, William P. Bonbright and Company, an international bond house, asked her to organize a wom- en’s department at their New York Office. Bonbright believed “that probably women would prefer to deal with other women in making their investments, that they possibly considered the investment of money a confidential matter and that they would talk more freely with a woman than with a man.” So successful was this endeavor that Bonbright opened another women’s department in Boston in 1916, under the direction of Margaret Stack- pole, a Radcliffe graduate with coursework in Economics and Psychology. Bonbright