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Creator: | Milwaukee Handicraft Project |
Title: | A block-print wall hanging from the Milwaukee Handicraft Project |
Date: | 1935-1941 |
Description: | The Milwaukee Handicraft Project (MHP) began in 1935 when Harriet Clinton, head of the Women's Division of Wisconsin's WPA, saw a need to put female head-of-householders to work. Clinton hired art professor Elsa Ulbricht to lead the project which put women to work producing functional decorative arts for institutions like the Milwaukee Public Schools. The MHP was particularly unique for its willingness to hire African Americans--something most WPA projects would not--and the offices were soon swarmed with eager workers. Although some tensions surfaced between white and black workers, the overall project proved successful. This block-print wall hanging is an example of the attractive and useful work created by MHP workers. The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata. |
Types: | Relief prints |
Subjects: | Social integration--Wisconsin--Milwaukee | Civil Rights--Wisconsin--Milwaukee--History | African Americans--Civil rights--Wisconsin--Milwaukee--History | Discrimination in employment--Wisconsin--Milwaukee | United States. Works Progress Administration | Handicraft--Wisconsin--Milwaukee | Block printing--Wisconsin--Milwaukee | Milwaukee (Wis.) | Milwaukee County (Wis.) |
Collection: | Turning Points in Wisconsin History |
Institution: | Wisconsin Historical Society |
Contributors: | Wisconsin Historical Society |
Online Publisher: | [Madison, Wis.] : Wisconsin Historical Society |
Rights and Usage: | Milwaukee Handicraft Project. Wisconsin Historical Museum. Online facsimile at: http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/turningpoints/search.asp?id=1497 |
Related Materials: | Forms part of the Turning points collection (Wisconsin Historical Society) |
Persistent Link to Item: | http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/turningpoints/search.asp?id=1497 |