|
Portland YWCA Programs & Outreach Girl Reserves |
Programs: Girl Reserves & ClubsResearch by Jodelle Mistretta and Melanie Wright
|
![]() |
|
Business
Girls' Conference, c. 1930
|
The most popular and successful YWCA club program was the Girl Reserves, begun in 1918 to foster patriotic war work. After the war, the Reserves grew exponentially, with thousands of Portland junior high and high school girls joining in the 1920s and 1930s. The club system, including the Reserves, was the main way in which the YWCA accommodated the needs of women and girls of color. African-American, Japanese, and Chinese girls organized themselves into Reserves, often finding a sponsor among women in their churches or schools to guide and encourage them.
![]() |
| Y-Teens Spring Formal, 1950s |
Adult women's clubs were less systematic and rather more wide-ranging than programs for youth. Women sought outlets ranging from bridge and sewing to travel, from business and professional networking to religious study, from cultural enrichment to world missions. Today, the YWCA offers space for female networking in Portland through its Leadership Luncheon and Feminine Finance programs, striving to keep a wide range of dynamic women in the city linked and coordinated in their professional and volunteer work.
![]()
1. "Best Big Sister in the World" is a phrase printed on a fundraising poster, visible in a photograph dated 1919. See Portland YWCA Archives, photograph collection, box 1, file AD-2-2. On the "restlessness" of YWCA girls, see Young Adult Department Committee Minutes, 10 February 1947, Portland YWCA Archives, Portland, Oregon.
Back to Text
![]()
| YWCA
Today | African-American Women
| Asian-American Women |
| World War II | Religion,
Race, & Reform | Buildings
| Camping |
![]()
|
Introduction
|
Document List |
African-American Women |
| Documents Projects and Archives | Teacher's Corner | Scholar's Edition | Full-Text Sources | About Us | Contact Us |
