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Expect Great Things!: How the Katharine Gibbs School Revolutionized American Workplace for Women
Expect Great Things!: How the Katharine Gibbs School Revolutionized American Workplace for Women

Expect Great Things!: How the Katharine Gibbs School Revolutionized American Workplace for Women in Bloomington, MN

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A fun and fascinating social history of the famed Katharine Gibbs School, which from the 1910s to the 1960s, trained women for executive secretary positions but surreptitiously was instilling the self-confidence and strategic know-how necessary for them to claim equality, power, and authority in the wider world.
It’s a safe bet that most of the secretaries on the TV series
Mad Men
would have attended the Katharine Gibbs School in New York City. The iconic institution was in its heyday in the 1950 and '60s synonymous with supplying secretaries—always properly attired in heels, ladylike hats, and white gloves—to male executives. In
Expect Great Things!
Vanda Krefft turns the notion of a “Gibbs girl” on its head, showing us that while the school was getting women who could type 90 words per minute
into
the C-suite, its more subversive mission was to get them
out of
the secretarial pool to assume positions of power on the other side of the desk. And Gibbs graduates did just that, tackling the sexism of the era and paving the way for 21st-century women to succeed in any profession.
Katharine Gibbs was one her own success stories. She started her school when, as a 46-year-old widow, she was left near-broke with two young sons. The school taught typing and stenography but Gibbs also hired accomplished professors from elite colleges to teach academic subjects—it was a well-rounded education that produced early feminists ready to tackle the sexism of their era. "Expect great things!" was her motto and her philosophy. Within a decade she’d opened schools in three elegant locations. With nostalgic period photographs throughout,
takes us back to Katie Gibbs’s life and tells the stories of the women she influenced. We meet Gibbs graduates who worked for the Walt Disney, Marilyn Monroe, and Robert F. Kennedy. Others forged pathfinding roles as an Emmy-winning television star, a women’s rights advisor to four U.S. presidents, a writer of
Wonder Woman
comic books, the head of the Women’s Marines, a best-selling young adult author, and a U.S. Ambassador.
For readers of
The Barbizon
and
Come Fly the World
,
reveals the seismic impact the Katharine Gibbs school had on the American workplace—and on women’s opportunities today.
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