Berks

Berkshire Conference of Women Historians

  • About
    • Overview
    • Executive Administrator Position
    • Leadership
    • History
    • Timeline
    • Bylaws
    • Privacy Policy
  • News
    • In Memoriam: Sandra Trudgen Dawson
    • 2024 Statement on Campus Protests
    • 2023 Statement on Racism and the Berks
    • 2023 Statement to MoAR
    • 2022 Berks AHA Grant
    • 2021 Statement on Anti-Asian Hate Crimes
    • 2021 Statement on Sedition
    • 2020 Statement on “patriotic history and diversity”
  • Prizes
    • 2022 Prize Winners
    • Book Prize Winners
    • Article Prize Winners
  • Little Berks
    • 2025 Little Berks
    • Past Annual Meetings
    • Future Annual Meetings
  • Big Berks
    • 2026 Big Berks
    • Past Big Berks
  • Join
  • Donate
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Little Berks / Past Annual Meetings / Little Berks 2021

Little Berks 2021

ARCHIVE

Virtual Conference, 2021Corner of a keyboard with Internet on the enter key

Saturday, October 23, 2021

The Berkshire Conference of Women Historians held its annual business meeting, better known as the Little Berks, online this year. We welcomed all members of the Berks to attend this virtual conference.

Theme: “Inclusive Institution Building & Legacy Making”

Over the past few years, various institutions that range from governmental to educational have emphasized the need for inclusivity on every level. Yet, the organizations remain the same, homogenous with regard to race, gender, and physical ability. As the nation’s premier women’s history organization, The Little Berks hopes to interrogate inclusivity and also offer up call-to-actions about how to best achieve inclusive excellence. We will have the following thought leaders and renowned academics serve on roundtables and panels to help us to chart an improved pathway towards “inclusive institution building and legacy making,” this year’s theme for the Little Berks.

  • Vanessa Northington Gamble (GWU & practicing physician)
  • Shennette Garrett-Scott (Texas A&M)
  • Cynthia Greenlee (Journalist/UGA Editor, and Reproductive Justice Activist)
  • Evelynn Hammonds (Harvard)
  • Holly Hotchner (National Women’s History Museum)
  • Imara Jones (Founder & CEO, TransLash)
  • Elizabeth Ruzzo (Founder of Adyn, birth control company)
  • Suzanne Welsh (Bennett College, HBCU)

2021 Little Berks Schedule

10:00 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (US and Canada)
Welcome: Presidents Barbara Molony and Judy Tzu-Chun Wu

10:10 a.m.
Conference Welcome: Deirdre Cooper Owens

10:15 a.m.
Activist Conversation featuring Dr. Elizabeth Ruzzo (Adyn) and Dr. Cynthia Greenlee (Journalist/UGA Editor, and Reproductive Justice Activist) – “Reproductive Justice is Social Justice”

11:20 a.m.
Dr. Shennette Garrett-Scott (Texas A&M), “Domesticating Racial Capitalism: Freedwomen and Industrial Sewing Schools, 1862-1872”
Abstract: “Domesticating Racial Capitalism” explores key questions about gender, race, institutions, and philanthro-capital in shaping Black women’s labor during and shortly after the Civil War. Northern freedmen’s aid societies, Union army officials, and the Freedmen’s Bureau created industrial sewing schools exclusively for African American women to teach basic literacy and sewing skills. More factory than classroom, freedwomen produced tons of clothes that were shipped and sold around the country. Led almost exclusively by white women, these schools sought to train, surveil, and control Black women: to mold them, in the estimation of white reformers, into both good workers and good women. The hierarchies of free-market relations – like those of the plantation household, prison, and factory – quickly adapted to the context of emancipation.

12:35 p.m.
Lunch Break

1:15 p.m.
Video feature, Pioneers in The Histories of Medicine and Science, Dr. Vanessa Northington Gamble (GWU) and Dr. Evelynn Hammonds (Harvard), moderator: Dr. Deirdre Cooper Owens (UNL)

1:45 p.m.
20-minute breakout sessions to introduce yourselves

2:05 p.m.
Keynote Panel, “Leading Institutions that Center Inclusive Excellence,” featuring: Suzanne Walsh, President of Bennett College; Holly Hotchner, Director of the National Women’s History Museum, and Imara Jones, Founder and CEO of Translash, moderator Dr. Deirdre Cooper Owens

3:00-4:00 p.m.
Business Meeting & Conference Ends

In Memoriam: Sandra Trudgen Dawson

Sandra Trudgen Dawson, historian of modern Britain, popular culture, medicine and women's health, a mother, a wife, and the executive administrator of the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians passed away suddenly on May 18, 2024. A dear friend and lifeline to four cycles of the officers of the organization, Sandra is deeply missed as a colleague and friend to many Berks members. We invite you to share your memories and photos of Sandra as a member and key figure in the Berkshire Conference, as a teacher, a scholar and a friend. To share your … Read More >>

Search

Prizes

Two Women Fencing,. ca. 1885

The Berkshire Conference of Women Historians awards two annual book and article prizes in the following categories: A first book that deals substantially with the history of women, gender, and/or sexuality. A first book in any field of history that does not focus on the history of women, gender, and/or sexuality. … Read More »

History

Group of women historians, early 20th century

The Berkshire Conference of Women Historians was founded in 1930 by Louise Fargo Brown of Vassar College and Louise Ropes Loomis of Wells College. Initially called the Lakeville History Group, after the Connecticut retreat where early meetings were held, the organization became the Berkshire Conference to reflect its new … Read More »

Contact Us

Berkshire Conference of Women Historians logo

The Berkshire Conference is a member-driven organization, which means that we are eager to hear from you. Have ideas about how the website would work better for you? Let us know! Our Executive Director will get back to you within two weeks, even just to let you know how we plan to follow up. In … Read More >>

Join Us

Suzanne Lacey, Between the Door and the Street, 2013. (Source: Wikimedia Commons) Forms part of: The Brooklyn Museum (Brooklyn Museum)

Become a Member The Berkshire Conference of Women Historians is a vital network of scholars that welcomes all women in the historical profession. We offer two kinds of events: our triennial … Read More »

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025 Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. All Rights Reserved.

Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Site by DoctorGeek