The National Film Preservation Foundation (Web) site offers online access to examples of its preservation work. Three of these films document the history of women:
- Manhattan Trade School for Girls (1911) (George Eastman House) This promotional documentary film (16 min., 10 sec) includes footage of students playing basketball, dancing, cooking, sewing, and making hats. Jennifer M. Bean’s commentary provides historical context throughout the film. (Web)
- Wohelo Camp (ca. 1919) (Northeast Historic Film), a promotional film about the pioneering all-girls summer camp in Maine, includes footage of the girls involved in a variety of activities: jewelry making, pottery, canoeing, cooking, gardening, and horseback riding. (Web)
- A Trip through Japan with the YWCA (ca. 1919) includes footage of women in traditional occupations, fleeting images of workers outside a textile factory, and scenes with Ainu women (pictured at left). For background on the Ainu, see Ainu: Spirit of a Northern People (Smithsonian Institution in Association with University of Washington Press, 1999). (Web)
Source: http://womenshistorysources.blogspot.com/