"The author's consideration of both male and female workers together provides a unique and valuable perspective on the history of white collar labor and late Victorian society..."--
Journal of Social History"Fascinating....A superb example of a comparative study of the experiences and values of men and women. It is a model history of male and female interaction. It is not only good women's history, labor history, and men's history, but it makes good History."--
Reviews in American History"A perceptive and engaging case study....Deserves a wide audience among students of large-scale organizations and should be required reading for anyone attempting to refine the 'organizational synthesis' of the American past."--
Business History Review"A carefully documented, well-organized, original and convincing book....She has brilliantly portrayed late-nineteenth-century workers in the Washington offices of the Treasury and Interior departments."--
The Historian"Full, intelligent, and...on the cutting edge of current interest."--Michael H. Frisch, State University of New York at Buffalo
"Fascinating reading about the feminization of a key occupational category."--Kathryn Kish Sklar, UCLA
"This study frontally attacks the twin problems of class identity and class formation in the last half of the 19th century."--Daniel Walkowitz, New York University