
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the late 1800s - early 1900s, homes for fallen women existed in cities across America where they could gather women and young girls, usually pregnant out of wedlock, and hide them from “respectable” society and attempt to “reform” them. While these places came from good intentions, they were places of hard labor, crude reform and ideas and methods that we consider outdated by today’s standard.
This week, I'm talking about Atlanta’s efforts to contain and reform their “fallen women”. Who led these efforts, who funded them, where were they, how did locals feel about them and talk about the few names of these women that we know.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: [email protected]
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
By Victoria Lemos4.9
486486 ratings
In the late 1800s - early 1900s, homes for fallen women existed in cities across America where they could gather women and young girls, usually pregnant out of wedlock, and hide them from “respectable” society and attempt to “reform” them. While these places came from good intentions, they were places of hard labor, crude reform and ideas and methods that we consider outdated by today’s standard.
This week, I'm talking about Atlanta’s efforts to contain and reform their “fallen women”. Who led these efforts, who funded them, where were they, how did locals feel about them and talk about the few names of these women that we know.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: [email protected]
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

25,797 Listeners

11,565 Listeners

14,656 Listeners

87,529 Listeners

56,508 Listeners

8,754 Listeners

9,081 Listeners

15,366 Listeners

9,775 Listeners

16,399 Listeners

12,372 Listeners

1,818 Listeners

1,680 Listeners

18,151 Listeners

3,467 Listeners