Irene Osgood Andrews
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Irene Osgood, Mrs. John Andrews (b. January 18, 1879, Big Rapids, Michigan - d. 19??) was an American writer on problems of women in industry.
She was born in Big Rapids, Michigan and educated at the School of Philanthropy in New York and at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
She began her career as agent for the Associated Charities at Minneapolis, Minnesota, and, in 1906 was appointed special agent for relief work in the American Red Cross in San Francisco, and factory inspector in Wisconsin. She was head resident of the Northwestern University Settlement, Chicago in 1907.
She became assistant secretary of the American Association for Labor Legislation in 1908 and a member or the Y.W.C.A. National Industrial Commission to Europe (1918), was author of contributions to the Legislative Review.
She wrote:
- Minimum Wage Legislation, Working Women in Tanneries, Irregular Employment and the Living Wage for Women, The Economic Effects of the War upon Women and Children in Great Britain (Oxford, 1918; 1921; reprinted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D.C.)
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.
Categories: American activist stubs | United States non-fiction writer stubs | 1879 births | Year of death missing | American activists | American non-fiction writers | People from Big Rapids, Michigan | People from Chicago | People from Minneapolis, Minnesota | University of Wisconsin-Madison alumni