Skip to content

Window on Cecil County's Past

Reflections on Yesterday — Cecil County History

Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Genealogy
  • Archive
  • Links
  • Shore Blogging
Menu

Dr. Helen Tierney Published Highly Acclaimed Women’s Studies Encyclopedia

Posted on May 10, 2015March 9, 2021 by admin
helen tierney's women studies encyclopedia.
Dr. Helen Tierney’s Women’s Studies Encyclopedia

Since 2015 marks the 95th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, I have been examining the topic of extending the right to vote to women.  While investigating the regional perspective, I recalled the work of Helen Tierney, professor emeritus in the Department of History at the University of Wisconsin (UW).  A women’s studies scholar, she helped establish the program at UW-Platteville as the discipline grew out of the resurgence of the women’s movement in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

The scholarship was scarce “in the brand-new world of women’s studies” and what was available on “the other half of humanity” was scattered in various academic fields, Dr. Tierney observed.  Thus she decided to publish the Women’s Studies Encyclopedia to meet the needs for an authoritative reference.  When the title appeared in 1989, the Library Journal called the first edition a “best reference book,” adding that it “was a landmark achievement providing concise definitions and historical context for students and scholars alike.”

Upon retiring from academia in the mid-1990s as the dean of the history department, Dr. Helen Tierney returned home to the Newark area.  After a period, she started volunteering at the Historical Society of Cecil County about the time we reactivated the Society’s newsletter to provide members with a value-added product.  Dr. Tierney took on the task of managing our serial publication since we didn’t have an assigned editor and for a number of years, she carefully produced a quarterly, bringing high-quality, original articles to readers.

During her retirement she also decided to update and expand the Encyclopedia since research on women had proceeded rapidly, feminist thought had grown and branched out, and conditions for women had “changed markedly in some area of life, for good and for ill, and little in others.”  While editing submissions, the professor added new entries to the expanding body of knowledge, and she was interested in how the women’s suffrage movement had evolved in Maryland and Delaware.

I recall Helen studying those old Delmarva newspapers to see what elusive leads could be uncovered.  It can be challenging to find evidence of emerging social movements and civil disobedience that are centered outside the regional norms in local weeklies.  Of course, the highly respected academic with a doctoral degree in ancient Greek history from the University of Chicago was fully aware of the limitations of her sources.  But, research requires a careful study to validate or rule out the availability of traces to the past, and I remember those long ago conversations as she unearthed elusive pieces of surviving evidence.

Helen Tierney died October 31, 1997, just days after she penned the introduction to the new volume, but her colleagues, family and publisher arranged for the second edition, a three-volume work, to be brought to term.  The family donated Dr. Tierney’s papers to the Historical Society of Cecil County, so as my research interest turned to this civil disobedience movement, I recently examined her field notes to follow her line of investigation on the regional perspective. The data is scarce as anyone working with social movements in rural areas will recognize, but the surviving materials from Dr. Tierney’s labors nearly twenty years ago gave me the perspective of the nationally recognized scholar on this untapped regional subject.  She would be pleased to see that her scholarship is tapped for regional studies.

Also see

Officer Tierney of the Wilmington Police Department Killed in Line of Duty in 1915

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

4 thoughts on “Dr. Helen Tierney Published Highly Acclaimed Women’s Studies Encyclopedia”

  1. James Sentman says:
    May 13, 2015 at 4:57 pm

    Have u got any Info on port deposit md

    Reply
    1. Mike Dixon says:
      May 13, 2015 at 9:26 pm

      Actually I do James. What are you looking for?

      Reply
  2. Helen McKay says:
    March 12, 2021 at 2:27 am

    A family anecdote re: Helen Tierney’s work: I remember her saying that when the 60’s were demanding Women’s Studies, her history department made her, as only female in the dept., head of Women’s Studies and said ‘have at it!’ She had to build it from scratch, hence the encyclopedia.

    Reply
    1. admin says:
      March 12, 2021 at 3:55 am

      Thanks for sharing that Helen. I enjoy working with Dr. Tierney at the Historical Society of Cecil County after she retired from the University of Wisconsin.

      Reply

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Welcome to the blog

Welcome to a Window on Cecil County’s past. On this blog, you will find posts on the history of Cecil County, both old and modern, and the personal stories of the people, first and secondhand.

For more information on this blog click here

To visit my main website click here

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 123 other subscribers

Follow Cecil County History on Facebook

Follow Cecil County History on Facebook

Top Posts & Pages

  • Frederick Douglass Visited Port Deposit and Rising Sun in 1885
  • On the Railroad to Providence
  • Rodeo Earl Smith, a Legendary Cecil County Cowboy
  • Conowingo -- A Susquehanna River Village That Vanished

Recent Comments

  • Va.erie on An Orphanage on a Chesapeake City Hilltop Once Took Care of Dependent Children
  • mike stike on Rachel Parker Kidnapping Case, which Involved Slave Catcher From Elkton, to be noted with Marker in West Nottingham Township; Commission Searching for Relatives in Preparation for Dedication
  • pam shewan on On Memorial Day 1947, Eastern Airlines Flight 605 Crashed Near Port Deposit
  • Penny calendar on Conowingo — A Susquehanna River Village That Vanished
  • admin on Remembering Jim Cheeseman, Cecil Whig Photographer

Pages

  • About
  • Cecil County Genealogy
  • Cecil County History & Genealogy Archive
  • Links
  • Shore Blogging
  • Spanish Flu Archive

Archives

My Websites & Blogs

Mike Dixon’s Professional Website

Mike’s Blog About the Professional Practice of Public History

Reflections on Delmarva’s Past

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
© 2026 Window on Cecil County's Past | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme
%d