
In my last post, I started a series on the different ways men and women travel. The disparities are many, and go back a long way; after all, Eve and not Adam took the first family grocery-shopping trip, and Noah, not his anonymous wife, built and drove the first recorded vehicle.
In the days of the walking city, women (at least middle- and upper-class women) largely stayed close to home; walking long distances down filthy, chaotic, and dangerous streets was simply seen as unladylike.
The 19th century saw changes in the economy, in society and in culture which reinforced this. Thanks to industrialization, work, which throughout human history had largely been performed inside the home, moved out to physically separate worksites. At the same time, suburbanization, accelerated by transportation technologies like the horsecar and streetcar, located residences further and further from those workplaces.
As work and home spaces bifurcated, the world outside the home — the rough-and-tumble seat of public affairs, commerce, and recreation, as well as work — was seen more and more as male terrain. Home and hearth — clean, safe, and pure — were perceived as the woman’s world.
As the historian Clay McShane argues, these views were intensified by a deep sense of male insecurity brought about by the mass-production system, the deskilling of manufacturing, and the shift of men into less “manly” white-collar work. Men also felt threatened by increasing education and employment for women. These factors redoubled male efforts to wall off the space outside the home as their own. Men traveled to that domain. Women did not.
The introduction of the automobile promised to provide women with a means of mobility that could change this situation. But despite the adventures of early female auto pioneers like Emily Post, from the start the car was overwhelmingly a male preserve.
Men responded to creeping insecurity by attempting to claim mechanical and athletic prowess as their exclusive realm. Auto operation and maintenance were perceived as requiring both. Women were seen as too nervous, overcautious, slow, emotional, and physically weak to drive, despite early studies showing they had half the accident rate of men. These perceptions were reinforced by the male-dominated media.
Economic factors were important as well. In the early years cars were an expensive luxury. Few households owned two. In one-car homes access to the family auto fell to the male head of the household for his commute trip.
More women began to find their way into autos after the self-starter banished the hand-crank. However, even then the gains were surprisingly small. The barriers to women driving were not primarily physical; in fact, the hand crank actually did not require much strength. But operating it was perceived as unfeminine, in keeping with the other psychological, sociological, economic, and cultural taboos that kept women off the roads.
The bottom line is that in the first decades after the auto was introduced, women behind the wheel were quite a rarity. In 1909 only 9.1 percent of Maryland car owners were women; in New Hampshire in 1911 the figure was 4.8 percent. And probably many of these (presumably wealthy) women had male chauffeurs. In 1917 only 8 percent of Massachusetts drivers and 15 percent of the drivers in Los Angeles were women.
Women of the era were unlikely to even get licensed. A 1969 study found that even at that late date, only 20 percent of women who reached driving age before 1916 held a driver’s license, as opposed to 62 percent of men. Thus prejudices from the very first years of the automobile era powerfully impacted American travel behavior for decades.
When women did drive, they faced a peculiar set of obstacles. Ridicule was frequent, etiquette books laid down exacting rules on how to drive in a feminine manner (low speeds and chaperones were highly recommended), husbands often forbade their wives and daughters from driving, and there were even political movements to ban female driving altogether.
And if women in the driver’s seat caused controversy, women in the back seat did so too. The privacy and freedom of the auto caused hand-wringing due to the license it permitted to courting teens and young adults.
Women would, of course, begin to find their way behind the wheel in greater numbers. As transportation scholar Martin Wachs has chronicled, in the 1920′s auto manufacturers began to fear they were reaching a saturation point where every home owned at least one auto. To sell families second cars, marketing efforts were targeted at women. However, old stereotypes were slow to die; ads meant for female consumption focused on the superficial aspects of cars (color, styling, upholstery). Ads aimed at men focused on mechanical characteristics and performance.
When the second car did arrive it promised women freedom and the chance to escape the home, but much of this promise did not materialize. Cars were pitched as essential tools for motherhood and homemaking. New household maintenance and child-serving trips materialized, limiting the technology’s emancipatory potential.
Still, as we know, over time gender equality in transportation did grow. In concert with other changes in our society — women moving into the workplace, more female-headed households, the dissemination of birth control — women’s travel behavior has to a large degree converged with men’s. But by how much? And are the differences that remain disappearing? Why or why not? And should we care? More on this next time.

I should add that some time after that, a female friend introduced me to karate etc. I tried one class and must admit that it felt good to be learning how to phyisically protect my self. Never pursued it further– though if younger, I would have. Was just talking about that Jennifer Lopez movie the other day in class– it definately is a powerful film as far as sending a message to women who are or feel vulnerable..
Hand cranking an engine didn’t require much strength? Well, not unless you had to do it again and again and again to get the beast started. That crank could also kick you badly enough to put some fear in you.
My grandmother never learned to drive. Not because she wasn’t encouraged, or thought it unfeminine. My mother never learned to drive a stick shift. Not because she didn’t have plenty of people willing to teach her.
Just another infomercial article, that enlightens not at all.
Recommended reading:
Tales of a Female Nomad: Living at Large in the World
by Rita Golden Gelman
I have no connection to this book or author, but it is an interesting story of a woman travelling and living alone all around the world.
It wasn’t just engine cranking and steering that required physical strength. Tires were unreliable, roads rough, and an extended journey would recall for two or three tire changes involving jacking up the car and lifting heavy wheels. Cars often had to be pushed out of mud holes if no convenient farmer and team of horses was nearby. Engine spark advance had to be set manually, not physically difficult, to be sure, but still requiring a knowledge of mechanics. No wonder that the job of truck driver was regarded as a skilled profession in Europe prior to WW2. But while women didn’t often drive the fire breathing gasoline buggies, they did drive the much more civilized electric city cars like the Detroit Electric, the ancestor of today’s Prius and Volt. Everything old is new again!
As represented here, McShane’s argued connection between men “walling off the home” and women’s not driving misses the fact that the automobile was largely a toy — not an essential means of transportation — until after WWII. Except in rural areas, its functions were duplicated by mass transportation. Since women were typically in lower-paid jobs, it made sense that urban, employed women would rely on the streetcar or similar, rather than putting themselves to the trouble and expense of maintaining a capricious and unnecessary personal vehicle. By no means would this choice have confined women to the home!
Why pollute a perfectly good historical analysis with stupid stereotypes of earlier times? The first two paragraphs of this post belong in Reader’s Digest or something.
Before the mid 19th Century, European and American women — especially the 95% who were not upper class — walked through their villages, towns, and cities all the time. Some areas of London may have been dangerous at some times, but many women lived and worked there.
Merchant women walked to market fairs in their area, or traveled further to buy and sell. Richer women often walked or rode long distances to visit their families or go on pilgrimages to Canterbury, or Lourdes. Likewise, Early American women traveled when they could, though often limited by distance and opportunity.
So basically: Biblical references are weird and inappropriate, the pre-Victorian history note is just wrong, and the US is not the world.
I’m sure that the historian Clay McShane was not the source of those first two paragraphs, and wish you hadn’t felt you had to add it.
The R.E.O. was the first automobile driven by my grandmother, daughter of Midwest farm pioneers. In 1912 Grandma was 16 when her father took her in a horse-drawn buggy to buy a new “iron horse” & bought a new R.E.O.
After paying for it, he left her with the dealer to teach her how to drive. She was to drive it home to the farm before nightfall, then teach her father & brother how to drive it. Grandma was barely 4’11″ tall – a tiny, but very smart woman all of her life.
The R.E.O. had a glass windshield but the rest of the windows only had curtains. It was made by Ronald E. Olds & would later be called the Oldsmobile. Grandma learned to operate a farm as well & drove a lot of Oldsmobiles over the next 60 years.
Anyone driving East/West through Nebraska should stop at Kearney & go through The Great Platte River Road Museum that arches over I-80. You get to experience the history of transportation across this great continent from prairie schooners to convertibles at outdoor movie theaters. (www.archway.org)
Western transportation is also showcased at the Pioneer Museum in Minden (SE of Kearney), the largest railroad yard in North Platte (west of Kearney), and Strategic Air Command Museum (SAC, near Omaha).