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  1. The Harvey Girls is a 1946 Technicolor American musical film produced by Arthur Freed for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It is based on the 1942 novel of the same name by Samuel Hopkins Adams, about Fred Harvey's Harvey House waitresses. [2]

  2. The Harvey Girls were a signature component of Harveys success and one of his most enduring legacies. Placing ads in Midwestern and Eastern publications, he solicited women between the ages of 18 and 30 to travel west and work as waitresses in his restaurants.

  3. Oct 17, 2017 · Harvey Girls, as those hired were called, were promised $17.50 a month plus room, board and tips—and in return promised not to marry for at least six months after signing on. The girls, according to the 1950s and ’60s writings of Lucius Beebe, slept in dormitories with a housemother to keep an eye on them and a 10 p.m. curfew, unless a late ...

  4. As part of the hotel and restaurant service staff, the Fred Harvey company created the iconic Harvey Girls, who are often described as the first workforce made up of all women. Women made up much of the service staff that worked at the Fred Harvey Company’s establishments.

  5. The idea of the Fred Harveys waitresses as a force of womanhood that civilized the West saw its fullest expression in the 1946 musical The Harvey Girls.

  6. Beginning with the first eating establishment in Topeka, Kansas in 1876 and lasting until the mid-1940s over 100,000 women followed the Santa Fe Tracks west to work as Harvey Girls. However, these adventurous women were much more than welcome faces for weary travelers. Harvey Girls in Slaton.

  7. Jan 15, 2010 · These young women braved the perils of an uncivilized West while maintaining a reputation for femininity and morality that has stood the test of time. All donned a standard uniform of black or white starched skirt, high-collared blouse, with a bib and apron; they served their patrons with practiced precision.

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