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  1. The Harvey Girls were a signature component of Harvey’s 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. Other qualifications included being unmarried and “of good character.”.

  2. 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]

  3. Zada Sharon said, “I’m glad I was a Harvey Girl. The most important thing in the whole story of the Harvey Girls is the fact it gave woman a chance to move out of the lives they were locked into and to be able to be a bit adventuresome.” 11. Sources: 1 Setting the Standard: The Harvey Girls. New Mexico History Museum. 2020. 2 Ibid 3 Ibid

  4. The Harvey Girls Defined Hospitality in the Wild West of the 1880s. More specifically, they were young, single, intelligent women who were also of “good character,” and, presumably, had the sort of sense of adventure that propelled them to unknown territory in the 1880s to work as waitresses. Their legacy: Helping to make travel in the West ...

  5. Oct 17, 2017 · Fred Harvey came West with a dream that cost a dollar—a meal fit for a lady or a gentleman, if not a reigning king or queen. He also brought hope to many young women in search of a responsible husband and to many young Western males looking for a respectable wife. The dream worked out to the tune of an estimated 5,000Western marriages —and ...

  6. Jan 15, 2010 · Harvey Girls contracted for six, nine, or twelve months of service and received a salary, room and board, tips, and free tickets on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. In addition to previously unheard-of monetary benefits, the job profited women with pride and independence. From the late 1800s to the mid-1950s Harvey Houses were famous ...

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  8. The Harvey Girls: the women who civilized the West by Juddi Morris-----The Harvey girls : women who opened the West by Lesley Poling-Kempes . The Harvey House Cookbook: memories of dining along the Santa Fe railroad by George H. Foster and Peter C. Weiglin . In the 1870s, people traveling west of the Mississippi were still venturing into the wild.