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Click on the image to see a larger version The most common occupation for women working outside the home was domestic labor. Some were "hired girls" doing housework in private homes while other waited tables or cleaned rooms in hotels. Married women worked with their husbands as staff and caretakers at the large private camps of wealthy seasonal residents.

Adirondack domestics retained their independence. Because periods of employment were so often seasonal and short, they were hired help rather than servants.

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