THE HARVEY GIRLS: OPPORTUNITY BOUND will air on KTTZ-T V Channel 5 Monday, December 9th at 8pm.
Sponsored to you by: Slaton Chamber of Commerce
“Get a Closer Look at the Women Behind Fred Harvey’s Empire in THE HARVEY GIRLS”
America’s tales about taming the Wild West rarely include women. But in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, more than 100,000 pioneering young women left home to work as waitresses in restaurants located on train platforms along the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway. The American Public Television-distributed program THE HARVEY GIRLS: OPPORTUNITY BOUND airing on public television stations nationwide beginning November 1, 2013, explores the lives, experiences, and contributions of the women who worked for the Fred Harvey restaurant empire in its earliest days.
The Harvey House restaurant chain was started by Leavenworth, Kansas entrepreneur Fred Harvey. Harvey left his native England at the age of 15 and found work in New York’s growing restaurant industry. As the Civil War was brewing, he began working with the railroads, achieving more senior positions as he moved west. Despite his seniority, Harvey never forgot his restaurant roots and, recognizing the poor quality of food for rail travelers, decided to do something about it. In 1870, Harvey started a company designed to serve travelers throughout the Southwestern U.S. good food at reasonable prices in clean, elegant restaurants. The women who worked for these restaurants — the Harvey Girls — later became icons, themselves, playing an important role in World War II and helping to transform society’s view of women’s work.