The following suggestions were submitted on comment cards at the Greater Philadelphia Roundtable session, “Philadelphia-Area Women in the Twentieth Century: What We Know, and What We Need to Know,” at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania on April 1, 2010:
- Aspects of women of color – Black, Asian, Latino, etc.
 - The Global face of Philadelphia & Tri-County areas; language differences.
 - Community-based forums – utilize libraries; churches; resident association; Greeks; Pan-Hellenic Council, Radio stations – WHAT, WDAS, etc., colleges, universities, Women’s Christian Alliance, Urban League, NAACP, hospitals, Women’s League, etc.
 - What are the most important things we have learned from studying the history of women in the 20th century in Phila.?
 - How do archives teach us about improving our lives or the lives of women?
 - Women volunteer associations
 - Suffrage in Philadelphia
 - Adoption
 - Female entrepreneurs
 - Women in horticulture / Women’s Land Army
 - Fellowship Farm
 - Women’s wartime work
 - Quaker women and their influence
 - Girl Scouts
 - The idea of posting profiles – smaller amounts of information – digestible
 - Regionalism – Philadelphia’s relationship to PA, NJ, and DE suburbs
 - 19th / 20th century reform and voluntary associations
 - Public transportation / public services
 - Women and gardens
 - Preservation
 - Education
 - E.R.A.
 - Women’s Trade Union League
 - Women Garment Workers Strike in 1910s
 - Gardens like Morris Arboretum and Bartram’s Garden
 - Philadelphia’s food history, especially iconic foods. My students often want to write about cheesesteaks, and only find commercial web sites. Someone needs to connect cheesesteaks with the 20th-century working-class culture of sandwich shops. Also, what happened to the food traditions of the Germans who settled early Philadelphia? Apart from the Amaish food traditions, German food is relatively scarce.
 - Edna Phillips – harpist, first woman in Philadelphia Orchestra; Elsee Hilger, cellist, Philadelphia Orchestra.
 - Philadelphia Normal School
 - The idea of embedding women in the story of industry in Philadelphia as workers and initiators, in public policy, in volunteering and spearheading work to enrich others’ lives.
 - Women in religious organizations in Philadelphia who made/make a difference in the lives / educations of others.
 - Local suffrage fight
 - Women in industry – Women in labor movement
 - Sexual politics
 - Women in academia
 - Union League and women’s entry vs. acceptance in that organization
 - Immigration – experience of different ethnic groups
 - Prostitution & economics, social attitudes, etc.
 - Women as leaders and workers in Philadelphia Green and in the Horticultural Society