Winslow was born in Rutland County, Vermont, the daughter of James Dana Winslow and Kate Elizabeth Willard Winslow.[1] She earned a one-year certificate in Household Economics in 1906 from Simmons College.[2] She earned a bachelor's degree from Teachers' College, Columbia University in 1914, and a master's degree in 1916.[3] She completed doctoral studies at the University of London in 1923, with a dissertation titled Budget Studies and the Measurement of Living Costs and Standards.[4][5]
Career
Winslow wrote a pamphlet, Your Household Budget in Graphic Form: The New Method of Analyzing and Controlling Household Expenditures (1914), while she was teaching home economics at Columbia University.[6] She gave a series of lectures on home economics in Vermont in 1916.[7] While she was working for the New York Charity Organization Society[8] she wrote Budget Planning and Social Casework (1919)[9]Food Values: How Food Meets Body Needs (1921),[10] and Food Values and Body Needs Shown Graphically (1924),[11] the last two being bulletins of the United States Department of Agriculture.[12]
Winslow also co-wrote Purchasing Power of the Consumer: A Statistical Index (1925) with William E. Berridge and Richard E. Flynn.[13] She worked with the Wickersham Commission[14] when she wrote Crime Increases and Decreases in Massachusetts, 1885-1929: Report of a Study (1930),[15] and contributed to the two-volume Report on the Causes of Crime (1931), published by the National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement.[16]
Winslow was director of social statistics at the United States Children's Bureau when she testified at a Senate hearing on unemployment relief in 1933,[17] and wrote Trends in Different Types of Public and Private Relief in Urban Areas (1937), a report of the United States Department of Labor.[18] At the time of her death in 1943, she was director of the division of records and reporting at United Service Organizations (USO).[4]
^Dana, Elizabeth Ellery (1846-1939); Dana, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1881-1950) (1856). The Dana Family In America. p. 284 – via Internet Archive.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Simmons College (Boston, Mass.) (1903). Catalogue. The College. p. 104.
^Stuart, Paul H. "Social Workers and Financial Capability in the Profession's First Half Century" in Julie Birkenmaier, Jami Curley, Margaret Sherraden, eds., Financial Education and Capability: Research, Education, Policy, and Practice (Oxford University Press 2013): 53. ISBN9780199755950
^United States; McKay, Henry D.; Shaw, Clifford R.; Reid, Ira De Augustine; Winslow, Emma A.; Van Kleeck, Mary; Ploscowe, Morris; Anderson, Henry Watkins (1931). Report on the causes of crime. Washington: U. S. Govt. Print. Off.