The Evolution of Girlhood: From 1926 to 2026

By Dennis Richmond, Jr.

In 1926, girlhood was defined by expectation. In 2026, it is defined by negotiation.

A century ago, most girls in America were raised the same way. Education for girls was expanding, but college remained out of reach for most, especially Black girls in the South and working-class girls across the country. The right to vote had only recently been secured through the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and while there was progress, political power did not immediately translate into social equality. For many, being an innocent girl ended pretty quickly. Marriage, domestic labor, factory work, and caregiving made girls grow up fast.

But even in 1926, girlhood was shifting. The “flappers” were taking folks by storm. Young women cut their hair, shortened their hemlines, and claimed public space in ways that unsettled older generations. In Harlem, the cultural awakening of the Harlem Renaissance showcased writers, performers, and thinkers who challenged the nation’s racial and gender hierarchies.

Fast forward to 2026, and girlhood is different. Girls grow up online as much as they do offline. Identity is partially created in digital spaces. A teenage girl can build a life from her phone, have thousands or millions of followers on social media, and publicly articulate her gender and sexuality in ways that may have seemed unimaginable a century ago. With that, she might experience unrealistic beauty standards driven by an algorithm. She might also have to hear political debates over her body — from men.

Education isn’t a dream— it’s almost an expectation. Girls outperform boys on many academic measures and lead student governments, robotics teams, and protest movements. Young activists — from climate organizers to gun-violence advocates — have reshaped civic engagement. They are not waiting to “grow up” to claim influence. They are asserting it in real time.

Still, a lot of things are separate and not equal. Black girls are disproportionately disciplined in schools. Sometimes they are seen as disruptive. And let’s not even talk about the higher rates of poverty and systemic barriers. Globally, access to education and safety remains uneven. The promise of progress has never been evenly distributed.

The craziest change in 100 years may not be legal or technological. It might be philosophical. In 1926, girlhood was something society defined for girls. In 2026, girlhood is increasingly something girls define for themselves.

Girls, cis women, and trans women are athletes and coders, caretakers and critics, tradition-keepers and disruptors. They inherit a century of struggle — and possibility. And they carry the torch.

Dennis Richmond, Jr. (@NewYorkStakz) is a journalist, historian, and educator from Yonkers, NY. He writes to uplift unheard voices, honor history, and inspire change.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Hot this week

Help Find This Missing Teen

Yonkers, NY Omar Segura 15 Years Old Last Seen In The...

Bail Reform Supporters Say “No Rollbacks”

Jewish Groups Say Hate Crimes Not a Reason...

State Police Make Two More Drunk Driving Arrests with Kids in the Car

Mahopac Man had three kids in the car: Peekskill...

US Secret Service Partners with Iona to Forge Hiring Pathway for Students

Assistant Special Agent Kent McCarthy Iona University will serve as...
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

How Arab News Channels Became a Daily Ritual Rather Than a Source

The television is already on when the coffee is...

Common Waste Management Problems Businesses Face (And Fixes)

Waste management is a daily operational challenge for businesses...

Manhattan’s Dr. Han Jo Kim: What a Spine Surgeon Took From Music School

There are certain schools that do more than educate...

Which World Cup stars could light up MetLife Stadium in the knockout rounds

The World Cup knockout stars set for MetLife Stadium...

Essential Security Upgrades for Small Businesses

The threat of a data breach is no longer...

Westchester County Parks-Robison Summer Concert Series Begins July 9

The Robison Summer Concert Series officially starts this month! Full...

Why Standardized Ground Transportation Creates Business Travel Confidence

When professionals travel between cities for work, uncertainty around...

Related Articles

Popular Categories