Historians of nineteenth-century common school reform have noted that the feminization of teaching meant expanded professional opportunities for women, but within a limited social and economic context. Schoolmen like Horace Mann seized on the rhetoric of popularizers of sentimental womanhood and declared that teachers should consider themselves mothers away-from-home. Writers and reformers alike emphasized women's nurturing qualities — gentleness, patience, and kindness with young children — and glorified the function of female “moral influence” in the purification of home and nation. But despite this inflated rhetoric, women teachers received less pay than their male counterparts, and they were denied positions of administrative authority in local and state school systems. Based on both “morality” and financial “efficiency,” the argument for female teachers was a powerful one; by the late Nineteenth Century (earlier in New England), women dominated the common school teaching force.