Una B. Herrick was Dean of Women, professor of Physical Education for Women, Director of Physical Education for Women & Vocational Guidance Advisor at Montana State College. From 1911 to 1932, she was the Dean of the College of Household and Industrial Arts and later the first Dean of Women at Montana State College. She was called a "trailblazer in a frontier college who made a place for women on this men's college campus". She was on the membership committee of the National Association of Deans of Women and was member of the Deans of WomenWestern Conference. She then became director of Hamilton Hall, at Herrick's time the women's dormitory. In 1926, Montana State College built Herrick Hall to house the Home Economics Department; the building was named after Dean Herrick. Herrick Hall was the first building at MSU to be dedicated immediately after completion. Herrick has been recognized as the one to make a place for women in a college campus of men. She encouraged women to develop skills that would be useful for them to be financially independent. She organized the Girl's Vocational Congress, later High School Week, to help women explore career opportunities, and organized the Women's League, later merged into Associated Women Students. In 1921, Herrick patented a brassiere that snugly fit the wearer and was retained in proper position without the use of shoulder straps. The garment supported the figure and permitted freedom of movement of the arms and body without being displaced by those same movements. Herrick wrote Twenty Years at Montana State University. Herrick was a member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, an organization of women who were proud of their Confederate heritage. She was also a member of the State Federation of Women's Clubs, the Daughters of the American Revolution, the American Federation of Arts, the National Home Economics Association and the State Home Economics Association.
Personal life
On February 20, 1895, in New York City, Una Brasfield married Dr. Clinton Granger Herrick. They had one daughter, Harriet, later Calloway. Herrick moved to Montana in 1911 and lived at Montana State College in Bozeman. She died on August 10, 1950, in Compton, California.
Legacy
Montana State University instituted the Una B. Herrick Award, the second highest award recognized during Women's Day.