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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Today in Womens History
    Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:07
April 24th:

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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:08
April 25th:

    1816: Eliza Daniel Stewart born

    1838: Sara Ann Dickey born

    1843: Constance Cary Harrison born

    1866: Women in Columbus, Mississippi, decorate the graves of both Union and Confederate soldiers, an act of generosity and memory that helps lead to the establishment in 1868 of the Memorial Day holiday.

    1885: Emma, Queen of Hawaii, died

    1900?: Edith Gregor Halpert born

    1918: Ella Fitzgerald born

    1923: Melissa Hayden born

    1942: Rubye Doris Smith Robinson born

    2004: Women's March for Freedom of Choice


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:09
April 26th:

1777: Learning that the British were burning Danbury, Connecticut, 16-year-old Sybil Luddington rode 40 miles from New York to Connecticut, rallying her father's militia and earning her in history the nickname "the female Paul Revere"

1795: Frances Manwaring Caulkins born

1820: Alice Cary born

1828: Martha Finley born

1836: Erminnie Adele Platt Smithborn

1860: Mary Raphael Schenck Woolman born

1875: Natalie Curtis (Burlin) born

1882: Jessie Redmon Fauset born

1886: Gertrude Pridgett Rainey born

1893: Anita Loos born


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:10
April 27th:

1759: Mary Wollstonecraft born

1810: Mary Upton Ferrin born

1851: Alice Morse Earle born

1927: Coretta Scott King born

1992: The British House of Commons elected its first-ever woman Speaker, Betty Boothroyd
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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:11
April 28th:

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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:11
April 29th:

1789: Mary Singleton Copley Pelham died (born about 1710)

1867: Margherita Hamm born

1917: Maya Deren (Eleanora Derenkovskaya) born


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:12
April 30th:

1662: Mary II of Great Britain born

1789: Martha Dandridge Custis Washington becomes the first First Lady of the United States, though the title First Lady was not in use during her lifetime.

1838: Abba Louisa Goold Woolson born

1858: Mary Scott Lord Dimmick Harrison born

1871: Louise Dilworth Beatty Homer born

1877: Alice B. Toklas born

1898: Katherine Amelia Towle born


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:13
May 1st:

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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:14
May 2nd:

    1676: Mary Rowlandson released from her captivity by Indians in King Philip's War. Her tale of this captivity, published in 1682, is the first in the genre of captivity narratives.

    1858: Edith Anna Oenone Somerville born (writer)

    1864: Alice Bertha Kroeger born (librarian)

    1878?: Nannie Helen Burroughs (educator)


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:15
May 3rd:

    1825: Laura Towne born (educator, Sea Islands)

    1866: George Madden Martin born (author - pen name for Mrs. Atwood R. Martin)

    1869: Julia Arthur born (actress)

    1879: Maud O'Farrell Swartz born (labor organizer - typographer; writer)

    1898: Golda Meir born (Israeli prime minister)

    1933: Nellie Tayloe Ross took office as the first female Director of the U.S. Mint, appointed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. She continued as director of the Mint until 1953.


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:15
May 4th:

    1749: Charlotte Smith born (English writer, poet, author of Emmeline)

    1820: Julia Gardiner Tyler born ( U.S. First Lady)

    1884: Agnes Fay Morgan born (nutritionist, chemist)

    1898: Joy Bright Hancock born (aviator, naval officer)

    1907: Mary Hallaren born (Army officer)

    1970: Dawn Staley born (basketball player, coach)

    1979: Margaret Thatcher becomes Britain's first woman Prime Minister as the Conservative Party wins the general election.


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:16
May 5th:

    1824: Lucy Larcom born ( poet, educator, editor, "mill girl")

    1841: Kapiolani died (chief in Hawaii)

    1856: Lucia True Ames Mead born (reformer, peace activist)

    1865 or 1867?: "Nellie Bly" Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman (journalist)

    1868: Mary Emogene Hazeltine (librarian)

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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:17
May 6th:

    1805: Eliza Jane Gillet Bridgman born

    1829: Phebe Ann Coffin Hanaford born (minister, writer, reformer)

    1831: Mary Clemmer Ames born (journalist, originator of the title "First Lady" for wives of U.S. Presidents)

    1858: Alice Blanchard Merriam Coleman born

    1882: Ann Haven Morgan born (biologist, educator)


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08-May-2012 at 03:18
May 7th:

Nominated:

    http://www.babelio.com/users/AVT_Ruth-Prawer-Jhabvala_8291.jpeg




Edited by Don Quixote - 08-May-2012 at 03:27
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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09-May-2012 at 00:50
May 8th:

    1429: Joan of Arc led French troops in the siege of Orleans

    http://www.discerninghearts.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/st.-Joan-of-arc.jpg

    1830: Harriet Lane Johnston born (or May 9?) (White House hostess, President James Buchanan's administration)

    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d7/Harriet_Lane.jpg/220px-Harriet_Lane.jpg

    1835: Augusta Jane Evans Wilson born (writer). Some of her works can be read here http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/authors/e#a1399

    File:Augusta Jane Evans Wilson.jpg

    "...She was born Augusta Jane Evans on May 8, 1835 in Wynnton (now MidTown (Columbus, Georgia)), Georgia. As a young girl in 19th-century America she received little in the way of a formal education. However, she became a voracious reader at an early age. Her unfortunate father, Matthew Evans, lost the family's rich property of Sherwood Hall to bankruptcy in the 1840s. He moved his family of 10 from Georgia to San Antonio, Texas, in 1845.

Evans’ time there would inspire her first published literary work. In 1850 at the age of 15 she wrote "Inez: A Tale of the Alamo", a sentimental, moralistic, anti-Catholic love story. It told the story of one orphan's spiritual journey from religious skepticism to devout faith. She presented the manuscript to her father as a Christmas gift in 1854. It was published anonymously in 1855.

However, life in a frontier border town like San Antonio proved dangerous, especially with the Mexican-American War. Later Evans' parents moved her to Mobile, Alabama. She wrote her next novel at age 18 which was called Beulah. It was published in 1859. Beulah began the theme of female education in her novels. It sold well selling over 22,000 copies during its first year of publication. This was a staggering accomplishment. It established her as Alabama's first professional author. Her family used the proceeds from her literary success to purchase Georgia Cottage on Springhill Avenue.

When most of the Southern states declared their independence and seceded from the Union into the Confederate States of America, Augusta Evans became a staunch Southern patriot. She became active in the subsequent Civil War as a propagandist. Evans was engaged to a New York journalist named James Reed Spalding. But she broke off the engagement in 1860 because he supported Abraham Lincoln. She nursed sick and wounded Confederate soldiers at Fort Morgan on Mobile Bay. Evans also visited Confederate soldiers at Chickamauga. She also sewed sandbags for the defense of the community, wrote patriotic addresses, and set up a hospital near her residence. The hospital was dubbed Camp Beulah by local admirers in honor of her novel. She also corresponded with general P.G.T. de Beauregard in 1862....Wilson wrote in the domestic sentimental style of the Victorian Age. Feminist critics have chosen to read past the marital games of her works to focus on the intellectual competence of her female characters which allow them to gain both personal and public power. Of "St. Elmo" one critic maintained, "the trouble with the heroine of St. Elmo was that she swallowed an unabridged dictionary." Wilson was the first American woman author to earn over $100,000. This would be a record unsurpassed until Edith Wharton...." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augusta_Jane_Evans

    1847: Clara Marshall born (physician, educator)

    http://www.nlm.nih.gov/changingthefaceofmedicine/img/portraits/214.jpg

    "...Dr. Clara Marshall was the first woman appointed to the staff of the Blockley Medical College for Men (part of the Philadelphia Hospital at Blockely), and was among the first women to receive a staff appointment at a charitable or correctional institution. As dean from 1886 to 1917, she helped expand and modernize the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania and became a powerful role model for women entering medicine...." http://www.nlm.nih.gov/changingthefaceofmedicine/physicians/biography_214.html

    1870: Georgia Lydia Stevens born (musician, educator)

    "...In March 1914, Georgia went to the Motherhouse in Ixelles, Belgium for her probation and in September of 1914 set sail for the United States and Manhattanville, where she would spend the rest of her life. In response to the Motu Proprio of Pius X on sacred music, Mother Stevens established the Pius X School of Liturgical Music at Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart in 1916. From 1916 until her sudden death in 1946, Mother Stevens directed all aspects of the School. The Pius X School was responsible for producing the Pius X Hymnal and several recordings; the School flourished for fifty years and produced hundreds of pastoral musicians. Mother Stevens also wrote several books on Gregorian Chant and sacred music...." http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=84607481


Georgia Lydia Stevens

    1910: Mary Lou Williams born (pianist, composer, arranger)

    http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/pic200/drp000/p004/p00402ic65i.jpg

    1914: President Woodrow Wilson declares Mother's Day a national holiday in the U.S.

    1955: Maud Wood Park died (suffragist)

    http://www.brynmawr.edu/library/exhibits/suffrage/MWPark.jpg


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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10-May-2012 at 03:01
May 9th:
830: Harriet Lane Johnston born (or May 8?) (White House hostess, James Buchanan administration)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ac/HLane.jpg/240px-HLane.jpg

1842: Mary Bassett Mumford, and American educator and social reformer, born

1844: Belle Boyd born (Confederate spy, writer)

http://secondcorpfieldhospital.yolasite.com/resources/belle-boyd.jpg

1865: Elizabeth Jordan born (journalist and writer, covered Lizzie Borden trial, collaborated on Anna Howard Shaw's autobiography)

1928: Barbara Ann Scott born (Olympic gold medal winner in figure skating, known as "Canada's sweetheart")

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cb/Barbara_Ann_Scott_portrait_1946_crop.jpg/220px-Barbara_Ann_Scott_portrait_1946_crop.jpg




Edited by Don Quixote - 10-May-2012 at 03:10
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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11-May-2012 at 03:21
May 10th:

1800: Sarah Anne Worthington King Peter born (philanthropist)

1840: Elizabeth Cady married Henry Brewster Stanton, omitting the word "obey" form the ceremony

1840: Elizabeth Cady married Henry Brewster Stanton, omitting the word "obey" form the ceremony

1872: Madeline McDowell Breckinridge born (reformer, suffragist) born (reformer, suffragist)

http://image2.findagrave.com/photos250/photos/2004/335/7643357_110192677776.jpg

1919: Ella Grasso born (public official)

"...A Connecticut native, Ella Grasso is best-known for being the first elected female governor of the state. Grasso served two terms in the United States Congress from 1970-74, and after not seeking reelection, she instead ran for governor in Connecticut. She won the election, and ended up winning a reelection bid in 1978. Grasso gained acclaim for her handling of the “Blizzard of 1978” with her closing of the state during the storm.

She was also instrumental as a proponent of building the Hartford Civic Center to bring more life into the city, and was also in favor of rebuilding the arena following the collapse of the roof in January 1978. In late 1980, Grasso was diagnosed with cancer and forced to resign from her post as governor, passing away just several weeks later at the age of 61.


Grasso has earned several notable honors posthumously, including her being awarded the Presidential Medal of Honor by President Ronald Reagan, and she was also inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame and the Connecticut Women’s Hall of Fame. Grasso was also included in the inaugural class of the Hartford Whalers Hall of Fame for her support of the building and the team in 1989...." http://www.cthockeyhof.org/ella-grasso/

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/GrassoEllaT.gif

1944: Judith Jamison born (dancer, choreographer)
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-7CHyqKbynoE/TxyrG9QSU6I/AAAAAAAAFGU/PPew7JIpHyQ/s1600/judith%2Bjamison%2Bolder%2BBW%2Bphoto.jpg


Edited by Don Quixote - 11-May-2012 at 03:27
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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30-May-2014 at 11:41
May 30, 1431 - Joan of Ark was burned on stake, after series of humiliations, like taking her male clothes form her, possibly enduring a rape, and made to confess something she didn't believe in. In my opinion, one of the most striking female charactes in western history, Joan was definitely too large for her century.

Edited by Don Quixote - 30-May-2014 at 11:45
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  Quote Don Quixote Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04-Jun-2014 at 02:37
June 4

1919   The U.S. Senate passes the Women's Suffrage bill.
1972   Black activist Angela Davis is found not guilty of murder, kidnapping, and criminal conspiracy.

1604 - Claudia de' Medici, Grand Duchess of Tuscany is born(d. 1648).
"...Claudia de' Medici (June 4, 1604 – December 25, 1648) was a daughter of Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany and Christina of Lorraine. She was born in Florence, and was named after her grandmother Claude of Valois, herself granddaughter of Claude, Duchess of Brittany, consort to King Francis I of France. In 1620, she married Federico Ubaldo della Rovere, the only son of Francesco Maria II della Rovere, Duke of Urbino. Their only child went on to marry the Grand Duke of Tuscany. He died suddenly on 29 June 1623. After her husband's premature death, she was married, on 19 April 1626, to Leopold V, Archduke of Austria, and thus became Archduchess consort of Austria. She died at Innsbruck in 1648. On the death of her husband, she assumed a regency in the name of her son Ferdinand Charles who was the ruler of the Princely County of Tyrol. Claudia, along with five directors, held the post until 1646. She had one child by Federico Ubaldo della Rovere: She had five children by Leopold V...."
http://www.whoislog.info/profile/claudia-de-medici.html


Edited by Don Quixote - 04-Jun-2014 at 17:30
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  Quote ladychristine Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14-Jan-2016 at 02:11
“How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.”
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