History of Feminism
Related: About this forumcelebrating women's herstory month-2014 theme: honouring women of character, courage and commitment
(the link below has the complete list of the women being honoured this year)
2014 National Women's History Month Theme & Honorees
This years theme, Celebrating Women of Character, Courage, and Commitment, honors the extraordinary and often unrecognized determination and tenacity of women. Against social convention and often legal restraints, women have created a legacy that expands the frontiers of possibility for generations to come. They have demonstrated their character, courage and commitment as mothers, educators, institution builders, business, labor, political and community leaders, relief workers, women religious, and CEOs. Their lives and their work inspire girls and women to achieve their full potential and encourage boys and men to respect the diversity and depth of womens experience.
These role models along with countless others demonstrate the importance of writing women back into history.
2014 Honorees
(In Chronological Order)
Women of Character, Courage
and Commitment
Chipeta (1843 1924)
Indian Rights Advocate and Diplomat
Chipeta was a wise and contrary advisor to her husband, a Ute Indian leader. Born into the Kiowa Apache tribe in the 1840s, Chipeta was raised by the Uncompahgre Ute tribe in what is now western Colorado. In her teens she wedded Ouray, who became a powerful Ute chief during the often violent and brutal times of western settlement. Chipeta was a peacemaker who did not consider all settlers to be the enemy, often giving food to starving white families. Chipeta lived 45 years on a reservation in Utah, lauded as a wise elder and advisor to other Indian chiefs and an honored guest in the homes of settler families.
Anna Julia Haywood Cooper (1858 1964)
African American Educator and Author
Anna J. Cooper was an author, educator, speaker, and among the leading intellectuals of her time. Born into enslavement, she wrote "A Voice from the South," widely considered one of the first articulations of Black feminism. Throughout her long life, Anna worked for the betterment of African American womens lives, which she saw as the foundation for a more just society for everyone. Cooper worked at Washington D.C.s M Street -- now Dunham High School for nearly 40 years, focusing the all black high school on preparing students for higher education, successfully sending many students to prestigious universities.
. . . .
Arden Eversmeyer (1931 Present)
The Old Lesbian Oral Herstory Project Founder
Arden Eversmeyer founded the Old Lesbian Oral Herstory Project (1999), to ensure that the stories of lesbians born in the first part of the 20th century, who were labeled mentally ill, fired from their jobs, rejected by their families, and even raped and murdered with impunity, are recorded in history. Project volunteers have documented over 320 diverse life stories recording the sacrifices and obstacles faced by lesbians of that era. The collection is now archived, and continues to grow, as part of the prestigious Sophia Smith Collection at Smith College. Today Eversmeyer is proud to live in a time when she can be her true self with acquaintances, friends, family, medical professionals, and everyone
. . . . .
http://www.nwhp.org/
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theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)Wish there was a REAL history channel to watch, one that would provide us with bios such as these, rather than more garbage about moonshiners, alligator hunters and arm wrestling. I would love some programs about women's history and also about Native American history, about which I know virtually nothing. If all you had was cable TV as a yardstick, you'd think that history consisted of nothing more than stories about white men... and white men doing anything at all, apparently.
raven mad
(4,940 posts)cinnabonbon
(860 posts)ismnotwasm
(42,538 posts)And a great reference