Archive for the 'On this day...' Category

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 8th, 2004

February 8

1850: (Birthday) Kate Chopin, author whose novel Awakening (1899) about woman’s sexual awareness made her a social outcast.

1861: Elizabeth Cady Stanton testifies before the New York Senate Judiciary Committee that desertion and cruelty should be made grounds for divorce.

1964: “Ladies Day in the House”: Representative Howard W. Smith introduces an amendment to add the word sex to provisions of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, thereby legislating against discrimination on the basis of sex.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 7th, 2004

February 7

1966: (Court Decision) A federal court declares Alabama’s law excluding women from jury duty to be unconstitutional.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 6th, 2004

February 6

1956: (A First) Autherine Lucy enrolls as the first African American student at the University of Alabama.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 5th, 2004

February 5

1777: (Legal Decision): Georgia’s constitution “abrogated” the male entail and primogeniture, those two bulwarks of ancient thievery that prevented women from inheriting property.

1971: (Suffrage) Women in Switzerland are enfranchised to vote in national elections but women are not allowed to vote in local elections in many cantons, a fact that doesn’t change until 1994.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 4th, 2004

February 4

1913: (Birthday) Rosa Parks born in Tuskegee, Alabama. Parks became famous for her actions which some historians mark as the beginning of the civil rights movement in the U.S. when she refused to surrender her seat on a bus to a white man December 1, 1955 in Montgomery, AL. This brave woman had been an outspoken black rights advocate for more than 20 years, long before Martin Luther King popularized the movement.

On Tuesday, June 15, 1999, President Clinton and top lawmakers honored civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks with the prestigious Congressional Gold Medal of Honor. “This medal is encouragement for all of us to continue until all have rights,” said Parks, 86, during her brief remarks. Parks’ refusal to give up her bus seat to a white passenger in Montgomery, Alabama, on December 5, 1955, triggered a black boycott of the city’s bus system that lasted more than a year and eventually led to laws that ended legalized segregation.

1921: (Birthday) Betty Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique and one of the founders of the National Organization for Women born in Peoria, Illinois.

1976: (A First) Kathryn Lis, Susn Kollmeye and Cynthia Snead became the first U.S. Coast Guard Academy cadets by finishing in the top one percent of the more than 10,000 men and women who competed for admission.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 3rd, 2004

February 3

1821: (Birthday) Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman doctor in the United States, born in Bristol, England. (See On this day in history for January 23, 2004).

1874: (Birthday) Gertrude Stein, American author, born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania. Stein lived most of her life in France with her lifelong companion Alice Tolkas. Her word repetitions challenged readers to explore the various and deeper meanings of words such as “A rose is a rose is a rose.” Coined the phrase “the lost generation” and used the word “gay” for the first time in literature. “Gertrude Stein was a writer of experimental prose and one of the most original American Modernists. Gertrude Stein is a feminist writer who wrote about the inner world of women, expressing their inner feelings, wishes and desires. Gertrude Stein’s women are ordinary, everyday women who live ordinary, uneventful lives.”

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 2nd, 2004

February 2

1878: (Birthday) Katharine Martha Houghton Hepburn (Kate’s mother) born. From Bryn Mawr Women as Suffragists - the NAWSA Alumnae:

Hepburn co-founded the Hartford Equal Franchise League in 1913, a group that eventually numbered between 20,000-30,000 members. She later became President of the Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association, an affiliate of the NAWSA, actively speaking as a representative of women who were mothers as well as suffragists. In September 1917, inspired by the arrests of the White House pickets, she resigned from the Connecticut organization and joined the National Woman’s Party. By November 1917 she was on the NWP’s National Executive Committee, where she continued to make public appearances on behalf of the cause.

1901: The U.S. Army Nurse Corps established by Act of Congress.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | February 2nd, 2004

February 1

1853: The first issue of Una, a women’s rights newspaper, published by Paulina Wright Davis.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 30th, 2004

January 30

1888: (Birthday) Ella Cara Deloria, a Dakota Indian (Sioux) anthropologist who studied Dakota Indian life for more than 40 years, was born at White Swan, South Dakota, on the Yankton Sioux Reservation. Deloria always lived at extreme poverty levels as she worked with noted anthropologist Frank Boaz and later Ruth Benedict. For the first time in history, life in the Indian culture was seen from a woman’s perspective.

1958: (A First) The British House of Lords passed law (confirmed by the House of Commons Feb. 13) that seated women in the House of Lords for the first time in its six and one half centuries of existence. The day in now known as Woman Peerage Day.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 29th, 2004

January 29

1912: (Birthday) Martha Griffiths, U.S. Representative from Michigan, first woman on House Ways and Means Committee, and fighter for equal rights, born in Pierce City, Missouri.

1926: (A First) Violette Neatly Anderson, became the first black female lawyer to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court.

1943: (A First) Ruth Cheney Streeter became the first woman to reach the rank of Major with the U.S. Marines. She became a lieutenant colonel in 1943 and a full colonel in 1944.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 28th, 2004

January 28

1908: (A First) Julia Ward Howe becomes the firest woman elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

“>Julia Ward Howe (1819-1910), little known today except as author of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” was famous in her lifetime as poet, essayist, lecturer, reformer and biographer. She worked to end slavery, helped to initiate the women’s movement in many states, and organized for international peace—all at a time, she noted, “when to do so was a thankless office, involving public ridicule and private avoidance.”

In 1868 Julia Ward Howe joined Caroline Severance in founding the New England Woman’s Club. She also signed the call to the meeting that formed the New England Woman Suffrage Association and served as its president, 1868-77 and 1893-1910. In 1869 she and Lucy Stone led the formation of the American Woman Suffrage Association when its members separated from the National Association of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Howe presided over the Massachusetts Suffrage Association, 1870-78 and 1891-93. From its first issue in 1870 she edited and contributed to the Woman’s Journal founded by Lucy Stone.

“During the first two thirds of my life,” Howe recalled, “I looked to the masculine idea of character as the only true one. I sought its inspiration, and referred my merits and demerits to its judicial verdict. . . . The new domain now made clear to me was that of true womanhood—woman no longer in her ancillary relation to her opposite, man, but in her direct relation to the divine plan and purpose, as a free agent, fully sharing with man every human right and every human responsibility. This discovery was like the addition of a new continent to the map of the world, or of a new testament to the old ordinances.”

In the1870s, during the Franco-Prussian war, Julia felt “the cruel and unnecessary character of the contest. . . . a return to barbarism, the issue having been one which might easily have been settled without bloodshed.” She began a one-woman peace crusade that began with an impassioned “appeal to womanhood” to rise against war. She translated her proclamation into several languages and distributed it widely. In 1872 she went to London to promote an international Woman’s Peace Congress but was not able to bring it off. Back in Boston, she initiated a Mothers’ Peace Day observance on the second Sunday in June and held the meeting for a number of years. Her idea spread but was later replaced by the Mothers’ Day holiday now celebrated in May.

1921: a study by the U.S. House of Representatives was released which showed motherhood was safer in 17 countries than in the United States. The study led to a federal funding for infant and maternity care.
Recent studies during the 1990s shown the U.S. still lagging behind other developed nations.

1986: The first women killed in the U.S. Space program when the Challenger explodes, and astronaut Judith Resnick and Christa McCauliffe died along with five male crew members shortly after launch at Cape Canaveral, FL. They became the first women killed in earth’s space programs.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 27th, 2004

January 27

1900: (Birthday) Georgia Neese Clark, first woman to hold the office of Treasurer of the United States (1949) born in Richland, Kansas.

1964: (A First) Margaret Chase Smith, U.S. senator from Maine, announces her candidacy for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination. Smith started her policitcal career when she succeeded her husband as U.S. Representative in 1940. After serving 4 terms in the House, she was elected to the U.S. Senate, becoming the first woman elected to both houses of Congress.

Senator Smith came to national attention on June 1, 1950, when she became the first member of the Senate to denounce the tactics used by colleague Joseph McCarthy in his anticommunist crusade. Following her “Declaration of Conscience” speech, some pundits speculated that she might be the vice-presidential candidate on the 1952 Republican ticket. The opportunity, however, never materialized. In 1964, Senator Smith pursued her own political ambitions, running in several Republican presidential primaries. She took her candidacy all the way to the Republican National Convention in San Francisco, where she became the first woman to have her name placed in nomination for the presidency by either of the two major parties. Smith came in second to Barry Goldwater.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 26th, 2004

January 26

1944: (Birthday) Angela Davis, black militant teacher, lecturer, activist, and author born in Birmingham, Alabama. She wrote Women, Race and Class in 1980; was tried and acquitted of kidnapping, murder, and conspiracy (1971) stemming out of a shoot-out at the Marin Country Courthouse (1970), and ran for Vice President on the Communist Party ticket in 1980 and 1984.

1951: (A First) Paula Ackerman, becomes the first woman in the United States to serve as spiritual leader with rabbinical duties and authority.

In 1950, Rabbi William Ackerman died, after having served as spiritual leader of Temple Beth Israel in Meridian, Mississippi, for the previous 26 years. Knowing that finding a new rabbi would be difficult, the congregation turned to his widow, Paula Ackerman, asking her to serve as interim spiritual leader. For the next three years, Paula Ackerman lead weekly and holiday services, preached and officiated at funerals, weddings and confirmations. Like her predecessors, Ackerman was the subject of much media attention and, also like her predecessors, she hoped that her example would inspire other women. Yet nearly another quarter century would pass before our Reform Movement ordained a woman.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 25th, 2004

January 25

1882: (Birthday) Virginia Woolf, British novelist, essayist, and critic born in London. Woolf made an original contribution to the form of the novel with her stream of consciousness. She wrote subjectively rather than objectively. Her A Room of One’s Own (1929), a classic feminist essay, as well as Orlando, dedicated to Vita Sackville-West which is considered one of the world’s longest love letter. She and her husband, Leonard, formed Hogarth Press and were the mainstays of the noted Bloomsbury movement.

1970: (Court Decision) In Phillips v. Martin Marietta, the U.S. Supreme Court rules that women cannot be denied jobs on the basis of their having small children unless men are also subject to this constraint.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 23rd, 2004

January 23

1849: (A First) Elizabeth Blackwell graduates from Geneva Medical College, becoming the country’s first female doctor of medicine. After applying (and being rejected from) all of the established medical schools, she applied to several smaller schools (for a total of 29 applications) and received one acceptance letter — from Geneva Medical College in Geneva, NY, where she went on to graduate first in her class.

Soon after graduation, Elizabeth left for England and Paris, hoping to supplement her Geneva education with study at the great hospitals of Europe. Though told that she would be welcomed at the teaching hospitals of Paris, the only opportunity she was offered was at the lying-in hospital, La maternit’. There she found that her medical training gave her no status above that of the uneducated French village girls who were training to become midwives. Nevertheless, she considered the training in women’s and children’s diseases, as well as midwifery, to be excellent. She next studied for several months study at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London, where she was welcomed by the faculty — except the Professor of Midwifery, who told her that “his neglecting to give me aid, was owning to no disrespect to me as a lady, but to his condemnation of my object!”

Elizabeth returned to the United States in 1851 and settled in New York City, where she hoped to establish a practice. However, patients were slow in coming and she described “a blank wall of social and professional antagonism.” Her career instead took the direction it was to have for the rest of her life: the promotion of hygiene and preventive medicine among both lay persons and professionals and the promotion of medical education and opportunities for women physicians.

Soon after her return to the U.S., Elizabeth opened a free dispensary to provide out-patient treatment to poor women and children, but it was open only a few hours a week and its services were limited. In 1857, she closed the dispensary and opened the New York Infirmary for Indigent Women and Children, a full-scale hospital with beds for medical and surgical patients. It’s purpose was not only to serve the poor, but also to provide positions for women physicians and a training facility for female medical and nursing students. The medical staff at first consisted of Elizabeth and two of her protégés, her sister Emily [Blackwell] and Marie Zakrzewska. This institution still exists as the New York University Downtown Hospital.

Elizabeth believed that women should receive their medical education alongside men in the established medical schools. She was not sympathetic to the women’s medical schools that had opened in Boston, Philadelphia and New York in the 1850s. However, since the women trained in her Infirmary were not able to gain admission to the male medical colleges, she was persuaded to establish her own women’s medical college.

The Woman’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary opened its doors in 1868, with fifteen students and a faculty of nine, including Elizabeth, as Professor of Hygiene, and her younger sister Emily as Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women. The year after the College’s opening, Elizabeth left for England, leaving the College under Emily’s directorship.

She had always planned to return to England to make her career, and in 1869 she left New York to spend the remaining 40 years of her life in Great Britain.

1955: (A First) The U.S. Presbyterian Church votes to accept women as ministers.

1982: Debbie Brill, Canadian athlete who proved that pregnancy and motherhood need not end a woman’s athletic career. Her son was only five months old when she set a new indoor world broad jump record of 6′6-3/8″.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 22nd, 2004

January 22

1858: (Birthday) Beatrice Potter Webb, English writer and economist born in Gloucester. An early member of the Fabian Society, she published important works before she met her husband and formed a major partnership which influenced socialist thought of their day. Together, they co-founded the London School of Economics (1895) and the New Statesman (1918). Her autobiography is My Apprenticeship (1926). A member of the Royal Commission from 1905-09, Beatrice Potter advocated social security and the basic welfare state - about 30 years ahead of her time.

1973: (Court Decision) U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade declares abortion primarily a medical decision and strikes down state laws limiting women’s access to it.

1986: Mary Ann Sorrentino, executive director of the Rhode Island Planned Parenthood from 1977 - 1987 and syndicated columnist, was notified of her excommunication by the Roman Catholic Church due to her work with Planned Parenthood.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 21st, 2004

January 21

1908: (Law) The Sullivan Ordinance is passed in New York City making it illegal for women to smoke in public, punishable by a fine of $5-25 and ten days in jail. And they arrested women!

1987: (Court Decision) The U.S. Supreme Court rules a state may determine if a woman’s pregnancy makes her eligible for unemployment insurance. The 1976 Federal Unemployment Tax Act determined that pregnancy is to be treated the same as any other disability. In the Missouri case in question, state law stipulates disability must be work-related to qualify the person for unemployment insurance.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 20th, 2004

January 20

1925: (A First) Miriam Ferguson inaugurated as governor of Texas. Ferguson is the first woman to be elected governor of Texas, and the second woman to be elected state governor in the U.S.

1975 (A First) The first EVER national conference on rape was held at the University of Alabama.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 19th, 2004

January 19

1990: (A First) Elizabeth M. Watson, became the first woman to head the police force of a major American city. Houston Mayor Kathryn Whitmire named Watson, who also became the first police chief to birth a baby while on active duty.

On this day in history…

Posted by bean | January 17th, 2004

January 17

1820: (Birthday) Anne Brontë, author of Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848) and Agness Gray (1847), and sister of Emily and Charlotte Brontë, born at Thornton in West Yorkshire. (BTW, according to one website, the Brontë birthplace is (or was recently) for sale — just for those of you house hunting right now).

1829: (Birthday) Catherine Booth, co-founder of the Salvation Army with her husband William Booth born in Ashbourne, Derbyshire.

She was an eloquent preacher and headed the social work program. CB wrote in her pamphlet Female Ministry (1859) that a woman had the right to preach and interpret the gospel. She was instrumental in legal reforms that protected young girls.

1915: Anarchist Lucy Parsons leads hunger march.

From 1907-1908, a period encompassing huge economic crashes, Lucy organized against hunger and unemployment. In San Francisco Lucy and the IWW took over the Unemployment Committee, pressuring the state to begin a public works project. The San Francisco government’s refusal to acknowledge the committee gave rise to a march of ten thousand people. At the front were unemployed women. The success of Lucy’s Chicago Hunger Demonstrations in January 1915 pushed the American Federation of Labor, the Socialist Party, and Jane Addam’s Hull House to participate in a huge demonstration on February 12. Two weeks after this demonstration, the government began planning for a decentralization of hunger and unemployment policy.

1938: (Birthday) Martha Cotera, Chicana feminist, librarian, and civil rights worker born in Mexico.