7 unsung heroines who changed the course of history
· 11 Bold Women Who Changed the World 1. Sybil Ludington: The Female Paul Revere. On the night of April 26, 1777, 16-year-old Sybil Ludington rode nearly 40... 2. Claudette Colvin: Teenaged Civil Rights Activist. Claudette Colvin in April 1998. Too tired to give up her seat on... 3. Jane Addams: ...
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#WarriorWednesdays: 15 Black Women Who Changed The Course of History
01 Ella Baker Civil Rights activist Ella Baker worked behind the scenes for the NAACP, SCLS, and SNCC for more than 50... 02 Harriet Tubman Harriet Tubman was a former slave, abolitionist and a spy for the U.S Army during ...· Anne Boleyn. Anne Boleyn, born around 1501, is widely recognized as the cause of English King Henry VIII's infamous divorce case. But …
· The "callous and menacing" Agrippina the Younger (AD 16–59), Augustus's great-granddaughter, was a hand-picked empress. Hand-picked by herself, as it turned out. A brilliant and ruthless opportunist, she used her lineage and her son Nero to make herself the most powerful woman in Roman history. Roman historians depicted her as greedy ...
Here are the 12 women who changed the worldJane Austen (1775 – 1817) ... Anne Frank (1929 – 1945) ... Maya Angelou (1928 – 2014) ... Queen Elizabeth I (1533 – 1603) ... Catherine the Great (1729 – 1796) ... Sojourner Truth (1797 – 1883) ... Rosa Parks (1913 – 2005) ... Malala Yousafzai (1997 - Present)More items...•
International Women's Day: Amazing women who have changed the worldJane Austen: 1775 - 1817.Florence Nightingale: 1820 - 1910.Emmeline Pankhurst: 1858-1928.Marie Curie: 1867 - 1934.Coco Chanel: 1883 - 1971.Katharine Hepburn: 1907 - 2003.Mother Teresa: 1910 - 1997.Margaret Thatcher: 1925 - 2013.More items...
Try watching this video on www.youtube.com, or enable JavaScript if it is disabled in your browser.Adolf Hitler: 1889-1945. ... Karl Marx: 1818-1883. ... Charles Darwin: 1809-1882. ... 18 of the Greatest Religious Leaders in History.51 of the Greatest Women in India's History.Friedrich Wohler: 1800-1882. ... Richard Trevithick: 1771-1833.More items...•
Eva, Juana Azurduy, Isabel the Catholic, Marie Curie, Winnie Mandela & Benazir Bhutto were women whose lives changed the course of history....M.R.P.:778.00inclusive of all taxes includes free wireless delivery via Amazon WhispernetSold by:Amazon Asia-Pacific Holdings Private Limited1 more row
1. Sybil Ludington: The Female Paul Revere. On the night of April 26, 1777, 16-year-old Sybil Ludington rode nearly 40 miles to warn some 400 militiamen that the British troops were coming. Much like the ride of Paul Revere, Ludington's message helped Patriot leaders prepare for battle.
Mahatma Gandhi (1869 – 1948): Activist – India It was there that he spent 21 years fighting against the injustices and racial discrimination in South African society.
– People who all left the world in a better place. Including Marie Curie, Hariet Tubman, Albert Einstein and Eleanor Roosevelt. – People who campaigned for equality, civil rights and civil justice. Includes Abraham Lincoln, Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks.
The 100 Most Significant Figures in History Jesus. Napoleon. Muhammad. William Shakespeare. Abraham Lincoln. George Washington. Adolf Hitler. Aristotle.More items...•
Kamala HarrisAccording to the index, Kamala Harris is the most influential woman in the United States. The politician, attorney, and the 49th and current vice president of the United States have 62.8 million US Google searches, followed by Ariana Grande with 29.9 million US Google searches per month.
Feb 5, 2021. . Women's History Month comes and goes every March, but what's lasting is our support for women 365 days of the year. While the annual celebration gives us a chance to amplify the work and achievements of phenomenal women (both well-known and those who keep us going in our personal lives), it's also important to remember ...
In 1985, Oklahoma native Wilma Mankiller became the first woman to be Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, leading the largest tribe in the United States. During her decade-long chiefdom from 1985 to 1995, "tribal enrollment grew, infant mortality dropped and employment rates doubled," according to Time.
During a time when sports predominantly consisted of white male owners and athletes, Effa Manley refused to subscribe to gender and racial stereotypes. She made history as a sports executive who co-owned the Newark Eagles baseball franchise in the Negro leagues with her husband Abe Manley from 1935 to 1946.
Amelia Boynton Robinson (1911-2015) Amelia Boynton Robinson was at the forefront of the civil rights movement in Georgia and Alabama. She is most recognized for the brutal photographs showing her being attacked by officers during the 1965 "Bloody Sunday" march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.
Hattie McDaniel (1895-1952) Hattie McDaniel was the first Black actor to receive a Oscar in 1940 for her portrayal of the maid "Mammy" in Gone with the Wind. When actress Regina King was asked in 2019 about following in McDaniel's footsteps with her recent Best Supporting Actress win, she said she felt "blessed.".
Before Naomi Campbell and Tyra Banks, there was Donyale Luna (née Peggy Ann Freeman). Luna is hailed as "the first Black supermodel," and she was the first African American model to appear on the cover of British Vogue in March 1966. Luna also appeared in several indie films, including Andy Warhol's Camp in 1965.
Mary McLeod Bethune (1875-1955) Mary McLeod Bethune was an educator and civil rights advocate. In 1904, she founded the Daytona Educational and Industrial School for Negro Girls (now known as Bethune-Cookman University) in Florida, becoming the first woman to start a historical Black college and university (HBCU).
Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell. When Blackwell received a medical degree in 1849, she was the first female to join the Medical Register of the General Medical Council. She practiced as a physician and encouraged other women to pursue careers in medicine until her death in 1910. Kevin Winter Getty Images. 10 of 75.
In addition to a lengthy political and philanthropical career, Clinton inspired young girls across the nation when she made the ballot as the first female presidential nominee in 2016.
Dorothy Thompson. Named one of the most "influential women in the U.S." alongside Eleanor Roosevelt in the 1939 edition of Time magazine, Thompson worked as a journalist for a number of publications - covering topics of war, politics, home, and family. NurPhoto Getty Images.
Roosevelt holds the record as the longest-serving first lady, reserving the title throughout her husband's four terms in the White House. During her time, she was very vocal in her support of the civil rights movement.
Her involvement led to the 19th amendment, which gives women the right to vote.
Earhart soared to notoriety as the first female aviator to fly across the Atlantic Ocean alone.
Britain's first female (and longest-serving) Prime Minister garnered the title "Iron Lady" for her strong opinions, strict policy, and firm leadership.
So many of the social life's aspects have changed for women in the years. Starting with the right for education and ending with gender equality - all of this didn't happen overnight, and many badass women had to sacrifice their personal lives for a greater cause. Women's Equality Day celebrated on August 26th in the US, commemorates the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution, granting women the right to vote. It was certified in 1920, despite being introduced many years earlier in 1878, and since 1972, every president has published a proclamation for Women's Equality Day. Only because of the strong women in history we have reached this point in our society.
Romania-born, Sofia Ionescu, is the one female neurosurgeon who was nominated as the first neurosurgeon in the world. She worked in the field for 47 years, performing all the procedures known at that time.
Women's Equality Day celebrated on August 26th in the US, commemorates the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution, granting women the right to vote. It was certified in 1920, despite being introduced many years earlier in 1878, and since 1972, every president has published a proclamation for Women's Equality Day.
Educator, activist and philanthropist Mary McLeod Bethune was appointed as a national adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt as part of his Black Cabinet. Known as the First Lady of the Struggle, Bethune created a school for Black students in Daytona Beach, Florida. It is now known as Bethune-Cookman University.
Unbought and unbossed, U.S Representative Shirley Chisholm shattered the glass ceiling when she became the first Black woman to run for President in 1972. Chisholm didn’t win the nomination but her place in history was cemented. She was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015.
Winnie Mandela. Known as the “Mother of the Nation,” Winnie Mandela is a South African activist and politician. In addition to being married to the late Nelson Mandela for 38 years, she received the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award in 1985.
Katherine Johnson. Before Hidden Figures, many of us had no clue about the contributions of Katherine Johnson. A certified mathematician , it was her calculations that ensured astronauts like Alan Shepard, John Glenn and the Apollo 11 flights were successful. Donaldson Collection/Getty Images.
Bessie Coleman is the first Black and Native American woman to hold a pilot license. Sadly, she was killed at age 34 when her plane unexpectedly went down in 1926.
Henrietta Lacks changed history and didn’t even know it. The young mother died of cancer at age 31. Tissue samples from her tumors were taken without consent during treatment and those cell samples were used by researchers to develop the polio vaccine. To this day, her cells continue to save lives.
Born Sarah Breedlove, Madame C.J. Walker became the first Black woman millionaire in the early 1900s after creating a line of beauty and hair products for Black women. Madam Walker was a pioneer in the Black hair care industry. Besides becoming one of the most successful Black business owners of her time, she was also an activist who championed ...
Harriet Lane , born in 1830, served as FLOTUS during the presidency of her single uncle, James Buchanan, from 1857 until 1861. A Chippewa chief recognized Lane as "The Great Mother of the Indians" for her work toward improving living conditions on Native American reservations. Historians have credited Lane with lobbying for education and medicine for American Indians, as well as the preservation of tribal culture. Following the Civil War, American Indians would experience tragedy that has largely gone ignored in U.S. history classes. Lane was also a close friend to Prince Edward of England, and attended his coronation in June 1902, about a year before her death in 1903.
Harriet Beecher Stowe, born in 1811, was a famous abolitionist whose anti-slavery novel Uncle Tom's Cabin inspired equal parts outrage and sympathy. Stowe's work humanized slaves in America, and sparked a national conversation about social justice, religion, and morality. The novel was so influential that it was banned in most Southern states. Stowe strove for accuracy in her novel, incorporating hot news stories on slavery and seeking firsthand accounts. The book sold phenomenally in the United States, Europe, and even Asia, and is still recognized as a classic more than a century after her death in 1896.
Anna Nzingha presided over portions of Angola and Zaire in a time when Portugal and other European powers were increasingly invading and conquering African lands. For 40 years, Nzingha, born in 1583, led military campaigns to protect her people from Portuguese invaders, and passionately sought to destroy the African slave trade until her death in 1663. In her lifetime, she led multiple attempts to unite African nations against European encroachment. She became queen of Ndongo in 1623, but preferred to be called "King," and famously donned male clothes. Like Elizabeth I of England and many other female leaders in positions of power traditionally reserved for males, Nzingha was clearly a strong and highly respectable figure who was unfortunately conditioned to be insecure about her sex.
Anne Boleyn, born around 1501, is widely recognized as the cause of English King Henry VIII's infamous divorce case. But modern scholars postulate that the king's fixation with leaving his barren first wife began years before he met Boleyn. Despite her supposedly average looks, Henry was attracted to Boleyn’s wit, intellect, and expressiveness. She used her influence to champion religious freedom and education for the poor. In his book The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn, Eric Ives attributes her fall and execution to a political coup led by her husband's advisers after her fierce opinions about charity ran contrary to theirs. Ives claims that her opponents manipulated misogynistic cultural values against female sexuality to orchestrate her execution in 1536.
Tacitus called her “pre-eminently noble” and “the glory of her fatherland” but he also said she was “impatient for equality, greedy for mastery” and had thrown off “female flaws in preference to men’s concerns”. In bed with the Romans: a brief history of sex in Ancient Rome. 5.
The “callous and menacing” Agrippina the Younger (AD 16–59), Augustus’s great-granddaughter, was a hand-picked empress. Hand-picked by herself, as it turned out. A brilliant and ruthless opportunist, she used her lineage and her son Nero to make herself the most powerful woman in Roman history.
Cuckolded by her last husband, Mark Antony, in favour of Cleopatra, she spent much of her life grieving for her dead son Marcellus. Your guide to the Roman empire: when it was formed, why it split and how it failed, plus its most colourful emperors. 3.
The dynastic tool. Poor tragic Octavia (69–11 BC). Used by her brother Augustus as a dynastic tool, she was expected to produce heirs and live up to the exacting moralising standards of the regime. Octavia behaved as the respectful and compliant Stepford Wife she was supposed to be as well as proving a dynastic lynchpin.
Thanks to Tacitus, the “ferocious and volatile” Messalina (cAD 17–48), Claudius’s wife, has gone down in history for her duplicitous and reckless infidelity. After selling honours and Claudius’s family heirlooms, Messalina embarked on a bigamous marriage with her lover Silius and planned to topple Claudius. When Claudius’s freedmen spilled the beans, Messalina was finished. She was executed in the Gardens of Lucullus, a place she had greedily stolen from its owner.
In 2016, she won the seat of Barton in the federal election and became the first Indigenous woman to be elected to the House of Representatives.
In the mid 1950s, Joyce Mercy was only a teenager, but she had grit, will and fortitude. She knew what she wanted to do. She went to Sydney to study nursing. There, she met and became friends with leading members of the Aboriginal-Australian Fellowship and became a member of the Aborigines Progressive Association.
In 2018, Noel Pearson described O’Donoghue, a friend, as “the most outstanding Aboriginal leader of the contemporary era.”. Stuart Rintoul released a biography of her “ Lowitja” which came out last year to critical acclaim.
As chair of The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission, O’Donoghue conducted negotiations that lead to the Keating government’s native title legislation following the High Court’s Mabo judgment.
In 2003 former school teacher and board member of the NSW Board of Studies, Linda Burney became the first Aboriginal person to serve in the NSW Parliament.
Professor Megan Davis | The architect of The Uluru Statement. In May 2017, UNSW Law Professor Megan Davis oversaw the four-day regional dialogues behind the Uluru Statement and a delegate at the First Nations National Constitutional Convention which took place at the foot of Uluru in Central Australia on the lands of the Aṉangu people.
Gibbs organised over 500 Aboriginal people to take part. Ten years later, the referendum won citizenship for Aboriginal people with a 90.7 percent majority to ‘Yes’. Later that year, she established a hostel for rural Aboriginal people to receive hospital treatments in Dubbo.
Craddock was one of many women who challenged the Comstock laws in the last decades of the nineteenth century and the early decades of the twentieth. New ideas about money, class, gender, and sex were circulating after the Civil War. Women, who were disproportionately harmed by poverty, unwanted parenthood, lack of employment, and low wages, ...
At the time of their arrests for Comstock law violations, the women were as young as twenty-seven and as old as sixty-five. They were married, single, mothers, child-free, virgins, widows, and divorcées. None took reproduction lightly; one had an intellectually disabled son.
What makes the Comstock women all the more remarkable is that they did their agitating, writing, and speaking out against him at a time when women did not have the right to vote (though Comstock was appointed and could not be voted out of his position). In court, their fates were decided by men; women were not appointed to judgeships until 1921 and could not serve on federal juries until 1957. With one exception, the Comstock women retained male lawyers who encouraged them to plead guilty and were ineffective advocates, in part because the men did not understand their clients’ thinking.
Other contributors included the American modern dance pioneer Loie Fuller, who called it a “graceful pantomime.”. Even the third archbishop of New York, who admitted he had not seen it, seemed supportive: “Perhaps Mr. Comstock was too sensitive in the matter, he and the good old ladies who were so shocked.
As they had in their rural communities, they wanted to protect young men from temptation in the city, guiding them to lead pious lives among pious women. These “Com stockians” opposed prostitution , into which many young women were driven by poverty and alcohol.
Couples could choose to have “propagative” or “amative” sex. During the latter, men practiced male continence, or coitus reservatus, which Oneida founder John Humphrey Noyes considered more pleasurable, contraceptive, and generally healthy for men, as semen loss was thought to provoke anxiety. Of male continence, in which men abstained ...
Angela and Ezra Heywood were abolitionists before they came to their free love ideas. Woodhull’s 1872 nomination for president of the United States brought increased attention to the suffrage cause. Woodhull, Heywood, and Craddock identified as Spiritualists, claiming they could communicate with the dead.