![]() |
|
|
|
|
#1 |
|
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
Biological female. Lesbian. Relationship Status:
Happy ![]() Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Hanging out in the Atlantic.
Posts: 9,234
Thanks: 9,840
Thanked 34,617 Times in 7,640 Posts
Rep Power: 21474860 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() Loretta Perfectus Walsh (April 22, 1896 – August 6, 1925) became the first American active-duty Navy woman, and the first woman allowed to serve as a woman, in any of the United States armed forces other than as a nurse, when she enlisted in the U.S. Naval Reserve on March 17, 1917. Walsh subsequently became the first woman Navy petty officer when she was sworn in as Chief Yeoman on March 21, 1917. ![]() Marie Bottineau Baldwin (1863-1952) was a Chippewa attorney. Marie was the first Native American student and first woman of color to graduate from the Washington College of Law. Today the Women’s Law Association at her alma mater funds a scholarship in her name. Following law school, Marie worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs and was treasurer the Society of American Indians. ![]() Rebecca Latimer Felton (June 10, 1835 – January 24, 1930) was an American writer, lecturer, reformer, and politician who became the first woman to serve in the United States Senate. She was the most prominent woman in Georgia in the Progressive Era, and was honored by appointment to the Senate; she was sworn in on November 21, 1922, and served one day, the shortest serving Senator in U.S. history. At 87 years old, 9 months and 22 days, she was also the oldest freshman senator to enter the Senate
__________________
|
|
|
|
| The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to Kobi For This Useful Post: |
|
|
#2 |
|
MILLION $$$ PUSSY
How Do You Identify?:
Kinky, Raw, Perverted, Uber Queer Alpha Femme Preferred Pronoun?:
Iconic Ms. Relationship Status:
Keeper of 3, only one has the map to my freckles Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: ** La Reina del Sur**
Posts: 22,488
Thanks: 32,231
Thanked 80,077 Times in 15,670 Posts
Rep Power: 21474874 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() Gloria Anzaldua was a groundbreaking poet and cultural theorist, self-described Chicana/Tejana/lesbian/feminist/poet/writer.
__________________
"If you’re going to play these dirty games of ours, then you might as well indulge completely. It’s all about turning back into an animal and that’s the beauty of it. Place your guilt on the sidewalk and take a blow torch to it (guilt is usually worthless anyway). Be perverted, be filthy, do things that mannered people shouldn’t do. If you’re going to be gross then go for it and don’t wimp out."---Master Aiden ![]() ![]() |
|
|
|
| The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to The_Lady_Snow For This Useful Post: |
|
|
#3 |
|
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
Biological female. Lesbian. Relationship Status:
Happy ![]() Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Hanging out in the Atlantic.
Posts: 9,234
Thanks: 9,840
Thanked 34,617 Times in 7,640 Posts
Rep Power: 21474860 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
1909
The Sri Lanka Tamil Women's Union is created. 1909 Aleksandra Kollontay publishes The Social Foundations of the Women's Question while in exile from Russia. 1909 Mary White Ovington and Ida B. Wells-Barnett help found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). 1909 In New York, shirtwaist workers go on strike. The International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU) and the Women's Trade Union League (WTUL) work together in support of the strike. 1911 Imprisoned British suffragists stage hunger strikes. 1911 Marie Curie is awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for the isolation of pure radium. 1911 Journalist and publisher Kalliroe Parren establishes the Lyceum of Greek Women. 1911 The Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire in New York City kills 146 workers, most of them young immigrant women. They were unable to escape because the exit doors had been locked to prevent theft. 1912 Juliette Gordon Low founds the Girl Guides (later Girl Scouts) in the United States. By 1927 there will be a troop in every state. 1913 Norwegian women win the right to vote. 1913 English suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst is arrested for conspiracy to blow up David Lloyd George's home. While in jail, she goes on a hunger strike. 1913 In Washington, D.C., Alice Paul and the National American Woman Suffrage Association organize a huge march on the Capitol the day before President Woodrow Wilson's inauguration. 1914 In Russia, Princess Eugenie Shakhovskaya is the first female military pilot. She flies reconnaissance missions. 1914 American activist Margaret Sanger is indicted under the Comstock Act for distributing a birth control pamphlet titled Family Limitation. 1915 Danish women win the right to vote. 1915 Carrie Chapman Catt and Jane Addams combine several American pacifist organizations to create the Women's Peace Party. 1915 The International Congress of Women meets at The Hague to consider ways to end World War I. 1916 The British government recruits 400,000 women to work in agriculture while men are at war. 1916 Jeannette Rankin is elected to Congress from Montana; she is the first female member of the U.S. House of Representatives. 1916 María Jesús Alvarado Rivera establishes Evolución Femenina, Peru's first women's organization. 1917 Soon after coming to power in Russia, the Bolsheviks reform marriage laws, create maternity leave, and establish equal employment and wages. 1917 Laws passed in Cuba protect women's custody of children, divorce rights, and property rights. 1917 The U.S. Navy hires 12,000 women as clerks in the same job classifications and for the same pay as men so that it can send men overseas. 1917 Feminist Kimura Komako organizes the first Japanese woman suffrage meeting. 1917 On March 8, Russian women strike for “bread and peace,” helping spark the revolution that overthrows the imperial government. The date is later chosen to mark International Women's Day. 1918 Canadian and British women are granted the right to vote, although in Great Britain a woman must be over age 30. 1918 The Indian National Congress endorses giving women the right to vote. 1918 Peruvians pass a law granting working women two hours a day to nurse their infants. 1918 The U.S. government reports that 1.4 million women work in war industries. After World War I these women are forced out of industrial work. 1918 British birth-control activist Marie Stopes publishes the controversial and best-selling books Married Love and Wise Parenthood. 1919 Lady Astor becomes the first female member of the British House of Commons. 1919 The Treaty of Versailles includes a requirement that women receive equal pay. The clause is universally ignored. 1920 In Chile the National Council of Women is created to agitate for women's rights. 1920 In Japan, Hiratsuka Raicho, Oku Mumeo, and Ichikawa Fusae found the Shin Fujin Kyokai (“Association of New Women”) to work for women's unions and equal rights. 1920 The Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is signed into law, giving women the right to vote. 1920 Despite death threats from the Ku Klux Klan, Mary McLeod Bethune begins a voter registration drive for African American women. 1920 Edith Eder from Hungary, Rebecca Sieff from Britain, and Vera Weizmann from Russia found the Women's International Zionist Organization (WIZO). 1920 The University of Oxford admits its first full-degree female students. 1920 Joan of Arc is canonized. 1921 Agnes McPhail becomes the first female Canadian member of Parliament. 1921 Grace Abbott becomes head of the United States Children's Bureau. She works for better health care for children and mothers as well as laws against child labour. 1921 The German Nazi Party excludes women from membership. 1921 Margaret Sanger founds the American Birth Control League, which later becomes the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. 1922 Bertha Lutz founds the Brazilian Federation for the Advancement of Women. 1922 Rebecca Ann Latimer Felton becomes the first woman to serve in the U.S. Senate. She serves only two days. 1923 Egyptian feminist Huda Shaarawi publicly unveils and inspires many other women to do the same. 1924 Chinese women demonstrate when Sun Yat-sen's National Congress denies them suffrage. 1925 The first women's college in Korea, Ewha Womans College (founded 1886), is accredited. 1926 New Argentine legislation gives women equality under the civil code. 1927 Norwegian-born figure skater Sonja Henie wins her first world amateur championship. She goes on to win the next nine world championships and gold medals at the Olympics in 1928, 1932, and 1936. 1929 Margaret Grace Bondfield is named minister of labour and becomes the first British female cabinet minister. 1929 Virginia Woolf publishes A Room of One's Own.
__________________
|
|
|
|
| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Kobi For This Useful Post: |
|
|
#4 |
|
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
Biological female. Lesbian. Relationship Status:
Happy ![]() Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Hanging out in the Atlantic.
Posts: 9,234
Thanks: 9,840
Thanked 34,617 Times in 7,640 Posts
Rep Power: 21474860 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() Poker Alice (Alice Ivers Duffield Tubbs Huckert) (February 17, 1851 - February 27, 1930), was the best known female poker player in the American West. When she was twenty, the petite, attractive Alice married the mining engineer and avid gambler Frank Duffield. Alice joined her husband on his gambling excursions and quickly learned to master both poker and faro. When Frank was killed in an explosion, Alice began to earn her livelihood as a professional gambler. Alice died at the age of 79. ![]() Virne Beatrice "Jackie" Mitchell Gilbert (Aug 29,1912,13or14–Jan 7,1987) was one of the first female pitchers in professional baseball history.Pitching for the Chattanooga Lookouts Class AA minor league baseball team in an exhibition game against the New York Yankees, she struck out Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. A few days after Mitchell struck out Ruth and Gehrig, baseball commissioner Kenesaw Landis voided her contract and declared women unfit to play baseball as the game was "too strenuous".
__________________
|
|
|
|
| The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Kobi For This Useful Post: |
|
|
#5 |
|
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
Biological female. Lesbian. Relationship Status:
Happy ![]() Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Hanging out in the Atlantic.
Posts: 9,234
Thanks: 9,840
Thanked 34,617 Times in 7,640 Posts
Rep Power: 21474860 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
1930
White South African women get the right to vote. 1930 Ellen Church becomes the first airline stewardess. 1931 Jane Addams receives the Nobel Prize for Peace. 1932 Women of Brazil and Thailand are granted the right to vote. 1932 Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic. 1933 Franklin D. Roosevelt appoints Frances Perkins secretary of labor, and she becomes the first American female cabinet member. 1933 Portugal's new constitution specifically denies women's equal rights. 1933 In Nazi Germany, girls are inducted into the Jungmädel (“Young Maidens”) and Bund Deutscher Mädel (“League of German Girls”). The organizations stress the importance of virtue and motherhood. 1933 American author Gertrude Stein publishes The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas. 1933 In Italy, Mussolini rewards women who have more than 14 children. 1934 African American author Zora Neale Hurston publishes her first book, Jonah's Gourd Vine. 1934 Cuban law requires equal pay for equal work. 1935 Anthropologist Margaret Mead publishes Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies, challenging Western assumptions about gender relations. 1936 British pilot Beryl Markham becomes the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic from east to west. 1937 Women in the Philippines get the right to vote. 1937 The American Medical Association recognizes birth control as a legitimate topic for medical school classes. 1938 In France, women are admitted into unarmed military divisions. 1939 Marian Anderson gives a concert to an audience of 75,000 at the Lincoln Memorial after the Daughters of the American Revolution prevent her from singing at Constitution Hall because of her race. 1940 Margaret Chase Smith is elected to fill her late husband's seat in the U.S. Congress; she becomes the first woman to serve in the House of Representatives and the Senate. 1940 The U.S. Republican Party comes out in support of the Equal Rights Amendment. 1941 The Soviet Union creates three all-female pilot regiments. The most highly decorated is the 586th Women's Fighter Regiment. 1941 Pacifist Jeannette Rankin places the only congressional vote against U.S. entry into World War II. 1942 American women enlist in two newly created military bodies, the Women's Army Corps (WAC) and Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES). 1942 Elise Richter, the first female professor in Austria and a noted linguist, is deported to the Nazi concentration camp at Theresienstadt, where she later dies. 1943 The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League is founded by Chicago Cubs owner Philip Wrigley. 1943 More than 310,000 women take jobs in the U.S. aircraft industry. Wartime propaganda urges women to join the labour force for the duration of World War II. 1943 Physicist Elda Emma Anderson is recruited to work at Los Alamos on the development of the atomic bomb. 1944 Indian Muslim Noor un Nissa, the first British secret agent in the Nazi Party, is shot by the Gestapo. 1945 Diarist Anne Frank dies in the Nazi concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen. Two years later her father publishes her diary of their years spent in hiding. 1945 Eleanor Roosevelt becomes a delegate to the newly created United Nations. 1945 More than six million American women who entered the workforce during World War II are pushed out of their traditionally male jobs at war's end.
__________________
|
|
|
|
| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Kobi For This Useful Post: |
|
|
#6 |
|
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
Biological female. Lesbian. Relationship Status:
Happy ![]() Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Hanging out in the Atlantic.
Posts: 9,234
Thanks: 9,840
Thanked 34,617 Times in 7,640 Posts
Rep Power: 21474860 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() Mary McLeod Bethune (1873-1955) was... a graduate of Moody Bible Institute, she opened a school for black girls.... From 1935-1944 she was a special advisor on minority affairs" to FDR. "She was the first black woman to head a federal agency." She also worked as a "consultant on interracial affairs" for the United Nations. Mary founded the "National Council Youth Administration of Negro Women and was director of Negro Affairs for the National Youth Administration." ![]() Susanna "Dora" Salter, born on 3/2/1860. In 1887, at age 27, she was elected Mayor of Argonia, Kansas, becoming the 1st woman mayor and the 1st woman elected to political office in the United States.
__________________
|
|
|
|
| The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Kobi For This Useful Post: |
|
|
#7 |
|
Member
How Do You Identify?:
Queer femme Preferred Pronoun?:
she works out well ;) Relationship Status:
Happily married. Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Ontario
Posts: 812
Thanks: 1,885
Thanked 3,215 Times in 666 Posts
Rep Power: 21474852 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() Remember this lady? I didn't either. Irena Sendler Died: May 12, 2008 (aged 98) Warsaw, Poland During WWII, Irena, got permission to work in the Warsaw ghetto, as a Plumbing/Sewer specialist. She had an ulterior motive. Irena smuggled Jewish infants out in the bottom of the tool box she carried. She also carried a burlap sack in the back of her truck, for larger kids. Irena kept a dog in the back that she trained to bark when the Nazi soldiers let her in and out of the ghetto. The soldiers, of course, wanted nothing to do with the dog and the barking covered the kids/infants noises. During her time of doing this, she managed to smuggle out and save 2500 kids/infants. Ultimately, she was caught, however, and the Nazi's broke both of her legs and arms and beat her severely. Irena kept a record of the names of all the kids she had smuggled out, In a glass jar that she buried under a tree in her back yard. After the war, she tried to locate any parents that may have survived and tried to reunite the family. Most had been gassed. Those kids she helped got placed into foster family homes or adopted. In 2007 Irena was up for the Nobel Peace Prize. She was not selected. Al Gore won, for a slide show on Global Warming. Please share this to honor the sacrifice and courage of this fine human being who gave so much and saved so many. http://www.irenasendler.org/
__________________
"If you have come to help me, you are wasting your time. But if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us walk together." Lila Watson You say you love rain, but you use an umbrella to walk under it.
You say you love sun, but you seek shade when its shining. You say you love wind, but when its comes you close your window. So that's why I'm scared, when you say you love me. -- Bob Marley |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Tags |
| pride, strength, women |
|
|