June 16, 1937: One day a woman will be elected President! That’s the assurance of the woman who currently lives in the White House, Eleanor Roosevelt.
Today in Herstory: NAWSA Releases Pro-Suffrage Film
June 15, 1912: Always eager to take advantage of any opportunity to promote the cause, the National American Woman Suffrage Association (N.A.W.S.A.) has made the first pro-suffrage motion picture.
Today in Herstory: Theodore Roosevelt Comes Out in Support of Suffrage
June 12, 1912: Teddy Roosevelt has just endorsed woman suffrage! Better yet, he plans to work at the Republican National Convention in Chicago next week to get a suffrage plank in the party’s platform.
Today in Herstory: Alice Paul Attacks the Republican Party on Suffrage
June 11, 1920: Alice Paul escalated the war of words outside the Republican National Convention today.
Today in Herstory: President Kennedy Signs the Equal Pay Act into Law
June 10, 1963: Almost two decades of effort by women’s groups paid off today when President Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act.
Today in Herstory: Two Victories Have Been Won Against Workplace Gender Discrimination!
June 9, 1970: Two long overdue developments today, one in regard to an Executive Order by a former President, and another about a Task Force appointed last year by the present Chief Executive.
Today in Herstory: Suffragists Demand Chicago Republicans Do More for the Vote
June 8, 1920: One hundred and twenty-five National Woman’s Party members surrounded the Chicago Coliseum on this first day of picketing.
Today in Herstory: Suffrage Amendment Set for Ratification
May 26, 1919: Despite the frantic efforts of opponents, the Susan B. Anthony (nationwide woman suffrage) Amendment appears to be on the verge of final passage by Congress, and being sent to the States for ratification.
Today in Herstory: Man Sentenced to Three Months in Prison For Distributing Contraception
May 19, 1969: In what seemed like a courtroom scene from another era, Bill Baird was sentenced to three months in prison today for distributing a contraceptive device to an unmarried woman.
Today in Herstory: Jacqueline Cochran Breaks Boundaries in Aviation
May 18, 1953: Jacqueline Cochran has just become the first woman to fly faster than the speed of sound – and that wasn’t the end of her record-breaking day.
Today in Herstory: Suffragists Stage Open-Air Rally in Manhattan
May 13, 1909: Clearly not reluctant to venture into hostile territory in search of converts, Edith Bailey, Harriot Stanton Blatch and several other suffragists held a rally today near the church of militant anti-suffragist Rev. Dr. Charles Henry Parkhurst on Manhattan’s Madison Square.
Today in Herstory: Congress Approves the Creation of a Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps
May 12, 1942: Legislation to establish a Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) got final Congressional approval today with a Senate vote of 38 to 27.
Today in Herstory: Mass Meeting Held to Edit the US Constitution to Give Women the Vote
Founding Feminists is FMF’s daily herstory column. May 7, 1894: A lively and well-attended mass meeting was held at Cooper Union in Manhattan earlier this evening, and there certainly seemed to be plenty of people willing to do whatever it takes to remove a single word from the New York State Constitution, which presently grants […]
Today in Herstory: The Suffrage Parade is Bigger Than Ever
Founding Feminists is FMF’s daily herstory column. May 6, 1911: Anyone who still doubts that the woman suffrage movement is rapidly gaining support must have been a long way from New York’s Fifth Avenue earlier today. The turnout for this year’s annual suffrage parade was unprecedented, with at last 3,000 marching from 57th Street to […]
Today in Herstory: Rose Pastor Stokes Causes Sensation By Distributing Birth Control Information
May 5, 1916: Rose Pastor Stokes has caused a sensation in Carnegie Hall by distributing small slips of paper containing birth control information, a clear violation of Section 1142 of the New York State Penal Code. She took this step at a mass meeting called to celebrate Emma Goldman’s release from prison, where she had just served two weeks in the workhouse for the same offense.
Today in Herstory: Large Suffrage Parade Takes New York City
May 4, 1912: What a great day this has been for “Votes for Women” advocates!
Today in Herstory: Suffragists Take Aim at Senator O’Gorman
April 30, 1915: There was a quite frustrating and somewhat heated exchange of views this afternoon as Inez Milholland Boissevain, Doris Stevens and several other members of the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage met with U.S. Senator James O’Gorman, Democrat of New York.
Today in Herstory: Women Teachers Mount Fight for Equal Pay
April 29, 1905: “Equal pay for equal work” is the demand of an insurgent group of women teachers led by Anna Louise Goessling of P.S. 44 in Brooklyn, New York.
Today in Herstory: Fifth Annual League of Women Voters Convention Held in Critical Election Year
Founding Feminists is FMF’s daily herstory columnn. April 28, 1924: Though this is the fifth annual national convention of the League of Women Voters, it’s the first one to be held in a presidential election year since the battle for the suffrage amendment ended in victory on August 26, 1920, so it’s an especially exciting […]
Today in Herstory: New York Will No Longer Enforce Prohibition on Married Teachers
April 27, 1904: A victory today for female teachers who wish to marry, and for women’s rights in general.