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         Women In History:     more books (100)
  1. Servants of the Dynasty: Palace Women in World History (California World History Library)
  2. Skystars: The History of Women In Aviation by Ann Hodgman, Rudy Djabbaroff, 1981-09
  3. History of Women in the West, Volume II: Silences of the Middle Ages
  4. Invisible Stars: A Social History of Women in American Broadcasting (Media, Communication, and Culture in America) by Donna L. Halper, 2001-04
  5. From Ballots to Breadlines: American Women 1920-1940 (Young Oxford History of Women in the United States , Vol 8) by Sarah Jane Deutsch, 1998-03-26
  6. A Revolution Of Their Own: Voices Of Women In Soviet History (Volume 0) by Barbara Engel, 1997-11-28
  7. An Unfinished Battle: American Women 1848-1865 (Young Oxford History of Women in the United States) by Harriet Sigerman, 1998-03-26
  8. Pushing the Limits: American Women 1940-1961 (Young Oxford History of Women in the United States) by Elaine Tyler May, 1998-03-26
  9. The Road to Equality: American Women Since 1962 (Young Oxford History of Women in the United States) by William H. Chafe, 1998-03-26
  10. Biographical Supplement and Index (Young Oxford History of Women in the United States) by Harriet Sigerman, 1998-03-26
  11. New Paths to Power: American Women 1890-1920 (Young Oxford History of Women in the United States) by Karen Manners Smith, 1998-03-26
  12. Laborers for Liberty: American Women 1865-1890 (Young Oxford History of Women in the United States) by Harriet Sigerman, 1998-03-26
  13. A History of Women in Ireland, 1500-1800 by Mary O'Dowd, 2004-12-20
  14. Women of Vision: Histories in Feminist Film and Video by Alexandra Juhasz Juhasz, 2001-04-18

41. Indiana University Press Journals - Journal Of Women's History
Journal of women's history. The Journal of women's history is the first journaldevoted exclusively to the international field of women's history.
http://iupjournals.org/jwh/index.shtml
Home Books Journals Books Search ... Submissions
This journal is available on Project Muse.
Journal of Women's History
Leila J. Rupp and Donna Guy, Editors
ISSN: 1042-7961 To subscribe, click here
For single issues, click here
For single articles, click here "A superb journal that includes the best scholarship in the field today."
Council of Editors of Learned Journals The Journal of Women's History is the first journal devoted exclusively to the international field of women's history. It was founded in 1989 by Christie Farnham, who, together with Joan Hoff, edited its first eight volumes. For the journal, the contested term "feminist" has come to mean a recognition that gender is an important category of analysis; an assertion that women as a category have been historically disadvantaged relative to men of their race, class, ethnicity, or sexual identity; and a commitment to changing the structures that systematically privilege men over women. It does not attempt to impose one feminist "line" but recognizes the multiple perspectives captured by the term "feminisms." Its guiding principle is a belief that the divide between "women's history" and "gender history" can be, and is, bridged by work on women that is sensitive to the particular historical constructions of gender that shape and are shaped by women's experience. It is published four times a year. NOW - for a limited time only

42. Anthony Center For Women's Leadership History Of Women's Suffrage
Chronologies and essays on topics including the relationship of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony.Category Society history United States women Suffrage Movement......history of women's Suffrage.
http://www.rochester.edu/SBA/history.html
History of Women's Suffrage ACWL Home About ACWL ACWL Resources ACWL Programs ... Email the ACWL In 1995, the passage of the 19th amendment to the Constitution, giving women the right to vote, celebrated its 75th anniversary. The resolution calling for woman suffrage had passed, after much debate, at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, convened by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott. In The Declaration of Sentiments, a document based upon the Declaration of Independence, the numerous demands of these early activists were elucidated. The 1848 convention had challenged America to social revolution that would touch every aspect of life. Early women's rights leaders believed suffrage to be the most effective means to change an unjust system. By the late 1800s, nearly fifty years of progress afforded women advancement in property rights, employment and educational opportunities, divorce and child custody laws, and increased social freedoms. The early 1900s saw a successful push for the vote through a coalition of suffragists, temperance groups, reform-minded politicians, and women's social welfare organizations. Although Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton devoted 50 years to the woman's suffrage movement, neither lived to see women gain the right to vote. But their work and that of many other suffragists contributed to the ultimate passage of the 19th amendment in 1920.

43. Women Of Achievement And Herstory: Women's Military History
Please email military information, questions or comments on Military women's historyto Captain Barb Military women's history © 199699 Captain Barbara A
http://www.undelete.org/military.html
Women's Internet Information Network presents:
Almost two million women have served in the U.S. military and thousands more with the military forces of other nations. Military Women Casualties American Women in War Women Spies Surgeon, Spy and Suffragette Dr. Mary Walker ... Women's Recruiting Posters
We are indebted to Captain Barbara A. Wilson for compiling the original materials in this section. Visit her extraordinary site on military women by clicking the icon, below.
Please email military information, questions or comments
on Military Women's History to:
Captain Barb

Captain Barbara A. Wilson, USAF (Ret)
Irene Stuber, PO Box 6185, Hot Springs National Park, AR 71902.
Email istuber@undelete.org with any corrections, additions, or suggestions.
We are accepting donations to help offset the costs
of posting and archiving of WOA. To receive the email versions of
Women of Achievement and Herstory, click here Undelete: Women's Internet Information Network Inc. A non profit organization dedicated to telling herstory. TOC WOAH About Us Catts Claws ... Home

44. Women Of Achievement
Celebrating women of achievement, you'll find photos, stories, and much more to document women's Category Society People women history...... Spotlight on women OF ACHIEVEMENT SPOTLIGHT ON women OF ACHIEVEMENT. womenOF ACHIEVEMENT created for women's history Month Special Edition.
http://www.undelete.org/
A PRESENTATION OF IRENE STUBER: The Oldest and Largest Herstory Site on Internet
More than 10 MILLION readers since 1992

(click above to go directly to the biographies and events in calendar form) Discover what talented and accomplished women share your birthday
Volume I of THE WOMAN'S BIBLE

Commentaries on the Pentateuch of the Old Testament by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and women of the revising committee as identified with their articles. Volume II of THE WOMAN'S BIBLE
Continuation of the Commentaries on the Old and New Testaments by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and women of the revising committee as identified with their articles. It's Happening to Women
**NEW FEATURE**
UP-T0-DATE NEWS ABOUT WOMEN
USING CURRENT MEDIA SOURCES
Why aren't these stories in YOUR local newspaper?
Spotlight on
WOMEN OF ACHIEVEMENT
WOMEN OF ACHIEVEMENT created for Women's History Month Special Edition WiiN's SEARCH ENGINE allows you to search the contents of this site for specific topics mentioned in the many articles, or for specific women's names.
For search tips and assistance, see the

45. What's New In Women's History
An examination of the history of women's history by Linda Gordon.
http://xroads.virginia.edu/g/DRBR/gordon.html
What's New in Womens' History
Linda Gordon The question raised by this conference brought me to a surprising conclusion: that the feminist reconstitution of knowledge no longer seems to me so radical a break as it once did. In history, and probably in other fields, as well, our critiques of old scholarship, and our attempts to construct a new scholarship, seem to me rather to follow in paths already opened. That does not, I think, belittle or weaken the feminist contribution. On the contrary, the emphasis on the uniqueness and novelty of what we are doing may reflect the bravado of inadequate confidence. In attempting to reconstruct history, feminists do no more and no less than many groups battling for political power have done before. If history is the king of the political arts, its power to legitimate sovereignty is frequently under attack and must constantly be defended. From the classical world to Tudor England to the Reagan administration, ideologues write and rewrite histories of their imperialisms, successions, and legitimacy, with an eye to raising money for armies. Opponents counterattack, now scoring points as the rulers reveal their hypocrisy, now writhing in helplessness, unable to reach the masses with their counter arguments. The stakes may be higher today, but the ability of the dynasties to buy historians is greater, too. Naming the new women’s history “herstory” does us no favor. Implying that we are the first to fight this ideological battle deprives us of a history we already have. Indeed, I would venture to say that the rhetoric of the uniqueness of our intellectual project reflects a growing distance of scholars from the totalizing tendencies of a strong political feminist movement, and its desire to incorporate, even to subsume, other radical traditions. But most historiographical progress—perhaps most intellectual progress—proceeds by rearranging relationships within old stories, not by writing new stories. The old stories have been ours, too—women’s, not only men’s—although that is a contested point, and I will return to argue it shortly.

46. Women's History Month Features
Infoplease.com celebrates women's history Month with special features, quizzes, biographies, and timelines.Category Kids and Teens People and Society women s history Month...... The history of women's history Month National women's history Monthbegan as a single week and as a local event. In 1978, Sonoma
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/womenshistory1.html

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Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network How many of the women above can you identify Featured Biography Madeleine Albright Former U.S. Secretary of State Notable Women The History of Women's History Month National Women's History Month International Women's Day . In 1981 Congress passed a resolution making the week a national celebration, and in 1987 expanded it to the full month of March. History and Timelines Special Features

47. WOMEN'S HISTORY RESOURCES
women'S history RESOURCES. MEGASITES. SITES PRIMARILY ABOUT AMERICAN women'Shistory. Return to top. SITES PRIMARILY ABOUT AMERICAN women'S history.
http://www.library.wisc.edu/libraries/WomensStudies/hist.htm
WOMEN'S HISTORY RESOURCES
MEGASITES SITES PRIMARILY ABOUT AMERICAN WOMEN'S HISTORY SITES PRIMARILY ABOUT HISTORY OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES
MEGA-SITES
  • American Women's History: A Research Guide
    By Ken Middleton, Todd Library, Middle Tennessee State University. Best source for finding digital collections by topic . Also includes bibliographies and brief reviews of recent books, as well as links to biographical sources, online journals, and other resources.
  • Women's History Sites , originally compiled by Rachel Cassel Murphree; as of March, 2001, maintained by Ruth Dickstein. It is part of WSSLINKS Women and Gender Studies web site of the Women's Studies Section, American Library Association. Includes sites with resources for celebrating Women's History Month.
  • Archival Collections with significant holding relevant to women's history. List from the Archives for Research on Women and Gender, Univ. of Texas at San Antonio Library.
  • Archival Sites for Women's Studies, maintained by Mary Faith Pankin as part of WSSLINKS Women and Gender Studies web site of the Women's Studies Section, American Library Association.

48. Social Studies School Service Women's History Index
Similar pages women's history Review
http://www.socialstudies.com/mar/women.html

New to Our Catalog

Grades K-6

Grades 4-9

Grades 7-12
...
Videocassettes

Women's History
Articles/Features
Samples From Activity Books RealVideo Previews Online Activities ... Web Links
Save time and money by downloading reproducible activity books directly from our Web site. For more information on getting started, go to our eBooks page to browse available titles.
16 Extraordinary American Women
(Print version $19.95, eBook $14.95 Ordering Information Easy-to-read biographies are approximately three pages long and are followed by a variety of exercises designed to help students remember facts, understand the main idea, and apply what they have learned. Articles/Features
  • View a list of primary sources from the CD-ROM Women in America
  • View brief descriptions, ordering information, and full-screen (640 x 480 resolution) sample images of Women's History Posters.
  • Sacajawea, an essay that gives a brief history of the life of Sacajawea, then reviews a range of curriculum materials (including books, videocassettes, activities, and visual aids) that discuss topics relating to Sacajawea, Lewis and Clark, and their famous expedition.
  • Amelia Earhart: Book and videocassette resources, as well as suggestions for related hands-on activities, and a research-oriented Amelia Earhart exercise.

49. History's Women An Online Magazine
A magazine highlighting the extraordinary achievements of women throughout history and recognizing Category Society People women history......A magazine highlighting the extraordinary achievements of women throughout historyand recognizing the obstacles they have hadto overcome in order to reach
http://www.historyswomen.com/
A magazine highlighting the extraordinary achievements of women throughout history and recognizing the obstacles they have had to overcome in order to reach their goals Click Here to Sign Up!
It's Free
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navigating the site?

See our site map!
Search The Site
- Choose One - Index Women of Faith Ist Women Social Reformers The Arts History in the Making Early America Amazing Moms Miscellaneous Site Map Card Shop A Woman To Admire Secure Order Form Guest Book Writing Submissions About History's Women Our Banner Exchange Join Our Free Newsletter Link Page Web Rings Awards and Gifts Own a Web site or newsletter?
Mary Slessor was missionary to cannibals...
Read more...
*NEW!*
Amelia Earhart was a famous woman pilot...
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Francis Powers Cobbe was involved in the ragged schools movement ...

50. Important Women Through History
Get Started. National women's history Project. A List of women Achievers.
http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/women/notable.htm

Get Started
National Women's History Project A List of Women Achievers
Honor Roll Home
A List of Women Achievers Explore this list of over 30 women of achievement. You can nominate one of these women or someone else to the Honor Roll of Notable Women
Q-Z
Louisa May Alcott:
Author who produced the first literature for the mass market of juvenile girls in the 19th century. Her most popular, Little Women , was just one of 270 works that she published.
http://www.greatwomen.org/profs/alcott_l.php

Susan B. Anthony:
http://www.greatwomen.org/profs/anthony_s.php
Clara Barton:
Clara Barton got involved with tending the needy when she treated injured Union soldiers on the battlefield during the Civil War. She later was the founder and first president of the American Red Cross.
http://www.greatwomen.org/profs/barton_c.php
Elizabeth Blackwell: http://www.greatwomen.org/profs/ blackwell_em.php Pearl S. Buck: With her novels about American and Asian culture, she became the first woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. http://www.greatwomen.org/profs/buck_p.php

51. Gale - Free Resources - Women's History Month Redirect
Includes timeline, activities, weekly quizzes, and short biographies of fifty women who made a difference.Category Kids and Teens People and Society women s history Month...... Poet's Corner. women's history Month. The women's history Month home page has movedto the following URL http//www.gale.com/free_resources/whm/index.htm.
http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/whm.htm
Quick Title Search Press Room About Us Contact Us Site Map ... Browse Our Catalog document.write(url); Free Resources Reference Reviews Marketing for Libraries Black History Month ... Women's History Month

Site Update Notification
The Women's History Month home page has moved to the following URL: http://www.gale.com/free_resources/whm/index.htm Please update your bookmark to the new URL.
Related Links Literary Index
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52. Gale - Home
Reference products for libraries, schools and businesses.Category Business Publishing and Printing Publishers Reference...... Libraries Schools Government/Special Outside US and Canada women's history Monthhistory Resource Center women's history Month history Resource Center Consulta
http://www.galegroup.com/
Quick Title Search Press Room About Us Contact Us Site Map ... Browse Our Catalog April 12, 2003 Title Lists Free Resources Customer Service
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... Membership Sign up to check your order status, reprint invoices and order online. Metasearch Partners
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53. Women Artists In History
Showcase of women artists down through the centuries.Category Arts Art history Artists...... women Artists in history Related Resources. women and Art in the Renaissance;women Artists Archive; women Artists in history, an essay;
http://www.wendy.com/women/artists.html
We're using this space to showcase the work of women artists down through the centuries. Over time we will do our best to make this list comprehensive. If you have a famous artist to recommend, please send us mail We would like to create a network of women who are interested in the work of women artists. Our dream is that eventually all the women on our list will have their own web page. If any of these women strike your fancy and you decide to devote a web page to their work, please let us know and we will link our page to yours. While you're here, check out our list of frequently asked questions
Quick Index
Whenever you want to return to the quick index, touch any of the red letters to your left.
Medieval Period

54. Women's Exhibition - Celebrating Women's Achievements
Each year the National Library celebrates women's history Month in Canada by honouring the contribution Category Society People women history North America Canada...... readings. The National Library adds a new theme to this site every yearto celebrate women's history Month. The theme for 2002 is Art.
http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/digiproj/women/ewomen.htm
In each theme, you will find a selection of Canadian women who have made outstanding contributions. Each woman's life and achievements are described, followed by a list of suggested readings. The National Library adds a new theme to this site every year to celebrate Women's History Month. The theme for 2002 is Art.
Last Updated: 2001-07-10 Important Notices

55. Sallie Bingham Center For Women's History And Culture At Duke University
The women's Archives is an integral part of Duke's Special Collections Library, which houses a broad Category Society history North America United States women......Sallie Bingham Center for women's history and Culture in the Rare Book,Manuscript, and Special Collections Library at Duke University.
http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/women/

On-line Collections
Reference Help Women's Collections Research Grants ... Duke Women's Center
This page was created by
Ginny Daley
Last Updated 9/27/2001
by Amy Leigh
Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture
in the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library
at Duke University
Overview . The Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture is an integral part of Duke's Special Collections Library which houses a broad range of rare and unique primary source material. In 1988, the Women's Studies Archivist position was created by external donor funding in order to coordinate the acquisition, cataloguing, reference, and outreach activities related to the Special Collections Library's holdings on women and gender. This position was permanently endowed in 1993. In 1996, the Women's Studies Reference Archivist position was created to support increasing reference and outreach demands of the Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture. Holdings.

56. African-American Women - On-line Archival Exhibits At Duke University
Provides memoirs of Elizabeth Johnson Harris, born in Augusta, Georgia in 1867; letters of Hannah Category Society Ethnicity African African-American history......AfricanAmerican women On-line Archival Collections. February 1997 http//scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/collections/african-american-women.html
http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/collections/african-american-women.html
African-American Women
On-line Archival Collections
Special Collections Library, Duke University
Elizabeth Johnson Harris: Life Story Elizabeth Johnson Harris was born in Augusta, Georgia, in 1867 to parents who had been slaves. Her 85 page handwritten memoir provides glimpses of her early childhood, of race relations, of her own ambivalence about her place as an African-American in society, and of the importance of religion and education in her life. This on-line collection includes full text of her memoirs as well as several of her poems and vignettes that were published in various newspapers during her lifetime. Vilet Lester Letter Slave letters are very rare documents. This letter from Vilet Lester is one of less than a dozen such letters we have been able to identify among the vast amount of plantation records held at the Duke Special Collections Library. In this particular case, Vilet's letter stands alone with virtually no other documents - no slave lists, work records, or owner's letters - to give us further information about her. Although many of the facts of Vilet Lester's life may be elusive, she still gives us a rare and precious view into slave life through this letter. Hannah Valentine and Lethe Jackson: Slave Letters Hannah Valentine and Lethe Jackson were house slaves at Montcalm, the family home of David and Mary Campbell, located in Abingdon, Virginia. During the years David Campbell served as Governor of Virginia (1847-1850), he and his family moved into the Governor's mansion in Richmond, taking several of their slaves with them but leaving Hannah and Lethe to care for the homestead. These letters were written by Hannah Valentine and Lethe Jackson to their mistresses and other slave family members during this time period. The letters provide a rare firsthand glimpse into the lives of slaves and the relationships they had with their owners.

57. Women's Studies: History
National women's history Project A clearinghouse for women's historyinformation, resources, activities, and programming ideas.
http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/wstudies/history.html
General Activism Art Communication/Media ... 4000 Years of Women in Science
Short, informal biographical notes and links to other women in science sites.
African-American Women, Digital Scriptorium of Duke University
On-line archival collections featuring scanned pages and texts of the writings of African-American women. Currently includes the memoirs of Elizabeth Johnson Harris (1867-1942), an 1857 letter from Vilet Lester, a slave on a North Carolina plantation, and several letters from Hannah Valentine and Lethe Jackson, slaves on the estate of David Campbell, a governor of Virginia.
The Book of Margery Kempe
Edited by Lynn Staley. An excellent introduction and the full text is available via The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages (TEAMS )Texts Online Project. "Written probably in the late 1430s, The Book of Margery Kempe is one of the most astonishing documents of late medieval English life. Its protagonist, who represents herself as its ultmate author, was not simply a woman but a woman thoroughly rooted in the world."
Bibliographies and Guides to Research
Many bibliographies collected at the Todd Library, Middle Tennessee State University on women history.

58. New Jersey Women's History: Home Page
NEW JERSEY women'S history is a resource for students, teachers, and all interestedpeople who want to know more about the history of New Jersey women.
http://scc01.rutgers.edu/njwomenshistory
Notable Facts Images Documents Material Objects ... Search NEW JERSEY WOMEN'S HISTORY is a resource for students, teachers, and all interested people who want to know more about the history of New Jersey women. Because New Jersey women's history is a young field, it is constantly growing and changing. This web site will do the same, so it can keep up with new information and research and update existing information. It is designed by the Women's Project of New Jersey (WPNJ) in collaboration with the Margery Somers Foster Center Special Collections/Archives , the Scholarly Communications Center at Rutgers University Libraries in New Brunswick, and the New Jersey Historical Society in Newark. Portions of this site have been underwritten by Special Projects Grants from the New Jersey Historical Commission, a division of Cultural Affairs in the Department of State. A Project Task Force is responsible for the contents and creation of this site. The contents of this site are for educational and non-commercial use only. See terms and conditions. Women's Project of New Jersey
Print Publication Notable Facts Images Documents Material Objects ... Search For more information about this project, contact

59. Hotlist: Women's History
women's history Hotlist. women Who Shaped history; Lush Lives Ladiesof Jazz from 19301990; The National Museum of women's history;
http://sln.fi.edu/tfi/hotlists/women.html
Women's History Hotlist
  • Archives of Women in Science and Engineering
  • Women in Engineering Organization
  • Women of NASA
  • Women Who Shaped History ...
  • Lush Lives : Ladies of Jazz from 1930-1990
  • The National Museum of Women's History
  • Women's History Month
  • Multimedia Exhibits in Women's History
  • Internet Women's History Sourcebook ... Back to Hotlists
  • 60. Inventors Museum Presents Women Inventors And Invention
    women inventors and invention throughout history.Category Society People women Science and Technology history......Welcome to the Inventors' Online Museum Take the Inventors IQ Test!Museum Lobby. Search the Museum. About. Contact the Museum.
    http://www.inventorsmuseum.com/women.htm

    Take the Inventors IQ Test!
    Museum Lobby Search the Museum About ... What's New The Fish Bowl was invented in the middle of the 18th Century by Countess Dubarry, Mistress of King Louis XV "The Inventors Museum is a place where you can learn from the past and dream of the future. It is truly a place where you can reach for the stars,"
    Dr. Sally Ride, America's First Female Astronaut
    Mary Anderson

    Inventor of the Windshield Wiper
    Katherine Blodgett

    Inventor who made modern eyeglasses
    Bessie Blount

    Inventor for the Disabled
    Martha Coston

    Saving Lives During the Civil War Amelia Earhart The Search for this Innovative Woman Pilot and Hero. Gertrude Elion Fighting Cancer and More.... New!
    Sally Fox A Kinder, Gentler Cotton Frances Gabe The Self-Cleaning House Beulah Henry Prolific Inventor Grace Hopper Computer Pioneer Mae Jemison Astronaut and American Hero Amanda Jones The Unexpected Inventor Marjorie Joyner First Female African American Patent Holder Mary Kies First American Female Patent Holder Margaret Knight Inventor of the Paper Bag Stephanie Kwolek Inventor of Kevlar Hedy Lamarr Movie Star Inventor!?

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