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Peacock Middle > Sixth Grade > Mr. Peel >
Women’s Herstory Month Timeline - Directions Microsoft Word, Google Images.
Directions:
1. View Print Layout
2. File Page Setup Paper Size Landscape
3. View Zoom Whole Page
4. [Enter] numerous times until you have TWO pages.
5. Scroll back up to middle of first page.
6. Autoshapes draw horizontal line across middle of page format autoshape weight 3 pt. color ??
7. Copy line and paste across middle of SECOND page.
8. Insert Textbox insert TEN Textboxes on EACH page.
9. PICK TWENTY WOMEN from your list* and type DATE, NAME, & ACCOMPLISHMENT in boxes.
10. Insert Pictures from Google into your timeline and an extra textbox for your NAME & BLOCK NUMBER!
*T.A.G. - Differentiated
Title “National Women’s Hall of Fame A-Z”
Pick 23 from your list.
(One for each letter of the Alphabet No X, Y, or Z)
Look up specifics not just category listed.
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Mr. Peel’s www.HistoryClassRoom.com

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1587
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Virginia Dare is the first person born in America to English parents (Roanoke Island, Virginia).
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1650
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Anne Bradstreet's book of poems, The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America, is published in England, making her the first published American woman writer.
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1707
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Henrietta Johnston begins to work as a portrait artist in Charles Town (now Charleston), South Carolina, making her the first known professional woman artist in America.
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1766
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Test your skills with the Women's Firsts quiz.
Mary Katherine Goddard and her widowed mother become publishers of the Providence Gazette newspaper and the annual West's Almanack, making her the first woman publisher in America. In 1775, Goddard became the first woman postmaster in the country (in Baltimore), and in 1777 she became the first printer to offer copies of the Declaration of Independence that included the signers' names. In 1789 Goddard opened a Baltimore bookstore, probably the first woman in America to do so.
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1767
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Anne Catherine Hoof Green takes over her late husband's printing and newspaper business, becoming the first American woman to run a print shop. The following year she is named the official printer for the colony of Maryland.
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1790
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Mother Bernardina Matthews establishes a Carmelite convent near Port Tobacco, Maryland, the first community of Roman Catholic nuns in the Thirteen Colonies. (The Ursuline convent established in New Orleans in 1727 was still in French territory.)
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1792
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Suzanne Vaillande appears in The Bird Catcher, in New York, the first ballet presented in the U.S. She was also probably the first woman to work as a choreographer and set designer in the United States.
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1795
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Anne Parrish establishes, in Philadelphia, the House of Industry, the first charitable organization for women in America.
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1809
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Mary Kies becomes the first woman to receive a patent, for a method of weaving straw with silk.
Elizabeth Ann Seton establishes the first American community of the Sisters of Charity, in Emmitsburg, Maryland. In 1975 she became the first native-born American to be made a saint by the Roman Catholic Church.
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1849
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Elizabeth Blackwell receives her M.D. degree from the Medical Institution of Geneva, N.Y., becoming the first woman in the U.S. with a medical degree.
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1853
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Antoinette Blackwell becomes the first American woman to be ordained a minister in a recognized denomination (Congregational).
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1864
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Rebecca Lee Crumpler becomes the first black woman to receive an M.D. degree. She graduated from the New England Female Medical College.
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1866
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Lucy Hobbs becomes the first woman to graduate from dental school, the Ohio College of Dental Surgery.
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1869
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Arabella Mansfield is granted admission to practice law in Iowa, making her the first woman lawyer. A year later, Ada H. Kepley, of Illinois, graduates from the Union College of Law in Chicago. She is the first woman lawyer to graduate from a law school.
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1872
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Victoria Claflin Woodhull becomes the first woman presidential candidate in the United States when she is nominated by the National Radical Reformers.
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1873
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Ellen Swallow Richards, the first woman to be admitted to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, earns her B.S. degree. She becomes the first female professional chemist in the U.S.
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1879
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Belva Ann Lockwood becomes the first woman admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Mary Baker Eddy establishes the Church of Christ, Scientist, becoming the first woman to found a major religion, Christian Science.
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1885
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Sarah E. Goode becomes the first African-American woman to receive a patent, for a bed that folded up into a cabinet. Goode, who owned a furniture store in Chicago, intended the bed to be used in apartments.
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1887
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Susanna Medora Salter becomes the first woman elected mayor of an American town, in Argonia, Kansas.
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1896
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Alice Guy Blaché, the first American woman film director, shoots the first of her more than 300 films, a short feature called La Fee aux Choux (The Cabbage Fairy).
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1897
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H.H.A. Beach's "Gaelic Symphony" is the first symphony by a woman performed in the United States, and possibly the world.
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1901
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On October 24, 1901, Annie Edson Taylor, a schoolteacher from Michigan, becomes the first person to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel.
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1914
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Mary Davenport-Engberg is the first woman to conduct a symphony orchestra, in Bellingham, Washington.
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1916
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Jeannette Rankin, of Montana, is the first woman to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.
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1921
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American novelist Edith Wharton becomes the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for fiction. She wins the award for her novel The Age of Innocence.
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1922
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Rebecca Felton, of Georgia, is appointed to the U.S. Senate to fill a temporary vacancy. The first woman senator, she serves for only two days.
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1925
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Nellie Tayloe Ross becomes the first woman to serve as governor of a state, in Wyoming. In the fall of 1924 she was elected to succeed her deceased husband, William Bradford Ross. (Miriam Amanda "Ma" Ferguson is inaugurated governor of Texas days later.)
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1926
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American Gertrude Ederle becomes the first woman to swim across the English Channel.
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1931
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Maxine Dunlap becomes first American woman to earn a glider pilot license.
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1932
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Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, traveling from Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, to Ireland in approximately 15 hours.
Hattie Wyatt Caraway, of Arkansas, becomes the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate.
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1933
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Frances Perkins is appointed secretary of labor by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, making her the first woman member of a presidential cabinet.
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1934
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Lettie Pate Whitehead becomes the first American woman to serve as a director of a major corporation, The Coca-Cola Company.
On October 23, 1934, American adventurer Jeanette Piccard sets an altitude record for female balloonists when she ascends 57,579 feet.
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1946
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Mother Maria Frances Cabrini (1850-1917) is canonized by Pope Pius XII. She is the first U.S. citizen (she was born in Italy) to become a saint.
Edith Houghton becomes the first woman hired as a first major-league baseball scout.
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1953
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Jerrie Cobb is the first woman in the U.S. to undergo astronaut testing. NASA, however, cancels the women's program in 1963. It is not until 1983 that an American woman gets sent into space.
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1960
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Oveta Culp Hobby becomes the first woman to serve as Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. She is also the first director of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC), and the first woman to receive the U.S. Army Distinguished Service Medal.
Jacqueline Cochran breaks the sound barrier by flying an F-86 over Roger's Dry Lake, California, at the speed of 652.337 miles per hour. Eleven years later, she flies at a speed of 1,429.2 miles per hour, more than twice the speed of sound.
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1964
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Margaret Chase Smith, of Maine, becomes the first woman nominated for president of the United States by a major political party, at the Republican National Convention in San Francisco.
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1965
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Patsy Takemoto Mink, of Hawaii, is the first Asian-American woman elected to Congress. She served in the U.S. House of Representatives for 24 years.
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1967
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Muriel "Mickey" Siebert becomes the first woman to own a seat on the New York Stock Exchange and the first woman to head one of its member firms.
Althea Gibson is the first African-American tennis player to win a singles title at Wimbledon.
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1969
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Shirley Chisholm, of New York, becomes the first African-American woman in Congress. Her motto is, "Unbought and unbossed." She served in the U.S. House of Representatives for 14 years.
Shirley Chisholm (D-NY) becomes the first black woman U.S. Representative.
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1970
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Diane Crump becomes the first female jockey to ride in the Kentucky Derby.
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1972
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Sally Jean Priesand is ordained as the first woman rabbi in the United States.
Juanita Kreps becomes the first woman director of the New York Stock Exchange. She later becomes the first woman appointed Secretary of Commerce.
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1975
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Elizabeth Ann Seton is canonized, making her the first American-born saint.
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1976
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Sarah Caldwell becomes the first woman to conduct at New York's Metropolitan Opera House.
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1981
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Sandra Day O'Connor is appointed by President Reagan to the Supreme Court, making her its first woman justice.
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1983
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Dr. Sally K. Ride becomes the first American woman to be sent into space.
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1984
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Geraldine Ferraro is the first woman to run for vice-president on a major party ticket.
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1985
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Wilma Mankiller becomes the first woman chief of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma.
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1989
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Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, of Florida, becomes the first Hispanic woman elected to congress. She serves in the U.S. House of Representatives.
In Boston, the Reverend Barbara C. Harris becomes the first woman consecrated as a bishop in the Episcopal Church.
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1990
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Dr. Antonia Novello is sworn in as U.S. Surgeon General, becoming the first woman (and first Hispanic) to hold that job.
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1991
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On January 2, Sharon Pratt Dixon is sworn in as mayor of Washington, DC, becoming the first black woman to serve as mayor of a major city.
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1992
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Carol Moseley-Braun, of Illinois, becomes the first African-American woman elected to the U.S. Senate.
Mae Jemison becomes the first black female astronaut.
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1993
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Shiela Widnall becomes the first secretary of a branch of the U.S. military when she is appointed to head the Air Force.
Janet Reno becomes the first woman U.S. attorney general.
Toni Morrison becomes the first African-American woman to win the Nobel Prize for literature.
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1997
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Madeleine Albright is sworn in as U.S. secretary of state. She is the first woman in this position as well as the highest-ranking woman in the United States government.
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1998
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During Operation Desert Fox in Iraq, Lt. Kendra Williams, USN, becomes the first U.S. female combat pilot to bomb an enemy target.
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1999
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Lt. Col. Eileen Collins is the first woman astronaut to command a space shuttle mission.
Nancy Ruth Mace is the first female cadet to graduate from the Citadel, the formerly all-male military school in South Carolina.
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2000
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Hillary Clinton is elected to the U.S. Senate, becoming the first First Lady ever elected to national office.
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2005
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Condoleeza Rice becomes the first African-American female Secretary of State.
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2006
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Effa Manley, co-owner of the Negro Leagues team Newark Eagles, becomes the first woman elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
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2007
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Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) becomes the first woman Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Harvard University names Drew Gilpin Faust its first woman president in the school’s 371-year history.
Dr. Peggy Whitson, an American astronaut, becomes the first woman to command the International Space Station.
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2008
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Hillary Clinton wins the New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary, becoming the first woman in U.S. history to win a presidential primary contest.
Sarah Palin, governor of Alaska, becomes the first woman to run for vice president on the Republican ticket.
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U.S. WOMEN'S HISTORY
1636
Anne Hutchinson, who has challenged the teachings of the leaders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, is tried for heresy and banished. She and her family move to Rhode Island.
1692
In an outbreak of hysteria in and around Salem, Mass., hundreds of people, mostly women, are accused of witchcraft. Nineteen are put to death.
1773
As an adjunct to the Sons of Liberty, women form the Daughters of Liberty.
1774
North Carolina Women sign the Edenton Proclamation calling for the boycott of British goods.
1790
Judith Sargent Murray publishes her essay "On the Equality of the Sexes."
 1821
Emma Willard founds the Troy Female Seminary.
1834
The American Female Reform Society is founded.
The Factory Girls Association stages a strike at the mills in Lowell, Mass.
1837
Mary Lyon founds Mount Holyoke College for women.
1837
Oberlin becomes the first co-educational college in the United States.
A national convention of female anti-slavery societies meets in New York.
1840
Elizabeth Cady Stanton attends the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London and is turned away by male organizers.
1845
Sarah Bagley establishes the Female Labor Reform Association in Lowell, Mass.
1848
Elizabeth Cady Stanton organizes the Seneca Falls Convention, which issues the "Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions."

1850
The Female Medical College of Pennsylvania is founded.
1854
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony present a petition with 10,000 signatures demanding suffrage and married women's property rights to the New York legislature.
1861
Two weeks after the onset of war, women found 20,000 aid societies throughout the country. In the north, they are coordinated by the Sanitation Commission. By the end of the war, women have raised $15 million worth of supplies.
1863
The Women's National Loyal League is founded to encourage a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery and granting women's suffrage.
1869
Stanton and Anthony, leading the National Woman Suffrage Association, oppose ratification of the 15th Amendment because it omits any mention of voting rights for women. The alliance between feminists and abolitionists disintegrates.
Lucy Stone and Henry Blackwell found the American Woman Suffrage Association in support of the 15th Amendment.
1867
The Young Women's Christian Association is founded in Boston to assist single women migrating to the cities for work.
1871
Smith College is founded.
1873
Congress passes what come to be known as the Comstock Laws, federal statutes that make it illegal to transport obscene material through the mail. This prohibition is used to restrict the availability of contraceptives.
1874
Frances Willard founds the Women's Christian Temperance Union.
1885
Good Housekeeping begins publication.
1889
Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr open Hull House in an impoverished section of Chicago.
1890
The General Federation of Women's Clubs is founded.
Florence Kelley founds the National Consumers' League in an effort to harness women's purchasing power in order to demand better labor conditions.
The rift in the suffrage movement is repaired and the National American Woman Suffrage Association is formed.
1894
Feminist donors use their gifts to the Johns Hopkins Medical School to compel the admission of women.
1896
The National Association of Colored Women is formed.
1903
The Women's Trade Union League is founded to organize women workers and integrate their concerns into the larger feminist movement.
1910
Washington state grants women the right to vote.
1911
California grants women the right to vote.
1912
Kansas, Oregon, and Arizona grant women the right to vote.
1913
NAWSA stages a women's suffrage parade on the day of Woodrow Wilson's inauguration.
1914
Aggressive activists split from NAWSA and form the Congressional Union, which becomes the National Women's Party in 1916.
1915
Suffrage referenda fail in New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New Jersey.
1916
Suffragettes demonstrate at the Republican and Democratic national conventions.
1917
The NWP begins picketing the White House.
Anna Howard Shaw, a former NAWSA president, heads the Women's Committee of the Council of National Defense, a body which coordinates women's patriotic activity in support of the war effort.
1918
The House of Representatives passes a suffrage amendment, but it is defeated in the Senate.
1920
The 19th Amendment, guaranteeing women the right to vote, is ratified.
NAWSA becomes the League of Women Voters.

1921
The first Miss America Beauty Pageant is held in Atlantic City.
The Sheppard-Towner Act, which funds maternity assistance, is approved by Congress.
1932
Frances Perkins becomes the first female in the Cabinet when she is appointed Secretary of Labor.
1937
During a sit-down strike at a General Motors plant, the Women's Emergency Brigade organizes a continuous delivery of supplies that makes the strike possible.
1940s
Over the course of the 1940s, the median age at first marriage dropps from 21.5 to 20.3 for women and from 24.3 to 22.7 for men.
1941
During World War II, women's participation in the workforce increases by nearly 60%.
1942
The military creates women's branches in each of the armed services. Close to 350,000 women serve in the WAVES (Navy), WACS (Army), SPARS (Coast Guard), MCWR (Marines), and WASP (Air Force).
1945
Women are forced to retreat from the labor pool. In the auto industry the proportion of women on the assembly lines falls from 25% to 7.5%.
1946
Dr. Benjamin Spock publishes Baby and Child Care.
1947
Marynia Farnham and Ferdinand Lundberg publish The Modern Woman: The Lost Sex, in which they argue that only a return to the traditional home can restore "women's inner balance."
1952
As part of its reorganization, the Democratic Party abolishes its women's division.
1955
When Rosa Parks is arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a bus, Joanne Robinson, president of the Local Women's Political Council, organizes the bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama.
1957
Daisy Bates, president of the Little Rock, Arkansas NAACP, wins a suit to integrate Little Rock High School.
1960
The Food and Drug Administration approves the birth control pill.
1963
Betty Friedan publishes The Feminine Mystique.
Congress passes the Equal Pay Act in an attempt to eliminate the practice of paying women less for the same work performed by men.
1964
The National Woman's Party encourages the amendment of Title VII to prohibit employment discrimination on the basis of sex. The amendment is successful.
1965
In the case of Griswold v. Connecticut, the Supreme Court identifies a constitutional right to privacy which protects a married couple's right to use contraceptive devices.
1966
Friedan joins with other feminists and creates the National Organization for Women (NOW).
1971
Friedan and Rep. Shirley Chisholm found the National Women's Political Caucus.
The Comstock Laws are repealed.
1972
Chisholm makes a run for the Democratic party's presidential nomination. Congress approves the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) and Title IX of the Higher Education Act.
1973
The Supreme Court establishes a woman's right to legal abortion in Roe v. Wade.
Tennis champion Billie Jean King defeats Bobby Riggs in the "Battle of the Sexes."

1974
The Coalition of Labor Union Women is formed.
1981
Sandra Day O' Connor is sworn in as the first female Supreme Court justice.

1982
The ERA fails to be ratified.

1984
Geraldine Ferraro is nominated as a major party's first female vice-presidential candidate.
1989
In Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, the Supreme Court limits abortion rights, but stops short of overturning its decision in Roe v. Wade.
1993
President Clinton names Hillary Rodham Clinton to head his health care reform task force.
President Clinton appoints Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a feminist activist and former attorney for the ACLU, to the Supreme Court.
President Clinton signs the Family and Medical Leave Act.
1996
Madeleine Albright is appointed the first female Secretary of State.
1998
Time magazine asks, "Is Feminism Dead?" The cover photo features Susan B. Anthony, Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem, and television character Ally McBeal.
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