Archive for the 'History - Women's' Category

Marie Hicks - Philadelphia civil rights leader

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Black protesters gather outside the gates of Girard College in Philadelphia, PAMarie Hicks made things happen for her community and her family.

Her fame for this trait had its genesis in an incident that occurred when she first visited the campus of Girard College. Her eldest son Junius Jr., was to receive a badge in a Boy Scout ceremony in front of Founders Hall.

The private boarding school was established in 1848 for white males who were orphaned or had lost their father. The school took in boys grades 1-12 at no cost to their family.

Though for years from the outside she had always thought that the place must be a prison, Marie Hicks looked at this 40 acre paradise in the middle of Philadelphia and she got mad. Her sons Charles and Theodore had lost their father, Junius Hicks Sr, to cancer in 1964. A decade before, the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education decision held that separate cannot be equal, and ordered schools to integrate to help achieve equality of the races. But still, black children could not get the educations they had been promised because states and their schools were not quick to comply with the decision. There were no black students at Girard College.

So in 1965 Marie Hicks became one of the leaders of a year-long protest outside the walls of Girard College. She led thousands of protesters, including Martin Luther King, until the gates opened and her son and others were admitted to the school. In September 1968, Theodore, then 9, and three other black students began classes at Girard. By this time Charles, then 12, was over the maximum age accepted. The school made an exception and Charles enrolled four months later.

Her efforts proved worthwhile for both the community and her family. Charles became the first black graduate of the school. In 1977 Theodore graduated as the school’s first African American valedictorian. The College now has 85% black students, and, 55% of the student body are female.

After securing her children’s primary education Marie eventually got a job as a maid at La Salle University. She attended night classes there and in 1980 earned a bachelors degree in sociology. She counseled homeless women at Mercy Hospice in Center City and worked for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. She retired 10 years ago.

Sometimes called the “Rosa Parks of Girard College,” Marie Hicks died in Germantown, PA on April 19, 2007 at age 83. She last visited the Girard campus when her funeral procession drove through the school and stopped in front of Founders Hall on the way to her final resting place.

For more information:
U.S. Government Archives

Popularity: 47%

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Charlotte L. Winters - WW1 Veteran

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

Charlotte L. Winters Photo by David DeJongeSupercentenarian Charlotte L. Winters was the last living U.S. female veteran of World War One.

When she called on Secretary of The Navy, Josephus Daniels, in 1916 to ask why she could not join the Navy, she may have helped set into motion events that have influenced my life greatly as well as the makeup of our armed forces. A year later she was among the first women to join the service as a Yeoman 3rd Class (F). The “F” stood for Female.

Though Daniels did not say Winters influenced his decision to allow women in the Navy, his niece, Kelly N. Auber of Middle River MD said, “She convinced him that women could be in the Navy, and her visit is corroborated in his journals. While he did not admit that she directly influenced him, he did acknowledge that they had met.”

Secretary Daniels investigated the matter and found that there was no prohibition against women serving in the Navy. It was the start of something big. By 1918, more than 10,000 women joined the Navy.

Winters was assigned to the Washington Navy Gun Factory, also known as the Washington Navy Yard, where she was a typist throughout the war. After the war’s end she returned to her job there as a civilian. She retired in 1951.

Until the early 1980s Charlotte and her husband, John Russell Winters, visited Revolutionary War and Civil War battlefields documenting battle strategies and the lives of the soldiers who had fought there. She donated her uniform and other military objects to the Navy Museum in Washington DC and documentation of thousands of Civil War graves to the Hagerstown, MD Library.

Since WWI many women have served in the U.S. Navy, among them my mother and my wife. It hasn’t been all salutes and parades though. Just as women struggle for equality in civilian society, so too do women in uniform, thanks in no small part to the pioneering efforts of Charlotte L. Winters and others like her. From the day Josephus Daniels asked if women could serve, controversy has raged throughout the Navy (and other services too) about the role of women in its ranks.

Charlotte L. Winters, feminist, war historian, and last of a kind, died Tuesday, March 27, 2007 at the Fahrney-Keedy life care community in Boonsboro, MD at age 109.

To remember Charlotte L. Winters, and all of the women who served in WWI, to recognize my mother’s generation of female sailors (WAVES) from WWII, my wife’s generation at the end of the Cold War and all who came in between and since, I have linked to a great speech by Rear Admiral D.A. Loewer, USN, celebrating Women’s History Month in 2004.

Excerpted:

I began my remarks today with a quote from President John F. Kennedy. “A Nation reveals itself by those it honors, those it remembers.”

If we look into the proud pages of the history of women’s service to our Nation, we remember that not all heroic acts in war were performed by men — many women have performed acts just as heroic, and made the ultimate sacrifice. We remember that standing up for fair and equitable treatment is as honorable and as worthy of remembrance as serving in the Nation’s armed forces. We remember that women who served in World War I, with honor, could travel overseas to work in the mud and grime as nurses, entertainers, or switchboard operators — but they could not vote. And just prior to my own time of service women could serve and die in Vietnam, but they could not serve as line officers in ships at sea or as pilots in combat aircraft.

During this month of March, as we recognize the contributions women have made to our history, we pause to “reveal [ourselves] by those [we] honor, those [we] remember.”

Today, we honor the women who are in military service to our Nation, and we remember those who have gone before us pushing open the “door of opportunity.”

Read Rear Admiral Loewer’s full remarks.

Popularity: 100%

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Jane Hodgson - Physician

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

Jane HodgsonOnly one doctor, Jane Hodgson, has ever been convicted for performing an illegal abortion in a hospital. Before the Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision in Roe v. Wade in January 1973, abortion was illegal in most states as it was in Minnesota where Dr. Hodgson had a busy practice as an obstetrician and gynecologist. In April 1970, when Dr. Hodgson agreed to perform an abortion in order to challenge Minnesota’s law, abortion was permitted in the state only to save the woman’s life. The patient had contracted German Measles early in the term of her fourth pregnancy, and though her life was not in danger a high chance of serious birth defects was present.

Hodgson was brought to trial in November 1970 and was sentenced to 30 days in jail and a year’s probation. Her sentence was suspended pending appeal and her conviction was overturned after the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision. She served no jail time.

Dr. Hodgson died at age 91 at her home in Rochester, Minnesota on October 23 2006.

For more information:
http://www.abanet.org/irr/hr/spring03/humanrightshero.html
http://www.voicesofchoice.org/transcripts/jane_hodgson.shtml
http://www.amwa-doc.org/index.cfm?objectid=70BF083A-D567-0B25-516B2E0AD739A35B

Popularity: 25%

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Sandy West - Rock drummer

Thursday, October 26th, 2006

Sandy West doing what girl drummers want to doRock and pop music existed for a long time before girls got tough and even longer before they got behind the drums and beat the hell out of them. That is why today I remember Sandy West, co-founder and drummer of the seminal girl rock band “The Runaways.” Together with Joan Jett, West founded the all-female band that included Lita Ford and Cherie Currie. They scored big with such hits as “Cherry Bomb” and “Born to Be Bad.”

Sandy West died of lung cancer October 19, 2006 at age 47 at a hospice in San Dimas, east of Los Angeles.

For more information:

Read the New York Times obituary
http://www.therunaways.com/sandy.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandy_West

Popularity: 23%

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Tamara Dobson - Model and actor

Thursday, October 26th, 2006

225px-tamara_dobson.jpgAnybody with their eyes open knows that actors of color have struggled long and hard to get parts that are not based on ethnic stereotypes and cliches.

Now is a good time to give it some thought as we remember Tamara Dobson, the black Baltimore actor that played kung fu-fighting super-hero and super-vixen Cleopatra Jones in the 1973 blaxploitation movie of the same name.

She revived the role for the movie Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold and appeared in the TV shows Jason of Star Command and Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.

For more information:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamara_Dobson
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0229939/
http://www.answers.com/topic/tamara-dobson

Popularity: 35%

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