How Tennessee Became the Final Battleground in the Fight for Suffrage
One hundred years later, the campaign for the women’s vote has many potent similarities to the politics of today
Women Were Better Represented in Victorian Novels Than Modern Ones
Big data shows that women used to be omnipresent in fiction. Then men got in the way
How the “Heart Balm Racket” Convinced America That Women Were Up to No Good
Being engaged carried some legal consequences until the news media got a hold of a sensational story
Photographs Documenting the Struggle for Women’s Suffrage Are Reimagined in Full Color
Colorizer Tom Marshall’s deft touch brings new life to 100-year-old photographs
Stories of Forgotten Suffragettes Come Alive in New Exhibition
The Museum of London’s “Votes for Women” show marks 100 years since women were first granted the right to vote in Britain
A Brief History of Women’s Figure Skating
You might be surprised to learn that this sport where women now shine was initially seen as solely the purview of male athletes
See the Portrait Slashed by a Butcher’s Cleaver During Height of Women’s Suffrage Movement
In an act of protest, the London National Portrait Gallery work was damaged in 1914. It returns to mark 100 years of the Representation of the People Act
The Unsung Inspiration Behind the “Real” Rosie the Riveter
Historians pay tribute to the legacy of Naomi Parker Fraley, who died Saturday at 96. In 2015, she was linked, circumstantially, to the We Can Do It poster
The Woman Who Transformed How We Teach Geography
By blending education and activism, Zonia Baber made geography a means of uniting—not conquering—the globe
How Women Broke Into the Male-Dominated World of Cartoons and Illustrations
A new exhibition at the Library of Congress highlights female artists and their contributions to comic strips, magazine covers and political cartoons
New Website Explores the Women in Architecture Your History Books Didn’t Teach You About
‘Pioneering Women of American Architecture’ features in-depth profiles of unsung architects who made significant contributions to the field
A Timeline of 1968: The Year That Shattered America
The nation is still reckoning with the changes that came in that fateful year
The Remarkable Influence of ‘A Wrinkle in Time’
How the Madeleine L’Engle novel liberated young adult literature
How Mickalene Thomas Is Ushering in a New Wave of Contemporary Art
The celebrated portraitist’s glittering images of black women upend tradition
1968: The Year That Shattered America
Fifty Years Ago, Protesters Took on the Miss America Pageant and Electrified the Feminist Movement
Miss America pageant is under new leadership after a sexist email scandal. But the pageant has a long history of controversy—including the 1968 protests
The YMCA First Opened Gyms to Train Stronger Christians
Physical fitness was a secondary goal for the movement
Madame de Pompadour Was Far More Than a ‘Mistress’
Even though she was a keen politicker and influential patron, she’s been historically overlooked
This Time-Saving Patent Paved the Way for the Modern Dishwasher
Josephine Cochran just wanted to stop having broken dishes
The True Story of Mrs. Alford’s Nitroglycerin Factory
Mary Alford remains the only woman known to own a dynamite and nitroglycerin factory
It Didn’t Take Very Long For Anesthesia to Change Childbirth
The unprecedented idea of a painless delivery changed women’s lives
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