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Catty1
03-08-2015, 12:29 PM
http://www.care2.com/greenliving/8-inspiring-women-from-history.html


https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=8NPJ6GMXM3E#t=0

March is Women’s History Month, and we’re celebrating by honoring some of the most inspiring, revolutionary and unconventional women of all time. There are plenty of well-known and celebrated women on this list, but there are plenty of others that haven’t gotten the recognition they deserve. Read on for some of the most ground-breaking, revolutionary and fascinating women in history.
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1. Ella Baker.
There are several big names that come to mind when you think about the civil rights era, but one woman — who was still very influential in her own right — is often left off of that list. Her name was Ella Baker, and she was an instrumental force behind civil rights, starting in 1938 when she began work at the NAACP as a secretary, all the way through to her death in 1986 at the age of 83. Along the way, Baker fought against Jim Crow laws, ran voter registration drives, and organized Martin Luther King Jr.’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and helped form the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. She tended to stay behind the scenes, and didn’t embrace the idea that one strong leader should be in charge of a social movement.
Her tireless dedication to social justice and human rights has led her to be considered one of the most influential women — if not people – in the 20th century fight for civil rights.
Image Credit: The Ella Baker Center for Human Right (http://ellabakercenter.org/)s via Wikimedia Commons.

2. Delia Derbyshire.
Popular music today is dominated by electronic music and engineering. But, in 1962, most of the world hadn’t heard any electronic music at all. Then Delia Derbyshire came along. In 1962, Derbyshire recorded a score by Ron Grainer that would go on to be the original theme music for the BBC’s Doctor Who. As The BBC’s Andrew Harrison puts it (http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20131121-dr-who-as-vital-as-the-beatles), “[the Dr. Who theme song is] possibly the most important electronic music ever made… It is not too much to say that it triggered the modern era in popular music just as much as The Beatles did.”
And it’s that theme music that would essentially introduce the world to this game-changing music. She also composed and recorded other music, including with White Noise, one of the world’s earliest electronic bands.

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3. Margaret Sanger.
Margaret Sanger is best known as the founder of Planned Parenthood. In 1916, she founded a birth control clinic in Brooklyn, a first-of-its-kind — and illegal — institution. Sanger tirelessly advocated for women’s access to birth control, and, along the way she was arrested several times. It wasn’t until a year before her death in 1966 that birth control would be legalized in the United States.
Sanger’s quest for reproductive rights caused a great deal of controversy. Of course, even today, birth control is a much-debated topic. In her time, too, she aligned herself with eugenicists and espoused beliefs about race, ability and class that are generally considered taboo today. Her legacy, then, is not without its stains, but her groundbreaking reproductive rights advocacy still stands.
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4. Hedy Lamarr.
Hedy Lamarr was once one of the biggest stars of the silver screen. Often billed as the most beautiful woman on the planet, Lamarr hailed from Austria, emigrating to the United States to launch a career in Hollywood. Her biggest contribution to culture, though, is much more pervasive than her films. In fact, you’re probably using it right now! During World War II, Lamarr and her friend and neighbor George Anthiel invented technology that would help scramble the radio messages used to control torpedoes; that would later be used to develop wi-fi, cellular technology and bluetooth.

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5. Madam C.J. Walker.
Madam C.J. Walker became the first self-made woman millionaire in the United States, no small feat for an African-American woman whose parents were slaves. Walker made her fortune by founding the Madame C.J. Walker Manufacturing Company, which sold cosmetics and hair products aimed at black women. She is credited with inventing the hair straightening process still used by millions of black women today.
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6. Ada Lovelace.
Ada Lovelace was a computer programmer well before computers had programs. The daughter of the poet Lord Byron and a British countess, Ada Lovelace’s translation of Italian engineer Luigi Menabrea’s work on an early computer known as the analytical engine is widely recognized as the first computer program. Though her work was completed in 1843, it took a century for the machine to actually be built. In her time, however, Ada Lovelace accurately predicted that computers could be used for much more than just the mathematics that had originally been built for.

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7. Katharine Hepburn.
Unlike other women of Classic Hollywood, Katharine Hepburn didn’t embrace the actress-as-sex-symbol trope. Instead, she sought out challenging roles that broke ground for women in film and didn’t succumb to studio pressures. Her famously androgynous style is also credited with bringing women’s pants into the mainstream.

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8. Nellie Bly.

To say that Nellie Bly broke ground for women — and men — in journalism would be a massive understatement. She pioneered investigative reporting, going undercover in an insane asylum, a woman’s jail, a factory, and a tenement, and posing as both a prospective baby-buyer and a potential lobbying client, just to name a few. She also attempted to travel around the world in fewer than 80 days — cutting that down to 72, and, during World War I, became the first female war correspondent in history. After years of celebrity, Bly became more and more involved in her husband’s manufacturing business and eventually took over after his death — becoming the most prominent female industrialist of the time.



Read more: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/8-inspiring-women-from-history.html#ixzz3ToftAUCi

Litterati
03-08-2015, 12:42 PM
Wow - had not heard of many of these women's achievements! Awesome share!

mon
03-08-2015, 01:11 PM
Here, here!

mon
03-08-2015, 01:12 PM
Or hear , hear?

Catty1
03-08-2015, 01:26 PM
Or hear , hear?

Yup! ;)

Karen
03-08-2015, 02:24 PM
How does this include an eugenecist (Margaret Sanger) instead of - if you want to laud the invention of birth control, one of the other women scientists involved? Of women who championed the cause?

And why is my hometown favorite, Clara Barton, for example, not on the list?? She worked battlefields as a nurse, started schools, education system, founded the American Red Cross ...

And sure Katherine Hepburn was a remarkable woman. but "inspiring?" Because she wore pants?

Catty1
03-08-2015, 09:09 PM
How does this include an eugenecist (Margaret Sanger) instead of - if you want to laud the invention of birth control, one of the other women scientists involved? Of women who championed the cause?

And why is my hometown favorite, Clara Barton, for example, not on the list?? She worked battlefields as a nurse, started schools, education system, founded the American Red Cross ...

And sure Katherine Hepburn was a remarkable woman. but "inspiring?" Because she wore pants?


Eugenics weren't all that unfashionable then. Anyone can make a mistake. Katherine Hepburn's mother worked with Margaret in the birth control campaign as well.

Here's a longer list that includes Clara Barton: http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/women/notable.htm

As for Hepburn...trousers for women weren't exactly all the rage in her time.

Karen
03-08-2015, 09:26 PM
Eugenics weren't all that unfashionable then. Anyone can make a mistake. Katherine Hepburn's mother worked with Margaret in the birth control campaign as well.

Here's a longer list that includes Clara Barton: http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/women/notable.htm

As for Hepburn...trousers for women weren't exactly all the rage in her time.

But that does not mean eugenics was a good thing, just because it was "fashionable" = slavery used to be "fashionable," too!

And there were women wearing trousers long before Katherine Hepburn, they just didn't get the fame she did! Even as far back as http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Smith_Miller, who popularized what became known as "bloomers" - loose-fitting pants that were gathered at the ankle, before Amelia Bloomer ended up giving them her name. Now ""bloomers" has come to have a different meaning, but they were indeed long pants then!

Grace
03-08-2015, 10:42 PM
Marie Curie was once denied admission to a university because she was a woman.

She went on to become the first woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize, and today remains the only person in history to be awarded two Nobel Prizes in two different fields of science.

Her daughter also went on to win a Nobel Prize.

Catty1
03-08-2015, 11:27 PM
Karen, Sanger was the founder of Planned Parenthood. The good this has done is worthy of attention, not the bad which has not survived her.

Lady's Human
03-09-2015, 06:21 AM
Founding planned parenthood isn't exactly an accomplishment....

And on that note I think this thread should go away.

It's an extremely poor list, including Katherine Hepburn for her wardrobe choice, including Sanger AT ALL, the person who recorded the Dr. Who theme...

Leaving off Marie Curie, as mentioned above, Jane Goodall, Amelia Earhardt, Clara Barton, Florence Nightingale, there are endless other women who have had a true, positive impact on history and society without dredging up people from the margins and people who were absolute evil, such as Sanger.

Catty1
03-09-2015, 12:55 PM
Okay, any more nits that anyone wants to pick?

smokey the elder
03-09-2015, 02:10 PM
I think the point was lesser-known women, warts and all.

Karen
03-09-2015, 03:10 PM
On various other places,the notable women included some I had never heard of, who seem more worthy of mention than some of the ones on this list, including Chien-Shiung Wu - a woman born in 1912 who worked on the Manhattan project with Openheimer, disproved one "law"of physics, and was one of the leading theoretical physicists in her time!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chien-Shiung_Wu

Catty1
03-09-2015, 07:06 PM
Wonderful.

This particular article showed up in one of my emails. I thought it interesting and posted it here.

Thanks for a couple of your opinions. Too bad some can't just ignore what they don't like. Maybe another thread with one of the lists they found would have been an idea.:mad:

Lady's Human
03-09-2015, 07:27 PM
Any list attempting to put Ms. Sanger in a positive light is going to be controversial to be polite.

Evil is evil.

lizbud
03-10-2015, 01:17 PM
Wonderful.

This particular article showed up in one of my emails. I thought it interesting and posted it here.

Thanks for a couple of your opinions. Too bad some can't just ignore what they don't like. Maybe another thread with one of the lists they found would have been an idea.:mad:


I thought it was/ is interesting. Some people just can't stand differing points of view. It's their loss. Thanks for posting Catty1.:)

Karen
03-10-2015, 08:49 PM
At least the title of the post is "inspiring" women - it does not say what they inspire - and for some it is controversy, some other feeling, and some, feelings of puzzlement.

Maybe next year, we should all post our lists of ten women we admired and why! Heck, we could do that now, never too late to talk about people that inspire us!

Mine would of course start with Clara Barton, but when one has grown up on a street that borders the Clara Barton Birthplace, traveled on Clara Barton Road past her birthplace every school day to get to Clara Barton Elementary School, and greeted campers every summer who went to the camp for diabetic girls that takes place on the birthplace grounds every year, that is probably to be expected!

Who is up for the challenge? Googling is okay!