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- September 8, 1828 – Olivia Slocum Sage born, American teacher and philanthropist; as the widow of robber baron Russell Sage, she inherited over $60,000,000 in 1906, much of which she used to further education, including endowing programs for women; made large donations to Syracuse University, Yale, and Princeton; also a donation to Cornell for construction of a women’s dormitory, and funds for construction at Vassar College.
- September 8, 1842 – Phoebe Wilson Couzins born, one of the first women lawyers in the U.S.; the second licensed attorney in Missouri, she was admitted to the Missouri, Kansas, and Dakota Territory bars. She was also the first woman appointed to the U.S. Marshal service. Both she and her mother were members of the St. Louis Woman Suffrage Association, and the Ladies’ Union Aid Society. Couzins was also a public speaker for suffrage, and a delegate to the 1867 American Equal Rights Association meeting in New York City. After graduating and establishing a practice in St. Louis, she wrote articles for Elizabeth Stanton and Susan B Anthony's publication, The Revolution. In 1884, she became a deputy U.S. Marshal, but in 1887, she was replaced by a man. In 1897, she renounced both suffrage and temperance, and went to work as a lobbyist for the United Brewers Association, but lost her job in 1908. Unemployed and partially disabled, she struggled in poverty until her death at age 71 in 1913.
- September 8, 1857 – Ida Henrietta Hyde born, American physiologist and developer in the 1920s of a microelectrode powerful enough to stimulate tissue chemically or electronically, and record the electrical activity within the cell. This small device records the electrical activity within the cell. Although credit for developing the microelectrode has been given to Ralph W. Gerard, Gilbert Ling and Judith Graham, their version was developed in the 1940s. Her other firsts include being the first woman to graduate from the University of Heidelberg (1896), to do research at the Harvard Medical School (in the Department of Physiology), and to be elected to the American Physiology Society. The microelectrode has been said to have revolutionized neurophysiology. Hyde researched animal cardiac movement, circulation, respiration, and nervous systems, as well as investigating the breathing mechanisms of the horseshoe crab and the grasshopper, and the respiratory centers of the skate, amphibians, and in several mammals.
- September 8, 1888 – The mutilated body of 47-year-old Annie Chapman was found in Whitechapel, the second victim of Jack the Ripper. The murder created a state of panic in the East End of London, putting the police under increasing pressure to catch the killer.
- September 8, 1893 – New Zealand’s Legislative Council passed the Electoral Act, to which the governor consented on September 19, giving all New Zealand women the right to vote, and making New Zealand the world’s first self-governing country where women won the right to vote in national elections.
- September 8, 1903 – Marthe Vogt born, German-British pharmacologist and a leading authority on neurotransmitters in the brain, who left Nazi Germany for Britain. Co-author in 1936 of the classic paper that proved acetylcholine from nerves originating in the spinal cord is what triggers movement in muscles. She later showed that the hormones epinephrine and norepinephrine help brain cells communicate. Her ground-breaking paper on sympathin, published in 1954, helped to transform the lives of the mentally ill. Modern anti-depressant drug therapy is grounded in increasing the availability of amines, predicated on the idea that amines are present and active in the brain in the first place, something which Vogt did much to establish.
- September 8, 1914 – Tish Sommers born, co-founded Older Women’s League (OWL – motto: “Don’t Agonize, Organize”) with Laurie Shields (1982); worked on housing, health, and job training.
- September 8, 1916 – Sisters Augusta and Adeline Van Buren arrive in Los Angeles after completing their 5,500 mile journey on their Indian motorcycles, starting from Brooklyn, New York on July 4th. The 60 days it took to make their way across the continent were full of hardship. They traveled through some areas not on any map, overcoming poor or nonexistent roads, heavy rain and mud, crossing the Rocky Mountains, being lost in the desert, and multiple arrests by small town police for wearing men’s clothing. They were the first to climb Pike’s Peak on motorized vehicles. Advocates for votes for women, the sisters also hoped to prove that women could ride as well as men, and should be considered for service as military dispatch riders during WWI (one of the arguments against woman suffrage was that women didn’t serve in the military – if women became dispatch riders for the army, that argument would be invalidated). The military rejected their applications, but “Gussie” went on to earn a pilot’s license, and was a member of the famed Ninety-Nines, the international women pilot’s organization. “Addie” had been teaching, but she went to law school, earned her law degree, and became an attorney. Gussie later summed up their epic journey for a reporter: “Woman can, if she will.”
- September 8, 1919 – Maria Lassnig born, Austrian artist known for self-portraits and her theory of Body Awareness; associated with the Hundsgruppe (Dog Pack), a group of abstract expression/action painters, but in the 1960s she moved away from abstracts to concentrate on the human body; first woman artist to win the Grand Austrian State Prize in 1988; also honored with the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art in 2005.
- September 8, 1924 – Marie-Claire Kirkland born, Quebec lawyer, politician, and judge. As the first woman elected to the Legislative Assembly of Quebec, for the Jacques-Cartier district (1961-1966), she immediately caused a stir by refusing to wear a hat (standard attire for women in public at the time) in the assembly, because none of the men did, and in 1964 she was responsible for the passage of Bill 16, which gave married women the right to handle their own financial matters, and approve medical care for their children, without a husband’s co-signature. She was next elected to represent the Marguerite-Bourgeoys district (1966-1973). Kirkland was the first woman cabinet minister (without portfolio – 1962-1964), then appointed as Minister of Transport and Communications (1964-1966). She spearheaded the passage of the Cultural Property Act, a cornerstone of heritage conservation, and of Bill 63, which created the Council on the Status of Women in 1973, then left the legislature to become the first woman judge in the Quebec Provincial Court (1973-1991). Made a Member of the Order of Canada in 1992.
- September 8, 1924 – Grace Metalious born, American author known for her runaway best-seller, Peyton Place, which critics deplored, but was an international sensation; her other three novels sold well, but never came close to the success of Peyton Place; she died at the age of 39, from cirrhosis of the liver after years of alcohol abuse, with less than $50,000 in the bank, and $200,000 in debts, having spent lavishly, given thousands of dollars to hangers-on, and been victimized by an agent who embezzled large sums.
- September 8, 1924 – Mimi Parent born, Canadian surrealist painter who spent most of her working years in Paris. Her work was known for its symbolism, and she often made metaphorical use of real objects, like a man’s necktie of woman’s hair.
- September 8, 1925 – Jacqueline “Jacqui” Ceballos born, American feminist and activist; president of New York N.O.W. (1971); co-founder and first executive director of the Women’s Forum, also helped found the National Women’s Political Caucus, and was the founder of Veteran Feminists of America, devoted to preserving the history of ‘Second Wave’ feminism.
- September 8, 1927 – Marguerite Straus Frank born in France, American-French mathematician; in 1956, she was one of the first women to earn a PhD in mathematics at Harvard; pioneer in convex optimization theory and mathematical programming; her early work involved transportation theory and Lie algebras; co-creator of the Frank-Wolfe algorithm, an iterative optimization method for general constrained non-linear problems.
- September 8, 1937 – Barbara Frum born in America, Canadian radio newsmagazine and TV journalist, noted for her incisive and sometimes controversial interviews on Canada’s highly-rated in-depth news show The Journal. She died of chronic leukemia in 1992 at age 54.
- September 8, 1937 – Edna Adan Ismail born, Somali hospital founder-administrator, and public servant; one of the first Somali women to study nursing and midwifery in Britain, and become a qualified nurse-midwife, and was the first woman in her country to be a licensed driver. Worked as World Health Organization Regional Technical Officer for Mother and Child Health (1987-1991), and WHO’s representative in Djibouti (1991-1997.) She built and runs the Edna Adan Maternity Hospital, the first of its kind in Somali, opened in 2002. It is also a teaching hospital for nurses and midwives. Ismail is an outspoken opponent of female genital mutilation, also member and past president of the Organization for Victims of Torture. She was the only woman minister in the government when she served as Minister of Family Welfare and Social Development (2002-2003), and as Foreign Minister of Somaliland (2003-2006).
- September 8, 1942 – Judith Hann born, English broadcaster, science and nutrition writer; BBC’s Tomorrow’s World presenter (1974-1994), BBC Radio4 Two’s a Crowd presenter (2006); How Science Works; Judith Hann's Total Health Plan; and Herbs.
- September 8, 1944 – Margaret Hodge born, Lady Hodge, British Labour politician; Member of Parliament for Barking since 1994; Chair of the Public Accounts Committee (2010-2015); Minister of State for Work (2005-2007); Minister of State for Children (2003-2005); Minister of State for Universities (2001-2003); and Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Disabled People (1998-2001).
- September 8, 1945 – Esther Rome born, co-creator of Boston Women’s Health Collective’s book “Women and Their Bodies: A Course,” the basis for groundbreaking health manual Our Bodies, Ourselves.
- September 8, 1947 – Ann Beattie born, American novelist and short story writer; Chilly Scenes of Winter, Love Always, The Doctor’s House, Where You’ll Find Me and Other Stories, The Accomplished Guest; honored with the PEN/Malamud Award for excellence in the short story form.
- September 8, 1947 – Marianne Wiggins born, American novelist; she won the 1989 Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize for John Dollar, and Evidence of Things Unseen was a finalist for a 2004 Pulitzer Prize, and won the 2004 Commonwealth Club Gold Medal.
- September 8, 1954 – Ruby Bridges Hall born, American activist and philanthropist, first African American child to attend an all-white school in the South, chair of the Ruby Bridges Foundation, recipient of the Presidential Citizens Medal.
- September 8, 1955 – Terry Tempest Williams born, American author, conservationist, activist for wilderness preservation, women’s health and against nuclear testing. Noted as author of Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place; An Unspoken Hunger; Desert Quartet; Leap; Red: Passion and Patience in the Desert; The Open Space of Democracy; and Finding Beauty in a Broken World.
- September 8, 1967 – Kimberly Peirce born, American film director and screenwriter; noted for Boys Don’t Cry (1999), Stop-Loss (2008), and the remake of Carrie (2013), as well as episodes of series television. In 2020, her next film project, This is Jane, was announced, but production has been delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic.
- September 8, 1974 – Tanaz Eshaghian born, Iranian-American documentary filmmaker; her first documentary, I Call Myself Persian, won the 2002 Woodstock Festival Best Short Documentary Film. Her film, Be Like Others, was honored in 2008 with an Amnesty International Film Award and a Teddy Award, given for films with LGBT themes; also noted for From Babylon to Beverly Hills: The Exodus of Iran’s Jews; Love Iranian-American Style; Love Crimes of Kabul; and The Last Refugees.
- September 8, 1978 – Angela Rawlings born, Canadian-Icelandic poet, editor, and interdisciplinary artist; known for Wide slumber for lepidopterists, and The Great Canadian.
- September 8, 1983 – Kate Beaton born, Canadian cartoonist, creator of the comic strip Hark! A Vagrant, a history-themed strip begun in 2007 while she was working for the Maritime Museum of British Columbia.
- September 8, 1983 – Sarah Stup born, American author, poet, and essayist, who writes about autism. She has limited motor skills and does not speak. Stup uses a variety of typing devices to converse and work. She has published Are Your Eyes Listening?, and two children’s books, Paul and His Beast and Do-si-Do with Autism.
- September 8, 2014 – A Human Rights Watch investigation uncovered evidence that Western-backed African Union troops in Somalia gang-raped women and girls as young as 12, or traded aid, such as food, water, or medicine, for sex. The 22,000-strong AU force in Somalia, known as Amisom, with soldiers drawn from six countries, was fighting alongside Somali government troops against the Islamist militant group al-Shabaab since 2007. Its donors included the UK, US, the European Union, and the United Nations. The HRW 71-page report documented cases involving troops from Burundi and Uganda, and vulnerable women in refugee camps in the nation’s capital, Mogadishu, who had fled rural Somalia during the 2011 famine. Some women reported contracting sexually transmitted infections, mainly gonorrhoea, after the assaults, and said soldiers didn’t use condoms. Several women said they had been slapped or beaten by their assailants. The mother of one girl who was allegedly raped said, "People laugh at her whenever she comes out. They say: 'An infidel raped her.' How can you feel if your daughter asks you: 'Mother, I better die to hide my shameful face from the people?'" Only two of the women had filed police complaints, the rest had feared stigma, and reprisals from family, soldiers, or police. HRW later documented the case of one woman who sought help at a Mogadishu police station where she was raped again. The report, based on testimony by 21 women and girls, states, "Some of the women who were raped said that the soldiers gave them food or money afterwards in an apparent attempt to frame the assault as transactional sex." The report concluded, "The findings raise serious concerns about abuses by Amisom soldiers against Somali women and girls that suggest a much larger problem." It called on the AU and Amisom to foster a culture of zero tolerance towards illegal activities on their bases and set up or strengthen disciplinary units and an independent investigative body. Amisom's commander, Gen Silas Ntigurirwa from Burundi, told reporters the investigation documented "allegations of isolated cases of rape," and insisted that his soldiers were given strict orders against raping and looting.
- September 8, 2019 – The BBC Studios Writers’ Academy is a new accelerator programme to nurture the creative talent of each student. The successful candidates must already have an impressive track record of trailblazing work in theatre, film, radio, and literature. The Academy is an opportunity for each student to focus on their craft and bring their stories to the BBC. The first class of eight drama writers includes seven women. John Yorke, BBC Studios Writers’ Academy Head, said: “We arrived at our final eight, with no pre-conceived plan – the only criteria was excellence. It’s been thrilling to see not just a vast increase in female candidates, but a far greater percentage in the final stages than ever before.”
- September 8, 2020 – In the UK, Emily Bendell, chief executive and founder of the successful Bluebella lingerie brand, was surprised to discover that a number of clubs in central London still exclude women. She launched a discrimination claim against the Garrick, a private gentlemen’s club founded in 1831, named for famed actor David Garrick, which boasts a distinguished roster of members, including H.G. Wells, Charles Dickens, and William Makepeace Thackeray. Current members are cabinet ministers, barristers, judges, academics, diplomats, and well-known actors and writers. Bendell’s solicitors sent a pre-action letter to the club arguing that the Garrick’s refusal to admit women is a breach of the 2010 Equality Act, which allows the existence of single-sex organisations, such as women-only choirs or men-only rugby clubs, but it prohibits discrimination by businesses which provide services to customers. The lawyers argue that because the club runs a restaurant and guest rooms, it is discriminatory not to allow women to make use of them on the same terms as men. “Male members are allowed to bring female guests into the club, but women are not able to pay for themselves when they attend, become members themselves, book the facilities that men can book, access certain parts of the club at all, or access exclusive member events. In essence, women are only able to access the club’s services as second-class citizens on the whim of a man who has to both invite and pay for them.” Garrick members protested that no networking happens on the premises, and that work meetings are discouraged. They stress that since a large proportion of members are retired, the concern that vital connections are forged here is misplaced. One member described the club as “like an old people’s home with wine.” In 2015, club members voted by 50.5% in favour of introducing female membership, but club rules require a two-thirds majority to make any rule changes. Former president of the supreme court Lady Hale, the first woman among 12 supreme court judges, has expressed anger at the club’s continued exclusion of women: “I regard it as quite shocking that so many of my colleagues belong to the Garrick, but they don’t see what all the fuss is about,” she told a law diversity forum in 2011. She said judges “should be committed to the principle of equality for all.” Emily Bendell has since gathered hundreds of signatures from legal professionals on a petition supporting her campaign.
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- September 9, 1488 – Anne De Bretagne, aged 12, becomes Duchess of Brittany, upon the death of her father, Francis II, Duke of Brittany, the last male of the House of Montfort, from 1488 until her death, and queen consort of France, from 1491 to 1498 and from 1499 to 1514. She is the only woman to have been queen consort of France twice, because she was married to Charles VIII, from 1491 until his death in 1498, and then to Louis XII, from 1499 until her death in 1514. She was highly regarded in Brittany as a conscientious ruler.
- September 9, 1834 – A mob attacks Prudence Crandall’s school for black women in Canterbury, Connecticut. She had already been arrested for breaking a local law against teaching “colored persons,’ and this attack forces her to close the school.
- September 9, 1850 – Jane E. Harrison born, British classical scholar and linguist. She is one of the founders, with Karl Kerenyi and Walter Burkert, of modern studies in Ancient Greek religion and mythology. She applied 19th-century archaeological discoveries to the interpretation of ancient Greek religion in ways that have become standard. She has also been credited with being the first woman to obtain a post in England as a ‘career academic’. Harrison argued for women's suffrage but thought she would never want to vote herself. Her mother died shortly after she was born, and Harrison was educated by a series of governesses, who taught her German, Latin, Ancient Greek, and Hebrew. She later expanded her knowledge to about sixteen languages, including Russian. She attended Newnham College, the progressive, recently established college for women at Cambridge. She graduated in 1879, then spent most of her professional life at there. While a lecturer in classical archaeology at Newnham (1880-1898), she served as vice president of the Hellenic Society (1889-1896). During her travels in Europe, she met the Hungarian-Austrian archaeologist, Wilhelm Klein, who introduced her to Wilhelm Dörpfeld. Dörpfeld invited her to participate in his archaeological excavations at Bronze Age sites in Greece. Harrison wrote numerous books on her chosen field, including Myths of the Odyssey in Art and Literature (1882), The Mythology and Monuments of Ancient Greece (1890), Introductory Studies in Greek Art (1895), Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1903), Themis (1912), Ancient Art and Ritual (1913), and Epilogomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1921).
- September 9, 1867 – Delilah Leontium Beasley born, American historian, reporter, and newspaper columnist for the Oakland Tribune in California; first African American woman to be regularly published in a major metropolitan newspaper, and first person to present proof of the contributions of black pioneers in California, in her books Slavery in California (1918) and The Negro Trail-Blazers of California (1919), a pioneering work in the field of California black history. She was a community activist, and member of the northern California branch of the NAACP, the League of Women Voters, the California Federated Women’s Club, and helped organize the Linden Center YWCA. She founded the Delilah L. Beasley Literary and Improvement Club. Beasley campaigned for an International House at the University of California Berkeley, speaking out at a meeting of over 800 protesters against racial integration in the proposed International House, and writing rebuttals in the Tribune to white landlords’ claims that the house would cause UC Berkeley to be “overrun with Blacks and Asians.”
- September 9, 1868 – Mary Hunter Austin born, American author, an early writer about nature in the U.S. Southwest; her classic book is The Land of Little Rain (1903) describes the fauna, flora and people, and their mysticism and spirituality, in the region between the High Sierra and the Mojave Desert of Southern California.
- September 9, 1878 – Adelaide Crapsey born, American poet, developer of the cinquain, a five-line poetic form inspired by Japanese poetry forms; she died of tubercular meningitis at age 36.
- September 9, 1893 – First Lady Frances Cleveland gave birth to daughter Esther in the White House, the first time a president’s child was born in the executive mansion. 47-year-old Grover Cleveland had married 21-year-old Frances Folsom in the Blue Room of the White House on June 2, 1886, making her the youngest woman to become First Lady, and the only one to be wed in the White House.
- September 9, 1903 – Phyllis A. Whitney born, young adult and mystery author, President, Mystery Writers of America (1975), Grand Master Award (1988), the Agatha (1989).
- September 9, 1910 – Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas take up lifetime residence together. American writer and literary critic Edmund Wilson will comment in a letter to John Dos Passos that their relationship is “The most perfect example of human symbiosis I have ever seen.”
- September 9, 1923 – Rosita Sokou born, Greek author, playwright, translator, and one of the first women journalists in Greece.
- September 9, 1926 – Louise Abeita Chewiwi (E-Yeh-Shure – ‘Blue Corn’) born; Isleta Pueblo writer, poet, and educator; her book of poems, I am a Pueblo Indian Girl, was published when she was 13 years old.
- September 9, 1927 – Tatyana Zaslavskaya born, Russian economic sociologist, a theoretician of perestroika, and specialist in agriculture’s impact on economy and the sociology of the countryside; member of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
- September 9, 1931 – Shirley Summerskill born, British Labour politician; Member of Parliament for Halifax (1964-1983); Under-Secretary of State for Home Affairs (1974-1979).
- September 9, 1934 – Sonia Sanchez born as Wilsonia Driver, influential African American poet, author, and activist, associated with the Black Arts Movement; she published over a dozen books of poetry, as well as short stories and children’s books. Sanchez was honored with the Robert Frost Medal in 2001. She was involved in the Civil Rights Movement and is a supporter of the National Black United Front. She briefly joined the Nation of Islam in the 1970s, but left because of their views on women’s rights. She is an advocate for the rights of oppressed women and minorities. Sanchez was the first Poet Laureate of the city of Philadelphia (2012-2014).
- September 9, 1945 – Dr. Grace Hopper, mathematician and pioneering computer programmer, squirmed inside the Harvard Mark I computer, which took up an entire room, looking for what had caused it to malfunction. Using a flashlight, she discovered the cause of the problem. With a pair of tweezers she removed a moth which had been fried in a relay, causing a short circuit, which gave birth to the computer terms “bug” and “debugging.”
- September 9, 1960 – Kimberly Willis Holt born, American children’s author; her book, When Zachary Beaver Came to Town, won a 1999 U.S. National Book Award.
- September 9, 1969 – Natasha Stott Despoja born, Australian Democrats politician; Senator for South Australia (1995-2008), at age 26, she became the youngest woman to sit in the Parliament of Australia; Deputy Leader of the Democrats (1997-2001); Leader of the Australian Democrats (2001-2002); she didn’t stand for reelection to Parliament because of emergency surgery for an ectopic pregnancy and her frustration dealing with her party’s old guard (the party was formally deregistered in 2016 for not having sufficient members.) Despoja was later appointed as Ambassador of Australia for Women and Girls (2013-2016).
- September 9, 1972 – Natasha Kaplinsky born, English newsreader for Sky News (2000-2002), and BBC News (2002-2007); currently working for ITV as a newsreader and programme presenter.
- September 9, 2015 – Queen Elizabeth II becomes the longest-reigning monarch in Great Britain’s history.
- September 9, 2019 – In an article posted in the journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), Karen M. Winkfield, MD, PhD says of her experiences as an intern: “Boston is a very diverse city with a large minority population of African Americans and Latino Americans, but the patient population at Harvard did not reflect that. During my second year of training, I went to the Boston City Hospital, and lo and behold, I saw patients of color in numbers that reflected the city’s makeup. I wondered why they weren’t accessing the wonderful medical resources at Harvard. And that was what began the other part of my career focused on health equity and access to care.” She was on the staff of Massachusetts General Hospital for several years, during which she helped in developing the institution’s first comprehensive program in hematologic radiation oncology. “Along with that work, I felt it was important to engage the underserved minority communities and try to develop ways to improve access to quality care. I helped Mass General establish a program that explored methods to improve access to clinical trials and reduce disparities of care,” she declared. She became chair of the ASCO Health Disparities Committee, to address the needs of underserved minorities. She was recruited by Wake Forest Baptist Health in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for their Comprehensive Cancer Center. “My job as Director of the cancer health equity program is to make sure that everybody, no matter his or her race or financial status, has the same opportunity to be treated and cured of cancer. There are so many ways to improve cancer care among underserved communities, as long as we’re willing to partner with them and not be seen as an outside entity,” Dr. Winkfield declared.
- September 9, 2020 – Maggie O’Farrell’s novel Hamnett won the 2020 Women’s Prize for Fiction. The prize was set up in 1995, a response to the failure of the Booker Prize to include any women writers on its shortlist in 1991. It rewards “excellence, originality and accessibility in writing by women in English from across the world” and comes with an award of £30,000. Hamnett is based on the life and death from bubonic plague of William Shakespeare’s 11-year-old son, four years before Shakespeare wrote Hamlet.
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- September 10,1758 – Hannah Webster Foster born, American novelist and advocate for women’s education; her best-seller is The Coquette, or a History of Eliza Wharton, a fictionalized version of the true story of Elizabeth Whitman, a young woman seduced by an unidentified suitor, who died after the still-born birth of her illegitimate child.
- September 10, 1793 – Harriet Arbuthnot born, English diarist, social observer, and Tory party political hostess; maintained a long intimate relationship and correspondence with the Duke of Wellington, and recorded details of their conversations in her diaries, which are now a key source for historians of the Regency and late Napoleonic eras, and for biographers of the Duke of Wellington. Her diaries were published in 1950 as The Journal of Mrs. Arbuthnot.
- September 10, 1801 – Marie Laveau the elder born, Voodoo Queen of New Orleans, a free woman of color, with African, Native American, and French in her ancestry.
- September 10, 1852 – Alice Brown Davis born, the first woman to be chief of the Seminole Tribe of Oklahoma; postmistress, business owner, and superintendent of the Seminole Nation’s school for girls.
- September 10, 1860 – Marianne von Werefkin born, Russian-Swiss painter, salon host, co-founder of artist groups in Munich and Switzerland, known for Expressionism.
- September 10, 1870 – Lilian S. Gibbs born, English botanist; educated at Swanley Horticultural College and in botany at the Royal College of Science. She organized botanical expeditions to some of the most remote places on Earth, including South Rhodesia in 1905, then Fiji, New Zealand, Queensland, and Tasmania in 1907. In 1910, she became the first woman known to reach the summit of Mount Kinabulu in Borneo, and contributed over 1,000 botanical specimens from that trip to the British Museum. Bambusa gibbsiae (Miss Gibbs's bamboo) is named for her. In 1912, she made a botanical trip to Iceland, and in 1913, to the East Indies and Dutch New Guinea.
- September 10, 1877 – Katherine S. Dreier born, artist, art patron, social reformer, and suffragist; co-founder with Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray of the Société Anonyme, the first major U.S. collection of modern art and sponsor of numerous exhibitions; her estate donated 28 works by important modern artists to the Guggenheim Foundation.
- September 10, 1882 – Fola Dodge La Follette born, woman’s suffrage and labor activist, and actress. She performed numerous times in Cicely Hamilton’s play How the Vote was Won, beginning in 1910. Anna Shaw, president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, wrote La Follette, praising the play: "I had the pleasure of being present at the benefit performance of 'How the Vote was Won' ... and I have wanted ever since to express to you and the others who took part with you, my appreciation for the splendid help that play was to our cause." For suffragists, La Follette became the embodiment of how they wished to be portrayed. Her wry, gracious performances stood as contradiction to the cliché of the ugly man-hating spinster who was the butt of anti-suffrage jokes.
- September 10, 1886 – ‘H.D.’ born as Hilda Dolittle, American poet and novelist, known for avant-garde poetry, literary editor of The Egoist journal during WWI, frequently uses Greek mythology and insights from psychoanalysis in her work; now an icon for feminists and the LGBTQ Community.
- September 10, 1890 – Rose Finkelstein Norwood born in Russia, American labor organizer and powerful speaker in the Boston area. As a child in East Cambridge, Rose was bullied by Irish-American teens who yelled "Christ Killer" and threw bricks at her as she walked to school. During one attack she suffered a serious head wound, and one of the attackers was sent to prison. The family was forced to move to a less hostile neighborhood. She led labor campaigns for telephone operators, garment and jewelry workers, boiler makers, library staffers, teachers, sales clerks, and laundry workers. When she organized workers at the Boston Public Library, it inspired her to start the Books for Workers program, in which public libraries provided books to union halls and factories. She was active in many labor and civil rights organizations, including the Boston Women's Trade Union League, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. She served on the NAACP advisory board. Norwood was a vocal opponent of racism, fascism, and anti-Semitism; lifelong supporter of women's rights and workers' education, and an advocate for the elderly. She was married to Hyman Norwood for 58 years, before her death from a heart attack just after her 90th birthday in 1980.
- September 10, 1898 – Elsa Schiaparelli born, Italian fashion designer, one of the most prominent designers between the World Wars, along with her biggest rival, Coco Chanel.
- September 10, 1907 – Dorothy Hill born, Australian geologist and palaeontologist; first woman professor at an Australian university, and first woman president of the Australian Academy of Science; she graduated in 1928 from the University of Queensland, with a First Class Honours degree in Geology, and the University’s Gold Medal for Outstanding Merit, then got her Masters of Science in 1930. Since Australian universities didn’t begin awarding PhDs until 1948, she went to Cambridge University in Great Britain. She was a Fellow of Newnham College and the Sedgwick Museum, and was supported by a series of fellowships and scholarships which enabled her to continue at Cambridge until 1936. Notable for her studies of the limestone coral faunas of Australia, using them to outline wide-ranging stratigraphy, and of the first core drills of the Great Barrier Reef. After WWII, she served as the secretary of the Great Barrier Reef Committee, raising money and arranging for building materials for the Heron Island Research Station. She was editor of The Journal of the Geological Society of Australia (1958-1964), and became the first woman President of the Professorial Board of the University of Queensland (1971- 1972); author of over 100 research papers, and the comprehensive Bibliography and Index of Australian Paleozoic Coral. She was a strong advocate for more women entering scientific fields.
- September 10, 1926 – Beryl Cook born, self-taught British painter, OBE, noted for paintings of people enjoying themselves.
- September 10, 1931 – Isabel Colegate born, British literary agent and author, noted for her 1980 novel, The Shooting Party, adapted as a 1985 motion picture of the same name.
- September 10, 1935 – Mary Oliver, prolific American poet and author. She won 1984 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for American Primitive, and her collection, New and Selected Poems, won the 1992 National Book Award for Poetry. Among her many books are Dream Work, House of Light, and Blue Horses.
- September 10, 1946 – Michèle Alliot-Marie born, French lawyer and politician, Member of the European Parliament for France since 2014; French Minister of Foreign and European Affairs (2010-2011); French Minister of Justice (2009-2010); Minister of the Interior (2007-2009); Minister of Defense (2002-2007); Member of the National Assembly for Pyrénées-Atlantiques (1978-2004).
- September 10, 1948 – Margaret Trudeau born, Canadian author; the first woman who was both the wife of a prime minister, her former husband Pierre Trudeau, and the mother of a prime minister, Justin Trudeau, in office since 2015. In 2006, she announced she has bipolar disorder, and has become an advocate for eliminating the social stigma of mental disorders. She served as honorary president of WaterAid Canada, an Ottawa-based organization dedicated to helping the poorest communities in developing countries build sustainable water supply and sanitation service (2002-2017.) Noted for her books, Beyond Reason and Changing My Mind.
- September 10, 1950 – Babette Cole born, English children’s book author and illustrator; she created over 150 picture books, and is noted for Doctor Dog, Drop Dead, and Nungu and the Hippopotamus.
- September 10, 1951 – Sarah Coakley born, English Anglican systematic theologian and philosopher of religion with interdisciplinary interests, including feminist theory and the philosophy of science; Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity (2007-2018) at the University of Cambridge.
- September 10, 1952 – Medea Benjamin born (as Susan), American political activist; co-founder with Kevin Danaher of Code Pink: Women for Peace, and the fair trade advocacy group Global Exchange. In 2000, she was the Green Party candidate in California for U.S. Senate, and a contributor to the Huffington Post.
- September 10, 1960 – Alison Bechdel born, American cartoonist; known for the comic strip Dykes to Watch Out For, her graphic memoir Fun Home, and the Bechdel-Wallace Test, which she uses to call attention to gender inequality, and evaluate the portrayal of women in fiction and films, by determining if at least two women talk to each other about something other than men – the requirement that both women must be named characters is sometimes added.
- September 10, 1970 – Neera Tanden born, President of the Center for American Progress, a public policy research and advocacy organization in Washington, DC. She has served in this role since November 2011, before that serving as chief operating officer (2010-2011). She has a regular column in The New Republic.
- September 10, 1982 – Misty Copeland born, the first African American Principal Ballerina with the American Ballet Theatre. Her mother, Copeland, and her five siblings were living in two rooms in a motel when she began studying ballet at age 13, at a local Boys & Girls Club in California, then was invited to study at Cynthia Bradley’s ballet school on scholarship. Bradley had to pick her up from school because she had no other way to get to class. Within 3 months, she was en pointe. She won a scholarship at age 15, studied at the San Francisco Ballet, auditioned for American Ballet Theatre at age 17, and attended ABT’s 1999 and 2000 Summer programs. She joined the ABT Studio Company in 2001, and became a member of the Corps de ballet in 2001. By 2007, she was a soloist at ABT. Though she has had recurring stress fracture problems, including being sidelined for seven months after surgery in 2014, she has still risen with extraordinary speed from her first dance classes in 1995 to principal ballerina in a major company in 2015.
- September 10, 1996 – Walmart bans Sheryl Crow’s second album because of this lyric: “Watch out sister/Watch out brother/Watch our children as they kill each other/with a gun they bought at the Wal-Mart discount stores” in the song “Love is A Good Thing.”
- September 10, 2010 – U.S. Federal Judge Virginia Phillips ruled that the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy for gays and lesbians in the U.S. military is unconstitutional, and “infringes the fundamental rights of United States service members . . .” She issued an injunction to immediately halt enforcement of the policy.
- September 10, 2019 – Black women in the U.S. are starting new businesses at six times the national average, but Black women founders have received less than one percent of venture capital deals, and received lower loan amounts at higher interest rates than other business founders. As of 2019, African-American women accounted for 50% of all women-owned businesses. But without the resources and networks necessary to grow those ventures, they find their businesses stuck at the micro level, and revenue disparity is increasing: in 2014, minority-owned businesses averaged $67,800 in revenue; by 2019 the average had dropped to $65,800, a decline of 3%. According to the annual State of Women-Owned Business Report commissioned by American Express, if revenues generated by minority women-owned firms matched those currently generated by all women-owned businesses, they would add four million new jobs and $981 billion in revenues to the U.S. economy.
- September 10, 2020 – French writer and feminist Pauline Harmange, age 25, published her first book, a treatise on men, in August 2020, when much of France is on summer holiday. She expected to sell at most a couple of hundred copies to friends and readers of her blog. What she did not expect was a threat by the French gender equality ministry to take legal action to ban Moi les hommes, je les déteste (more literally, Me, the men, I detest them, but published in English as I Hate Men). Ralph Zurmély, an adviser to the ministry, wrote to Harmange’s publisher, “This book is obviously an ode to misandry (= hatred of men), both in terms of the summary on your site and in reading its title. I would like to remind you that incitement to hatred on the basis of sex is a criminal offence! Consequently, I ask you to immediately remove this book from your catalogue under penalty of criminal prosecution.” Harmage said, “I was shocked. This man works for the secretary of state for equality between men and women, whose mission is to do something about sexual assaults and rapes. It seemed outrageous that he was more concerned about censoring a small feminist book instead of doing his job.” As she had written in her essay, “Misandry exists only as a reaction to misogyny, which is at the root of systemic violence.” But his threat made her 96 page essay a hot property (The French ministry announced after the story hit the news that Zurmély had acted in his own initiative). The first 450 copies sold out, and so did the two reprints. Her publisher, Monstrograph, a “micropublisher” run by volunteers, was overwhelmed, and said it wouldn’t be reprinted unless a bigger publisher came to the rescue (the English translation is available in a Kindle edition at Amazon books). Harmange said, “I didn’t expect this. It’s been an enormous surprise. It’s the first time I’ve had a book come out. I wrote a novel but it was never published.” The book came out of a blog she wrote on misandry (man-hating). She opened with a quote from Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar – “The trouble was, I hated the idea of serving men in any way” – and it explores whether women have good reason to hate men. “I am married to a man, who is great and really supports my writing. But in general I mistrust men I don’t know,” Harmange said. “I just don’t have confidence in them. This comes less from personal experience than from being an activist in a feminist organisation that helps the victims of rape and sexual assault for several years. I can state for a fact that the majority of aggressors are men.” She added: “If we are heterosexual we are encouraged to like men, but we should absolutely have the right not to like them. I realise this sounds like a violent sentiment, but I feel strongly we should be allowed to not love them as a whole and make exceptions for certain men.” The book says defending misandry is liberating and can create space for sorority and sisterhood. “What if women have good reasons to detest men? What if anger towards men is in fact a joyful and emancipating path when it is allowed to express itself?” Harmange wrote. She said the negative reaction which has been aimed at Moi les hommes, je les déteste was completely predictable. “Female and feminist voices aren’t always welcome among men.”
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- September 11, 1318 — Eleanor of Lancaster born, she was twice married, to her first husband when she was just 13. They had one son, born in 1340, but her first husband died in 1342. She was then married in 1345 to Richard FitzAlan, 3rd Earl of Arundel, and she bore seven children, all of whom lived to adulthood. Eleanor died in 1372 at age 53. When her husband died in 1344, the instructions in his will were that he should be buried "near to the tomb of Eleanor de Lancaster, my wife; and I desire that my tomb be no higher than hers, that no men at arms, horses, hearse, or other pomp, be used at my funeral, but only five torches . . . as was about the corpse of my wife, be allowed." Their memorial effigies in Chichester Cathedral are holding hands, and inspired Philip Larkin to write the poem, “An Arundel Tomb.”
- September 11, 1476 – Louise of Savoy born, French Duchess of Nemours, Angoulême and Anjou; mother of King Francis I, serves as Regent of France in 1515, 1525-1526 and in 1529 during times when he goes to war, and while he is held prisoner in Spain; Louise is the principal French negotiator for the Treaty of Cambrai with the Holy Roman Empire, called “the Ladies’ Peace” because it is signed by Louise of Savoy and the Empire’s negotiator, Margaret of Austria.
- September 11, 1541 — Much of Santiago, Chile, is destroyed by indigenous warriors, led by the cacique (leader) Michimalonco, but Inés de Suárez rallies a counter-attack, drives the attackers off, then decapitates one of the captive caciques herself.
- September 11, 1762 – Joanna Baillie born, Scottish poet and dramatist known for Plays on the Passions (in three volumes) and Fugitive Verses. Baillie did not learn to read until age 10 when she was sent to boarding school, and the only theatrical presentation she was as a child was a puppet show. When her father died in 1778, the family’s financial situation suffered. Her aunt, Anna Home Hunter, was a poet, held a salon in her home, and was a leading Bluestocking (an educated, intellectual woman, originally a member of the Blue Stockings Society from 1720-1800, and used to describe both women and men, but came to be used only for women, and often meant to be derogatory. ‘Bas bleu’ has the same meaning in French). Baillie was introduced by her aunt to Hunter’s circle of friends, including Fanny Burney, Elizabeth Carter, Elizabeth Montagu, and Sir Walter Scott. Baillie studied playwrights and poets, then began writing her own while she ran her older brother’s household, until he married in 1791. She then lived with her mother and sister, often having to move, and exchanged letters with Walter Scott and others. She went through period of ill health in her 70s from which she recovered, then continued writing and corresponding until her death, at age 89, in 1851.
- September 11, 1806 – Juliette Magill Kinzie born, history writer, notable for including Native American legends and customs; Wau-Bun: The “Early Day” in the North West (when the ‘North West’ was Chicago).
- September 11, 1847 – Mary Watson Whitney born, astronomer; Maria Mitchell’s assistant; she became director of the Vassar Observatory (1888-1915) and professor of astronomy upon Mitchell’s retirement; like Mitchell, she was a champion for education and professional careers for women in the sciences. She and her staff published 102 papers in major astronomical journals on their work on comets, asteroids, variable stars, and using photographic plates to study and measure star clusters. By 1906, she was teaching pioneering classes in astrophysics and variable stars to 160 students. Whitney retired in 1910 at age 68 for health reasons.
- September 11, 1850 – Mary Elizabeth Lease born, American author, lecturer, fiery orator, suffragist, and Populist; “Our laws are the output of a system which clothes rascals in robes and honesty in rags . . ."
- September 11, 1877 – Rosika Schwimmer born, Hungarian feminist and pacifist; organized the Association of Hungarian Women Clerks (1897), co-founder of Feministák Egyesülete (Hungarian Feminist Association – 1904), also on the board of the Hungarian Peace Society and later Vice President of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF); first Hungarian woman ambassador, to Switzerland.
- September 11, 1917 – Jessica Mitford born, British-born investigative journalist and political activist, author of The American Way of Death (1963), participated in trade-union marches.
- September 11, 1927 – Christine King Farris born, professor and author; active in the International Reading Association, the NAACP, and the SCLC; sister of Martin Luther King Jr.
- September 11, 1933 – Dame Margaret Wood Booth born, British lawyer, judge, and author; she is the third woman to be appointed as a High Court judge, in the Family Division.
- September 11, 1941 – Minnijean Brown-Trickey born, American civil rights activist, one of the ‘Little Rock Nine’ who desegregated Central High School in 1957; she was suspended for six days in December 1957 for dropping her tray in the cafeteria and splashing food on two white boys when other students were harassing her by pushing chairs in front of her in the aisle; in February 1958, two girls threw a purse filled with combination locks at her, and when she called them “white trash” she was immediately expelled. She went to Canada in the 1980s and 1990s to get degrees in social work, and became involved in First Nations activism while there. President Clinton appointed her as Deputy Assistant of the Department of the Interior for Workforce Diversity (1999-2001); among many honors, she was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal and the Wolf Award.
- September 11, 1950 – Anne Dell born, Australian biochemist; Professor of Carbohydrate Biochemistry at Imperial College London; noted for studies of glycomics and carbohydrate structures that modify proteins, which open up possible applications to learning how pathogens such as HIV are able to evade termination by the immune system, and has led to the development of higher sensitivity mass spectroscopy techniques which have allowed for the better studying of the structure of carbohydrates. Dell was awarded the 1986 Tate and Lyle Medal by the Royal Society of Chemistry, and been appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2009.
- September 11, 1953 – Jani Allan born in London, South African journalist, columnist, and broadcaster; noted as one of South Africa’s most widely-read columnists in the 1980’s and 1990’s, working both in South Africa and in London, and had a radio show on Cape Talk Radio (1996-2000); was a speech writer for Mangosuthu Buthelezi (2000-2001).
- September 11, 1953 – Sarita Francis born, Monserrat civil servant and educator; currently Director of the Monserrat National Trust and the UK Overseas Territories Conservation Trust. She was the first woman appointed as deputy governor of Monserrat (2009-2011) and Acting Governor in March and April of 2011, between when the governor stepped down and his replacement arrived. Previously, she was the vice principal of the Salem Campus of the Monserrat Secondary School. In 1994, she headed the UN Development Programme in Monserrat, and began her work with the Monserrat National Trust.
- September 11,1955 – Sharon Lamb born, American psychologist and professor in the Department of Counseling and School Psychology at the University of Massachusetts Boston’s College of Education and Human Development; as a fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA), she was one of the authors of the APA’s report on the sexualization of young girls; co-author with Lyn Mikel of Packaging girlhood: rescuing our daughters from marketers’ schemes, and Packaging boyhood: saving our sons from superheroes, slackers, and other media stereotypes.
- September 11, 1960 – Annie Gosfield born, American avant-garde composer.
- September 11, 1961 – Samina Raja born, Pakistani Urdu poet, writer, editor, translator, and broadcaster; published 12 collections of poetry between 1973 and 1995, and had also been a literary magazine editor. She died in 2012 after a long struggle with cancer.
- September 11, 1963 – Victoria Polevá born, Ukrainian composer; best known for choral works.
- September 11, 1964 – Damares Alves born, Brazilian attorney and politician; current Minister of Women, Family and Human Rights since January 2019; she is also a pastor of Foursquare Gospel Church. She worked as a legal adviser to the Brazilian National Congress from the 1990s until her 2019 ministerial appointment.
- September 11, 1970 – Taraji P. Henson born, American actress, known for her co-starring role as Detective Jocelyn Carter on CBS drama Person of Interest, and her portrayal of Katherine Johnson in the 2016 film Hidden Figures. Supporter of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the NOH8 Campaign, which advocates for the LGBT community, Henson has appeared in print ads for PETA and a Public Service Announcement for NOH8.
- September 11, 2015 – Glenda Jackson, after winning two Oscars for performances in the hit films Women in Love and A Touch of Class, left acting in 1992 to run for a seat in the House of Commons as a Labour candidate. As the MP for Hampstead and Kilburn (1992-2015), she rarely commented on show business. But five months after standing down from her constituency, she was acting again in a radio adaptation of the 20-volume Les Rougon-Macquart by Émile Zola. She is disappointed by the continuing dearth of roles for older women and an absence of lead roles for female characters: “What I’m seeing now is that actresses are complaining. We were complaining in exactly the same way 23 years ago, and even years before that. Where have been the remarkable new plays which have women as the driving engine as opposed to the adjunct for what is always, and inevitably, a male engine-driver? That hasn’t changed. That is what is deeply, deeply depressing. It was exactly the same when I was still earning my living in the theatre – and I have seen no improvement in that area at all.” She is all the more shocked by the lack of progress on stage and screen, given greater equality elsewhere in society. Jackson said she struggles to understand why writers, producers and directors fail to realise the importance of portraying women in dramas. “It can’t be that they haven’t heard these cries of anguish rolling around for decades,” she says.
- September 11, 2019 – In Tbilisi, Georgian women at the sixth annual conference of the Women Councillors Forum of Georgia sought a greater say in economic and political issues. Participants called for municipal public services to pay greater heed to the needs of women, for example in expanding childcare options, and advocated for better vocational training opportunities to help women succeed in the labor market. The event brought together women members of local councils from all regions of Georgia, as well as representatives of the Georgian Government, Parliament, civil society, and international organizations, to discuss the opportunities arising from ongoing local governance reforms. They called for Georgian women to become more active in public life, and for gender parity at all levels of governance. “The voices of women are becoming louder at all levels of Georgia’s politics,” said Tamar Chugoshvili, First Deputy Speaker of Parliament and Chair of the Gender Equality Council. “The Women Councillors Forum is a powerful platform to help women play a more active role in local governance, ensuring meaningful gender equality in decision-making.”
- September 11, 2020 – In Ecatepec, Mexico, over two dozen masked women demanding justice for murdered women in cases that have not been solved or even properly investigated, broke down a door and entered a government rights commission building, sprayed graffiti, then threw molotov cocktails at the building’s exterior. Thirteen women were arrested, but were later released after an outcry on social media about their rough treatment by police. Activists also occupied the main offices of the country's federal human rights commission in Mexico City for several days. Intense media coverage of the protests helped reignite debate about the topic and spurred demonstrations in other cities across the country. In addition to the nearly 10 murders a day in Mexico classified as femicides, the protests have also focused on over 73,000 missing person reports, the majority of them women, still unsolved.
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- September 12, 1590 – María de Zayas y Sotomayor born, Spanish author during Spain’s Golden Age, regarded as a pioneer of literary feminism; Desengaños Amorosos (Disenchantments of Love), Novelas Amorosas y ejemplares (Amorous and Exemplary Novels).
- September 12, 1739 – Mary Bosanquet Fletcher born, Methodist preacher and philanthropist, who convinced John Wesley (leading figure in the founding of Methodism) to allow women to preach publicly. She and preacher Sarah Crosby were the most popular women preachers of their day, and Mary Bosanquet Fletcher was honored by Methodists as “Mother in Israel.” She was co-founder of The Cedars, an orphanage for girls, in the East London area of Leytonstone, where they were taught manners, reading, writing, nursing, and domestic skills, under strict discipline, as well as receiving intensive religious instruction. Rising costs and concerns about poor air quality caused her to move to the orphanage to Cross Hall, in Morley, West Yorkshire, thinking to save costs as the staff grew their food, but their lack of farming experience made this venture less successful than she hoped. She closed Cross Hall (after finding places for the orphans) in 1782 because she got married. She and her husband then worked together running a school. She began preaching more like the male preachers, by quoting biblical texts, and continued to preach and lead classes up to a few months before her death.
- September 12, 1846 – Elizabeth Barrett elopes with Robert Browning.
- September 12, 1853 – Celestia Parrish born, American educator and pioneering woman in psychology; overcame English-born psychologist E. B. Tichener’s prejudice against women to attend his class and get him to correspond with her so she could better teach her students – later he submitted some of her papers to the America Journal of Psychology; she founded the first psychology lab in the southern U.S. at Randolph-Macon Woman’s College in Lynchburg, VA; after teaching at the Georgia State Normal School, she became Georgia State Supervisor of Public Schools (1911-1918).
- September 12, 1859 – Florence Kelley born, social and political reformer, campaigned for a minimum wage, 8-hour workdays, and against child labor and sweatshops.
- September 12, 1894 – Dorothy M. Wrinch born, English mathematician and biochemical theorist; she read mathematics at Girton College, Cambridge, and became a research student there in 1917. One of the founding members of the Biotheoretical Gathering in the 1930s, an inter-disciplinary group studying how proteins work. Known for her studies attempting to deduce protein structure using mathematical principles; her initial theory turned out to be wrong, but her experimental work with Irving Langmuir led to the principle of the Hydrophobic Effect being the driving force for protein folding.
- September 12, 1897 – Irène Joliot-Curie born, French physicist, co-recipient with Frédéric Joliot-Curie of the 1935 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery of new radioactive elements and artificial radioactivity. From 1946, she was the director of the Radium Institute in Paris, founded by her mother, Nobel laureate Marie Curie. She died of leukemia at age 58 because of her exposure to radiation.
- September 12, 1902 – Marya Zaturenska born in Ukraine, American author and lyric poet who won the 1938 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for her book, Cold Morning Sky; she came to the U.S. with her family when she was 8 years old; as a teenager, she worked in a clothing factory during the day while attending high school classes at night, and won scholarships to attend college; published eight volumes of poetry, edited six poetry anthologies, and published A History of American Poetry, 1900-1940.
- September 12, 1916 – After Adelina and Augusta Van Buren reached Los Angeles, California, finishing their successful transcontinental motorcycle journey, they added to their mileage by continuing down the West Coast, through San Diego, to the U.S.-Mexican border. Reports in the leading motorcycling magazine of the day praised their Indian motorcycles but not the sisters, describing their arduous journey as a "vacation.” One newspaper even accused the sisters of using the pre-war national preparedness movement as an excellent excuse to escape their roles as housewives.
- September 12, 1917 – Han Suyin born as Rosalie Matilda Kuanghu Chou in China, Eurasian physician and author who wrote novels in English and French set in East and Southeast Asia, as well as seven memoirs which began with her family’s life from 1885, and her life from birth through 1991. She also wrote historical studies of China, and the Chinese Communist Revolution. Suyin is best known for her novel, A Many-Splendoured Thing.
- September 12, 1922 – The Episcopal Church removes the word “obey” from the bride’s wedding vows. In 2012, they added a liturgy to prescribe what shall be done and said at a service of blessing of a same-sex union.
- September 12, 1928 – Muriel “Mickie” Siebert born, the first woman to own a seat on the New York Stock Exchange, joining the 1,365 male members of the exchange in 1967 (In 1870, sisters Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin were the first women to open a Wall Street brokerage firm.) Siebert was also head of one of the first women’s banks. She was appointed by New York Governor Carey as Superintendent of Banks for New York State (1977-1980); co-author of Changing the Rules: Adventures of a Wall Street Maverick.
- September 12, 1934 – Nellie Wong born in Oakland, California, to Chinese immigrants; American poet, feminist, and socialist; she was a member of the Women Writers Union while a student at San Francisco State University, and organized the feminist literary and performance group Unbound Feet with lesbian activist and writer Merle Woo. She also joined the Freedom Socialist Party and the grassroots feminist activist group Radical Women. In 1983, she traveled to China on the first U.S. Women Writers Tour sponsored by the U.S.-China Peoples Friendship Association with Tillie Olsen, Alice Walker, and Paule Marshall. Wong taught poetry at Mills College (1983-1985). She was a frequent keynote speaker at national and regional conferences for feminist and anti-racist groups. Excerpts from two of her poems have been permanently installed as plaques at public sites at the San Francisco Municipal Railway. Her poetry collections include Dreams in Harrison Railroad Park, The Death of Long Steam Lady, Stolen Moments, and Breakfast Lunch Dinner. She was in a documentary film with Mitsuye Yamada called Mitsuye & Nellie, Asian American Poets in 1981.
- September 12, 1950 – Marguerite Blais born, French Canadian Quebec Liberal politician, journalist, and media host; Member of the Quebec National Assembly for Saint-Henri–Sainte-Anne (2007-2015); president of Conseil de la famille et de l’enfance (2003-2007); director general of the Fondation du maire de Montréal pour la jeunesse; advocate for the deaf community and persons with hearing disabilities.
- September 12, 1953 – Nan Goldin born, American photographer noted for portraiture, and her visual autobiographical documentary slideshow and photobook, The Ballad of Sexual Dependency.
- September 12, 1953 – Fiona Mactaggart born, British Labour politician, teacher, feminist, and activist; Appointed in 2018 as Chair of Agenda, an alliance for women and girls at risk. Member of Parliament for Slough (1997-2017); primary school teacher (1987-1992); General Secretary of the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (1982-1987); Vice President and National Secretary of the National Union of Students (1978-1981).
- September 12, 1973 – Tarana Burke born, African-American civil rights activist who started the ‘Me Too’ movement in 2006, which was the inspiration for #MeToo after the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse scandal launched dozens of revelations of cases of sexual abuse and harassment; she is the Senior Director at Girls for Gender Equity; honored as one of “the silence breakers” named collectively by TIME Magazine as its 2017 ‘Person’ of the Year.
- September 12, 1973 – Kara David born, Filipina journalist and television host; news anchor of News to Go at GMA News TV, and host-writer for the i-Witness documentary series. She is the founder and president of the Project Malasakit foundation, which aids people in remote communities and sends poor children to school; in 2010, she became the second person from the Philippines to win a Peabody Award, for her documentary Ambulansyang de Paa (Ambulance on Foot).
- September 12, 1974 – Caroline Aigle born, French aviator; the first woman fighter pilot in the French Air Force. In 1999, she was the first woman to receive the fighter pilot wings, and was assigned to the Mirage 2000-5 in the escadron 2/2 "Côte-d'Or" in 2000, then promoted to the rank of Commandant (similar to Major in the U.S Air Force) in 2005. She was among the top candidates in 2007 under consideration to become an astronaut for the European Space Agency, but was diagnosed with cancer and died a month later, at the age of 32. She was posthumously awarded the Médaille de l'Aéronautique (Aeronautics Medal).
- September 12, 1981 – Jennifer Hudson born, African American singer and actress, known for her film debut in Dreamgirls, for which she won the 2007 Best Supporting Actress Oscar. In 2008, her mother, brother and nephew were killed by her sister’s estranged husband. The Hudson family started The Hudson-King Foundation for Families of Slain Victims, and she co-founded with her sister the Julian D. King Gift Foundation, named for her nephew, which provides Christmas presents and school supplies to families in need in the Chicago area.
- September 12, 1992 – Dr. Mae Carol Jemison becomes the first African-American woman in space, as the payload specialist aboard the space shuttle Endeavor. Also onboard are Mission Specialist N. Jan Davis and Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Mark C. Lee, the first married couple to fly together in space, and Mamoru Mohri, who becomes the first Japanese person to fly into space.
- September 12, 2002 – Police Woman’s Day is launched to honor members of the International Association of Women Police (IAWP).
- September 12, 2019 – After the third Democratic Presidential Debate, women’s rights activists and several candidates for the Democratic nomination criticized the continued lack of questions about the threat to abortion rights, the gender pay gap, and two-paycheck family issues like paid parental leave and affordable childcare. California Senator Kamala Harris said, “. . . yet again, women’s access to reproductive health care is under full attack” and “should have been brought up last night – it wasn’t.” Former Texas Representative Beto O’Rourke also noted the absence, as well as Mayor Pete Buttigieg. Christina Reynolds of EMILY’s List, which is dedicated to electing Democratic women candidates who support abortion rights, said “We have moved beyond the point when it’s enough for a candidate to say they are pro-choice. Women deserve to hear from presidential candidates the specific ways in which they will protect Roe v. Wade and our rights. There are real differences in both the records and plans for these candidates and it’s time we discuss it more directly.” 57% of Americans say abortion should be legal at least in most cases, while 42% want abortion banned in all or most cases, according to an AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll in May 2019. Among Democrats, about 75% think abortion should be legal in all or most cases.
- September 12, 2020 – Fawzia Koofi was one of only four women taking part in the negotiations between the Afghan government and the Taliban after the U.S. reached an agreement on withdrawing U.S. troops with the Taliban in February 2020. Her arm was still in a sling because she was wounded during an assassination attempt in mid-August 2020. This was the second attempt on her life. The first was an attempt in 2010 by the Taliban. She is one of the most outspoken critics of the Taliban, who denied any involvement in the 2020 attack, but no one has claimed responsibility. Koofi said in an interview: “It is difficult on some occasions to digest some of the memories, but we have a proverb that says — you cannot wash blood with another blood, you need water to wash blood. So we really need to pour a lot of water to clean up all the blood that has been shed in this country for decades. We need to listen to the victims of war. This is the core issue for the negotiation team, at least for me personally, because I too have been a victim of this war. My right hand still does not work properly. But I have also lost my father, brothers, my family members, like many other people in Afghanistan.” Koofi is one of only a handful of women who have had any part in dialogue with the hard-line Islamist group, which ruled Afghanistan until they were removed from power by a US-led invasion in 2001. Afghan women activists have warned their hard-won rights must not be traded away. Under Taliban rule, women were barred from education and most work outside the home. While insurgent leaders have promised to respect women’s rights under Islam, they have refused to spell out what that might mean in daily life. Less than a year later, in 2021, as the Taliban swept across Afghanistan, reports emerged of women in newly captured territory being forced to marry fighters, being publicly flogged, and forced to stay at home. On the night of August 30, 2021, Fawzia Koofi boarded one of the last evacuation flights to Qatar despite the Taliban militants who had placed her under house arrest, and now control Afghanistan again. “It is heartbreaking to see how everything has collapsed,” Koofi said in a radio interview the next day.
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- September 13, 1775 – Laura Secord born, Canadian heroine of the War of 1812, who walked 20 miles out of American-occupied territory to warn British troops of an impending attack.
- September 13, 1819 – Lucy Goode Brooks born as a slave in Virginia, American charity organizer. The daughter of the slave Judith Goode and an unnamed white man, she could read and write. When she met Albert Royal Brooks, the slave of a different owner, she taught him to write so they could write passes that would enable them to see each other. When her master died in 1838, she became the property of another man, who allowed her to marry Albert, and live with him. Albert ran a livery stable for his owner, and was permitted to keep his additional earnings so he could buy his freedom. When Lucy’s second owner died in 1858, his heirs wanted to sell her and her children to different masters, but the merchant who bought most of her children allowed them to live with her as long as they showed up every day for work, but Lucy’s daughter was sold away to Tennessee. The Brookes worked hard to earn their freedom, and the freedom of their three youngest boys, but the oldest three boys were not freed until the end of the Civil War. The loss of her daughter and an infant son sold away earlier made Lucy Brooks decide to help children separated from their parents. With the support of her Ladies Sewing Circle for Charitable Work and a Quaker congregation, she founded the Friends’ Asylum for Colored Orphans, which opened its doors in 1867. It has become the Friends Association for Children, which currently provides childcare and family support services for low-income families. Lucy Brooks died in 1900, at age 82.
- September 13, 1819 – Clara Schumann born, German composer (‘Three Romances for Violin & Piano’) and pianist; she gave the first public performances of several works by Johannes Brahms.
- September 13, 1830 – Baroness Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach born, Austrian novelist, highly regarded German-language author of the 19th century; Božena; Das Waldfraulein (The Forest Maiden); Das Gemeindekind (The Parish Child).
- September 13, 1844 – Ann Webb Young born, one of Church of the Later Day Saint’s President Brigham Young’s many wives, who filed for divorce on grounds of cruelty, neglect, and abandonment; she was excommunicated from the LDS Church in 1874; her divorce became final in 1875. She went on the lecture circuit, advocating against polygamy and Mormonism; Webb testified before Congress during debates prior to passage of the Poland (anti-polygamy enforcement) Act. Author of Wife No. 19, or The Story of a Life in Bondage.
- September 13, 1844 – Anna Lea Merritt born, American painter; known for portraits, landscapes, and religious scenes; worked primarily in England as a professional artist.
- September 13, 1865 – Maud Ballington Booth born in England as Maud Charlesworth; Salvation Army leader in America, co-founder of the Volunteers of America, and advocate for improving prison conditions.
- September 13, 1888 – ‘Melli’ Amelie Beese born, early German aviator and sculptor; she had to leave Germany to study sculpting at the Royal Academy in Stockholm because German art schools did not admit female students; returning home, she studied mathematics, ship building and aeronautical engineering, and with difficulty found some aviators who would instruct a woman in flying; she became the first woman pilot in Germany to participate in a flight display on her birthday, September 13, 1911. She opened a flying school the following year, designed and patented a collapsible aircraft, and worked with her future husband, Charles Boutard, on a flying boat design. But when they married in 1913, she became a French citizen, and they were arrested during WWI as “undesirable aliens.” Charles was interned, and their goods were confiscated. After the war, they filed suit to recover their property, but the case dragged on, and German hyper-inflation greatly decreased its value. The marriage deteriorated, and they separated. In 1925, she crashed the aeroplane she was flying when she reapplied for her pilot’s license. Three days before Christmas that year, she shot herself.
- September 13, 1917 – Carol Kendall born, American historian and author of folk tale stories for children; her book The Gammage Cup was a 1960 Newbery Honor Book.
- September 13, 1919 – Mary Midgley born, British philosopher, advocate for science, ethics and animal rights, author of many books, including her autobiography The Owl of Minerva.
- September 13, 1920 – Else Holmelund Minarik born in Denmark, American children’s author noted for her Little Bear series.
- September 13, 1922 – Caroline Duby Glassman born, American attorney and the first woman to serve as an Associate Justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court (1983-1997).
- September 13, 1931 – Marjorie Jackson-Nelson born, Australian sprinter who won two Olympic Gold Medals, and held six world records; in 2001, she became the Governor of South Australia, serving until 2007; among her many honors, awarded Member of the Order of the British Empire (1953), and Companion of the Order of Australia (2001).
- September 13, 1933 – Elizabeth McCombs becomes the first woman member of the New Zealand Parliament; a member of the Labour Party, she represented Lyttelton (1933-1935).
- September 13, 1938 – Judith Martin born, aka Miss Manners, American etiquette expert, journalist, and author of over a dozen ‘Miss Manners’ books, beginning with Miss Manners' Guide to Excruciatingly Correct Behavior.
- September 13, 1943 – Mildred DeLois Taylor born, African-American author known for books on the struggles of Black families in the Deep South; known for Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry and The Road to Memphis.
- September 13, 1944 – Carol Barnes born, British television newsreader and broadcaster; she began her media career as a sub-editor at Time Out Magazine, then moved to Independent Radio News, and as a reporter for BBC Radio 4. She then worked for ITN (1975-2004), as a reporter, then as a presenter on Channel 4 Daily, and News at Ten. In 2008, she suffered a massive stroke that left her in a coma, and died four days later.
- September 13, 1948 – Margaret Chase Smith is elected as a U.S. Senator, the first woman to serve in both houses of Congress. She was a moderate Republican with a streak of independence, the first woman elected to either House from the state of Maine. She served in the House of Representatives (1940-1949) and as U.S. Senator (1949-1973). Chase Smith was the first member of Congress to go on record criticizing McCarthy’s witch-hunting tactics in her 1950 speech, "Declaration of Conscience." In 1964, she became the first woman placed in nomination for the presidency at a major party’s convention, placing fifth in the first balloting. She is still the current record-holder as the longest-serving Republican woman in the U.S. Senate.
- September 13, 1951 – Anne Devlin born, Irish author, playwright, and screenwriter; noted for Ourselves Alone, After Easter, and The Forgotten.
- September 13, 1956 – Anne Geddes, born in Australia, photographer noted for baby photography shooting infants in arrangements of fruits and flowers; she is the founder of the Geddes Philanthropic Trust, which raises awareness of child abuse and neglect.
- September 13, 1957 – Dame Eleanor Warwick King born, British judge of the Court of Appeal of England and Wales since 2008.
- September 13, 1957 – Tatyana Mitkova born, Russian broadcast journalist who refused to read the official Soviet Union version of the military response to the 1991 uprising in Lithuania; won the 1991 International Press Freedom Award from the Committee to Protect Journalists.
- September 13, 1965 – Annie Duke born, American professional poker player and author, dubbed the “Duchess of Poker.” She holds a World Series of Poker gold bracelet from 2004, and was the leading women’s money winner until Vanessa Selbst took that title in 2013. Duke has written instructional books on poker, and an autobiography, How I Raised, Folded, Bluffed, Flirted, Cursed, and Won Millions at the World Series of Poker. She is the co-founder with actor Don Cheadle of the non-profit Ante Up for Africa which benefits charities working in African nations, and frequently hosts and plays in poker tournaments for charity.
- September 13, 1983 – Molly Crabapple born as Jennifer Caban, American artist and writer; author of Drawing Blood, and co-author with Marwan Hisham of Brothers of the Gun. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, New York Review of Books, The Paris Review, Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Rolling Stone, and The New Yorker. Some of her art is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art. Crabapple’s animated short A Message from the Future with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was nominated for an Emmy award for Outstanding News Analysis: Editorial and Opinion.
- September 13, 1995 – Beverley Palesa Ditsie addressed the UN at the Beijing Women’s Conference about the importance of including lesbian rights in discussions about the empowerment and uplifting of women. Ditsie was the first person and first openly lesbian woman to address the issue of protecting the rights of LGBT people at a UN conference. Ditsie was born in Soweto in 1971 during the height of Apartheid, and was an anti-Apartheid and LGBT rights activist, one of the founding members of GLOW, South Africa’s first multiracial and political lesbian and gay rights group. During the drafting of South Africa’s constitution, she was at the forefront arguing for protecting people from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. South Africa became the first nation in the world to include such a protection in its constitution.
- September 13, 2019 – In Kenya, a 14-year-old schoolgirl committed suicide after a teacher allegedly shamed her, calling her “dirty” because her clothes were stained after her period started during class, and she was then expelled from class. Her mother said it was her first period, and she did not have a sanitary pad. Access to menstrual products is a huge problem across sub-Saharan Africa, where an inability to afford sanitary products prompts many girls to avoid school during their periods. A 2014 UNESCO report estimated that one in 10 girls miss school during menstruation, which means they miss out on 20% of their schooling each year. A 2017 law requires Kenya’s government to distribute free sanitary pads to all schoolgirls, but poor implementation of the law and lack of funding have hampered distribution, and is now the subject of a parliamentary investigation. Kenya’s women MPs “laid siege” to the education ministry to protest about the girl’s death and discuss the programme. MP Esther Passaris wrote on Twitter: “We had a candid discussion about sanitary towels, the little girl who died, and the investigation that is ensuing,” she added. “We need to make it so that girls aren’t ashamed of their periods, and I don’t think we’ve won that battle yet.”
- September 13, 2020 – Ann Francke, Chartered Management Institute (CMI) chief executive, warned that the government’s plan to push the British back into the office risks a return to “white middle-aged males” making the important decisions, while women and people from ethnic minorities are excluded at home. “The risk is when we go back into the office, the people that go back will be the senior leaders. And we know that those senior leaders are largely white men,” said Francke. “That will reinforce the kind of exclusionary, lack of diverse culture at the top of organisations. I think that would be a very dangerous step backwards.” Recent polling revealed that two in five mothers do not have the childcare they need to return to the office as some nurseries, childminders and wraparound care remains unavailable, while research shows that women are more likely to do the extra childcare. CMI’s most recent survey of managers carried out in August 2020 found that 74% of managers cited the risk of contracting coronavirus as employees’ most common concern, while a previous survey found that 91% of managers said “blended working” – a mixture of remote and office working – motivated them, while 85% said it made them more productive, and 77% said it made them more satisfied. Nearly half of the managers (42%) believe a lack of childcare caused by the pandemic will have negative impacts for female employees, while only 20% believe it will be a problem for men.
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- September 14, 1401 – Maria of Castile born, Queen of Aragon; though her health was delicate (she may have had epilepsy), she survived smallpox, but was left with permanent scars. She was betrothed at age seven to Alfonso V of Aragon, and they were married when she was 14, but her menstrual cycle did not begin until she was 16, so the consummation of the marriage was delayed, and she bore no children. The marriage was not a happy one, especially after she learned that her husband’s mistress had given birth to a son. Maria acted as regent twice, from 1420 to 1423, and then from 1432 to until her husband’s death in 1458, while Alfonso was off pursuing his claim to the throne of Naples, which he would later secure for his illegitimate son. Maria was left as de facto ruler to deal with frequent family squabbles between her brothers-in-law, and conflicts with burghers and peasants. When Alfonso lost the naval Battle of Ponza in 1435, he was captured, and Maria organized the funds to pay his ransom. Alfonso died in June 1458, but was quickly followed by Maria in September 1458.
- September 14, 1728 – Mercy Otis Warren born, American Revolution political writer and propagandist. In 1805, she published one of first histories of the American Revolution, a three-volume History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution. In the eighteenth century, history, politics and war were thought to be the province of men. Few men and fewer women had the education or training to write about these subjects. Warren was an exception. Although she had no formal education, she studied with the Reverend Jonathan Russell while he tutored her brothers Joseph and James in preparation for Harvard College. She married James Warren in 1754, and gave birth to five sons. Her husband was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives, and he later became speaker of the House and President of the Massachusetts Provincial Congress. The Warrens became increasingly involved in the conflict between the American colonies and the British Government. Their Plymouth home was often a meeting place for local politics, and for revolutionaries, including the Sons of Liberty. Mercy Warren was drawn to political activism, and she hosted protest meetings in her home. She regularly corresponded with Abigail Adams, John Adams and Martha Washington. With the assistance of her friend Samuel Adams, these meetings laid the foundation for the Committees of Correspondence. She later wrote "no single step contributed so much to cement the union of the colonies." Mercy became a strong political voice with views on liberty, republican government, and independence for the American colonies. She wrote, "Every domestic enjoyment depends on the unimpaired possession of civil and religious liberty." Mercy's husband James encouraged her to write, fondly referring to her as the "scribbler" and she became his chief correspondent and sounding board. During the years before the American Revolution, Warren published poems and plays that attacked royal authority in Massachusetts and urged colonists to resist British infringements on colonial rights and liberties. James Warren served as paymaster to George Washington's army for a time during the war. At the height of the debate over the United States Constitution in 1788, Mercy Warren issued a pamphlet, Observations on the new Constitution, and on the Federal and State Conventions, using the pseudonym "A Columbian Patriot," that opposed ratification of the document, and advocated for the inclusion of a Bill of Rights. Observations was long thought to be the work of other writers, most notably Elbridge Gerry. It was not until her descendant, Charles Warren, found a reference to it in a 1787 letter to British historian Catharine Macaulay that Warren was credited as the author. In 1790, she published a collection of poems and plays under her own name, highly unusual for a woman at the time. When she published her three-volume History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution, not only was it the first history of the American Revolution written by a woman, and an eye-witness to the events, but also a person who played a part in them.
- September 14, 1816 – Mary Hall Barrett born, American book editor and letter writer; as a teenager, she began teaching Sunday school at a Universalist church; her parents, a brother and a sister all died of consumption (tuberculosis), and she nursed them devotedly, injuring her own health. She married John Greenleaf Adams in 1839, and edited the Sabbath-School Annual for three years, influencing well-known Universalist authors to contribute to the annual, before her health declined to the point where she was unable to continue. She died in 1860. The Memoir of Mrs. Mary H. Adams was published after her death.
- September 14, 1830 – Emily Edson Briggs born, the first woman White House correspondent, during Lincoln’s administration; first president of Women’s National Press Association (1882).
- September 14, 1843 – Lola Rodríguez de Tió born, Puerto Rican poet, abolitionist, and women's rights activist. After her marriage in 1863 to Bonocio Tió Segarra, she became a writer and book importer, and published her first book of poetry, Mis Cantos (My Songs). She and her husband were banished twice for their political activities and writings advocating Puerto Rican independence from Spain. They lived in Venezuela and New York before settling in Cuba. In 1901, she was a co-founder and member of the Cuban Academy of Arts and Letters, and also served as an inspector of schools. Their home was a gathering place for Cuban intellectuals and politicians, and Puerto Rican exiles. She died in Havana at the age of 81, leaving a legacy of books and patriotic poetry, including new revolutionary lyrics for the song "La Boriqueña." In 2014, she was one of 12 Puerto Rican women honored with plaques in La Plaza en Honor a la Mujer Puertorriqueña (Plaza in Honor of Puerto Rican Women) in San Juan.
- September 14, 1854 – Julia Magruder born, American novelist; several of her stories were serialized in the Ladies Home Journal; recipient of an award from the Académie Française.
- September 14, 1857 – Alice Stone Blackwell born, suffragist, journalist, socialist, and human rights activist; daughter of suffragist Lucy Stone (who had pioneered keeping her maiden name after marriage), and Henry Blackwell, abolitionist and advocate for women’s equality and suffrage. Alice worked for the Woman’s Journal, started by her parents, became an editor, and assumed sole editing responsibilities after her mother’s death in 1893. In 1890, she helped reconcile the American Woman Suffrage Association and National Woman Suffrage Association, two competing organizations in the women's suffrage movement, so they merged into the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), and she served as NAWSA’s recording secretary (1890-1908). Beginning in the 1890s, she became a supporter of the Armenian refugee community, and translated works by Armenian poets, published as Armenian Poetry, in two volumes. Stone Blackwell was president of both the New England and Massachusetts Woman Suffrage associations, and honorary president of the Massachusetts League of Women Voters. Late in life she went blind, but lived to the age of 92, dying in 1950.
- September 14, 1857 – Julia Barlow Platt born, American embryologist and politician; after graduating from the University of Vermont in 1887, she did research at the Harvard Annex, founded in 1879, which was the only access for women to Harvard at the time, and she was one of several women challenging the university’s anti-coeducational policies; Platt had to get her doctorate at the University of Freiburg in Germany; her major contribution to science, demonstrating that neural crest cells formed the jaw cartilage and tooth dentine in Necturus maculosus (mudpuppy embryos), was not believed by her contemporaries because it ran counter to the belief that only mesoderm could form bones and cartilage. Her hypothesis of the neural crest origin of the cranial skeleton gained acceptance only some 50 years later when confirmed by Sven Hörstadius and Sven Sellman. Frustrated because she was unable to secure a university position, she became a political activist in California, an advocate for maintaining beach access for the public, and for a marine protected area, which became crucial to the recovery of the sea otter. In 1931, she was elected mayor of Pacific Grove, California.
- September 14, 1879 – Margaret Sanger born, American birth control activist, sex educator, and nurse; popularized the term “birth control,” and opened the first birth control clinic in the U.S. She also established organizations that evolved into the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
- September 14, 1882 – Winnifred Mason Huck born, investigative journalist who exposed abuses in the prison system; also a politician, the third woman to be elected to the U.S. Congress (Republican-Illinois, 1922-1923) in a special election to finish her father’s term after his sudden death.
- September 14, 1885 – María Grever born, Mexican composer, the first Mexican woman composer to achieve international recognition and acclaim; best known for the song "Cuando vuelva a tu lado" which became a hit with English lyrics as "What A Difference A Day Makes" in 1934. It was a hit again when Dinah Washington recorded it in 1959, and Washington won a Grammy Award that year for her performance of the song.
- September 14, 1897 – Margaret Rudkin born, founder of Pepperidge Farm Foods in 1937, known for its ‘Distinctive Cookies’ and crackers, which became a subsidiary of the Campbell Soup Company in 1961. She had begun baking because her son suffered from asthma and food allergies, and his doctor recommended her baked goods to his other patients.
- September 14, 1902 – Alice Tully born, American operatic soprano, music promoter and philanthropist; on the boards for the New York Philharmonic, the Metropolitan Opera, and the Juilliard School; recipient of the Handel Medallion.
- September 14, 1914 – Mae Boren Axton born, American songwriter, best known as co-writer with Tommy Durden of “Heartbreak Hotel.” Singer and songwriter Hoyt Axton was her son.
- September 14, 1917 – Joyce Chen born; chef, author, and teacher, emigrated to U.S. from China, and opened an authentic North Chinese cuisine restaurant; author of the Joyce Chen Cook Book, and host of TV’s “Joyce Chen Cooks.”
- September 14, 1921 – Constance Baker Motley born, American lawyer, judge, politician, and civil rights activist. She was the first woman attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. She wrote the original complaint in Brown v. Board of Education. She was the first African American woman to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court, the first African American woman to be appointed as a federal court judge, and recipient of the Presidential Citizens Medal, and the Spingarn Medal from the NAACP.
- September 14, 1930 – Romola Constantino born, Australian pianist; gave the first solo piano recital at the Sydney Opera House in 1973; she also worked as a music critic for the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper, and was a senior lecturer at the University of Sydney; appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1978.
- September 14, 1934 – Sarah Kofman born, French philosopher, author, and educator, wrote books on Nietzsche and Freud.
- September 14, 1934 – Kate Millet born, American author, artist, feminist, and activist, best known for her book Sexual Politics; advocate for women’s rights and mental health reform.
- September 14, 1941 – Joan Trumpauer Mulholland born, American civil rights activist, a white woman from Virginia whose activism as a student at Duke University was regarded as some form of mental illness, and she was taken for testing after her first arrest. She dropped out of Duke, and was one of the Freedom Riders on the Illinois Central train from New Orleans to Jackson, Mississippi, where they were arrested. They were incarcerated at Parchman Penitentiary, a prison with a reputation for violence, and the disappearance of several inmates. She and the other women were strip-searched and given vaginal exams. They were housed for two months on death row, in a segregated cell with 17 women and 3 feet of floor space per prisoner. She refused to pay bail and served more than her two month sentence because each day in prison took $3 off her fine of $200. She became the first white student at Tougaloo College in Jackson, and several attempts were made by local authorities to close down the school, but its charter predated the Jim Crow laws. She was one of the activists in the May 28, 1963, Woolworth lunch counter sit-in, where they were beaten and smeared with condiments. She was called a “white nigger” and dragged out of the store by her hair.
- September 14, 1955 – Geraldine Brooks born, Australian American journalist and novelist. Her 2005 novel March won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction; her work as a foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal inspired her first book, the non-fiction Nine Parts of Desire.
- September 14, 1962 – Bonnie Jo Campbell born, American novelist and short story writer; Once Upon a River and Mothers, Tell Your Daughters.
- September 14, 1964 – Helen Keller, Dr. Lena Edwards, Lynn Fontanne, Dr. Helen Taussig, and Leontyne Price receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
- September 14, 1965 – Emily Bell born, British journalist and academic; Professor of Professional Practice at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism who previously worked for The Guardian and The Observer.
- September 14, 1975 – Elizabeth Ann Seton canonized, first American-born saint, founded the first U.S. Order of the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph.
- September 14, 1981 – Katie Lee born, American cookbook author, food critic and novelist; known for her cookbook, The Comfort Table, and her novel, Groundswell.
- September 14, 2016 – Russian Hackers stole World Anti-Doping Agency files, targeting U.S. women athletes by posting their confidential information, including tennis stars Serena and Venus Williams, basketball player Elena Delle Donne, and gymnastics Olympian Simone Biles. Biles, who won four gold medals in Rio, tested positive for substances normally banned but had exemptions allowing her to use them to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Biles said ADHD is "nothing to be ashamed of" and that she "always followed the rules."
- September 14, 2019 – Max Stier, a former Yale University classmate of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, reportedly notified senators and the FBI during the justice's confirmation process in 2018 about a previously unreported sexual misconduct allegation involving the justice when he was a student at Yale. Stier reportedly said he saw Kavanaugh, a freshman at the time, at a drunken dorm party with his pants down when his friends then pushed his penis into a female student's hands. It is unclear if Stier knew the female student, or if she has verified the incident as described. The FBI reportedly did not investigate the allegation, and Stier has declined to speak about it publicly, but The New York Times reports it corroborated the story with two officials who have communicated with Stier. Kavanaugh faced multiple accusations of sexual misconduct during his confirmation process, most notably in testimony by Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, professor of psychology. Her testimony cost her dearly, since Blasey Ford has been unable assume teaching since coming forward with allegations of sexual assault against Kavanaugh. She has also received a number of death threats, and has continued to be harassed and threatened, so that she and her family have been forced to moved four times, and to hire private security for protection.
- September 14, 2020 – Nina Stibbe won the 2020 Comedy Women In Print prize for her novel Reasons to Be Cheerful about a teenage dental assistant. The £3,000 prize was established in 2018 by comedian and author Helen Lederer. Lederer was inspired by sexism accusations spearheaded by author Marian Keyes over the Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction because only three women had won the award in 18 years. Lederer declared that “more needs to be done to celebrate the achievements of women excelling in this field.” Keyes, who is now chair of the judges for the Comedy Women in Print prize, said Stibbe has “an instinctive comedic touch.” Stibbe was delighted to win the prize: “We [the shortlisted authors] were all aware that the prize comes from this cry of anguish from both Marian and Helen. So it feels great to win,” she said. “It’s not just the winning – you know that just by being longlisted that you’re being mulled over and discussed and read by [judges] Marian, Helen, Joanna Scanlan, Lolly Adefope – these really accomplished, amazing women who are like comedy gods to me.” Ironically, Stibbe also won the Wodehouse prize in 2019 for Reasons to Be Cheerful, becoming the fourth woman to win it. She gave the credit to Marian Keyes, “It’s thanks to Marian I won – she had the guts to say something about it. It wasn’t just that there’s an apparent gender bias in the shortlistees and winners, but also there was that year [2018] that the Wodehouse people said they weren’t even making a shortlist because the books weren’t funny in the right way. It did seem a bizarre thing that an outfit who purports to support and celebrate comedy writers would tell us all to f*ck off.” A male reviewer of Reasons to Be Cheerful called it a “pleasant but slight coming-of-age story” and its win of the Wodehouse Prize, “both perplexing and an unintentionally damning indictment of its competition.” Stibbe responded, “If he said ‘it wasn’t funny and I hated it’ I wouldn’t mind, but that book is not slight. It’s got lots of extremely important things in it, but maybe not for him. It’s not me saying, ‘Oh I got a bad review boohoo.’ It’s that I got a review which perfectly illustrates what’s wrong, that women’s concerns and the things that are particularly compelling, real, funny, painful and poignant for us can just be dismissed.”
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- September 15, 1505 – Mary of Austria born, Queen consort of Hungary and Bohemia as the wife of King Louis II (1515-1526) until his death. He died while retreating after the disastrous Battle of Mohács in which nearly the entire Hungarian army was killed by the much larger army of Suleiman I of the Ottoman Empire. Queen Mary governed Hungary as regent for her brother, Ferdinand I, from 1526 to 1527, and then was appointed by her brother, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, as Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands (1531-1555). She strived unsuccessfully for peace in the Netherlands, but Charles disregarded the problems she described in letters to him, and often ignored her warnings of trouble. She was forced to wage war against France in 1537, and to deal with the Revolt of Ghent between 1538 and 1540. Mary's appointment as Governor of the Netherlands was renewed in 1540, after the revolt in Ghent had been subdued. When Charles decided to abdicate as emperor in 1555, and leave the government of the Netherlands to his son Philip, Mary announced her resignation. Both Charles and Philip urged her to remain, but she refused, and her resignation was finally accepted. She retired to Turnhout (now part of Belgium) for a year, then moved to Castile to be near her recently widowed sister Eleanor. But Eleanor died in 1558, and Mary was considering resuming governorship of the Netherlands when Charles died in September the same year, and the news caused her to have two severe heart attacks. Mary died in October 1558. In her will, she asked that her heart-shaped medallion, once worn by her husband, be melted down and the gold distributed to the poor.
- September 15, 1853 – Antoinette Brown Blackwell ordained by the Congregational Church, the first U.S. woman ordained as a mainstream Protestant minister. She would leave the Congregational Church over issues of doctrine in 1857, but became a Unitarian in 1878, and was then recognized as a Unitarian minister.
- September 15, 1857 – Anna Winlock born, American astronomer, and one of “the Harvard computers” (1875-1904) who made her era’s most complete catalogue of stars near the north and south poles, and contributed substantial work to the Astronomishcen Gesellschaft. Also remembered for calculations and studies on asteroids 433 Eros and 475 Oclio. The women computers worked seven hours a day, six days a week, for 25¢ or 30¢ an hour, and the amount of pay wasn't raised for decades.
- September 15, 1868 – Lida Shaw King born, American classical scholar; professor of classical literature and archaeology at Vassar (1894-1897); dean of the Women’s College at Brown University (1905-1922); published in the American Journal of Archaeology.
- September 15, 1877 – Yente Serdatzky born in the Russian Empire Koveno Governorate (now Lithuania), Jewish-American Yiddish-language author of short stories, sketches and one-act plays.
- September 15, 1890 – Agatha Christie born, international best-selling British mystery novelist and playwright, known for Witness for the Prosecution, The Mousetrap, and creator of Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot.
- September 15, 1890 – Sonja Branting-Westerståhl born, Swedish lawyer and politician; one of the first women lawyers in Sweden, specializing in matrimonial law, after working in the Stockholm city legal aid office. She was very active in the 1930s in raising awareness of the dangers of Nazism and totalitarianism. Branting-Westerståhl was a social democrat, and served in the lower house of the Riksdag in 1948. She was also on the executive board of the Social Democrat Women’s Organisation (1936-1952).
- September 15, 1909 – Betty Neels born, member of the British Territorial Army Nursing Service during WWII, serving in France (1939-1942); beginning in 1969, she became a successful writer of over 13o romance novels until her death at age 91 in 2001.
- September 15, 1915 – Fawn M. Brodie born, American biographer and historian; noted for psychobiography; Thomas Jefferson: An Intimate History and No Man Knows My History, a biography of Joseph Smith.
- September 15, 1917 – Hilde Güden born, Austrian soprano noted for her performances in operas by Mozart and Richard Strauss, particularly Susanna in Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro).
- September 15, 1918 – Margot Loyola born, folk singer, musician and musical ethnographer and anthropologist, who published numerous books on folk music and customs of Chile and other South American countries.
- September 15, 1919 – Heda Margolius Kovály born, Czech writer and translator; she is noted for her memoir Under a Cruel Star – A Life in Prague 1941-1968.
- September 15, 1922 – Mary Soames born as Mary Spencer-Churchill; British author who wrote biographies of members of the Churchill family, and a memoir about her years growing up as the youngest child of Winston and Clementine Churchill.
- September 15, 1929 – Eva Burrows born, Australian Salvation Army officer; at 56, she became the organization’s youngest commander, the 13th General of the Salvation Army.
- September 15, 1936 – Sara J. Henderson born, Australian cattle station owner and author, noted for her 1993 autobiography From Strength to Strength.
- September 15, 1940 – Anne Moody born as Essie Mae, American author and civil rights worker, known for her acclaimed autobiography Coming of Age in Mississippi which won the Brotherhood Award from the National Council of Christians and Jews, and the Best Book of the Year Award from the National Library Association.
- September 15, 1942 – Ksenia Milicevic born in Bosnia-Herzegovina, French painter, architect and town planner. She has lived and worked in Argentina, Spain and Mexico, before settling in France. In 2012, she originated the International Children’s Painting Biennial, and started the Art Resilience movement in 2014.
- September 15, 1945 – Jessye Norman born, dramatic soprano, noted for performing Wagnerian repertoire.
- September 15, 1947 – Diane E. Levin born, American professor of education, author, an authority on how media effects young children; noted for Teaching Young Children in Violent Times: building a peaceable classroom, and So Sexy So Soon: the new sexualized childhood, and what parents can do to protect their kids.
- September 15, 1955 – Betty Robbins, first woman cantor officially appointed by a congregation, and led Rosh Hashanah services at Temple Avodah in Oceanside, New Jersey.
- September 15, 1955 – Željka Antunović born, Croatian centre-left Social Democratic politician and consultant; leader of the opposition as acting president of the Social Democratic Party between April and June 2007; first Croatian woman to serve as Minister of Defence (2002- 2003); member of the Croatian Parliament (1995-1999, and 2003-2013). Antunović founded a consulting company upon her retirement from politics.
- September 15, 1961 – Helen Margetts born, British political scientist specializing in digital era governance and politics; Director of the Oxford Internet Institute, and Professor of Internet and Society at the University of Oxford.
- September 15, 1963 – Four black girls are killed when the African American 16th Street Baptist Church is bombed in Birmingham, Alabama.
- September 15, 1975 – Martina Krupičková born, Czech post-impressionist painter.
- September 15, 1977 – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie born, Nigerian author of novels, short stories and nonfiction; her work includes the novels Purple Hibiscus, Half of a Yellow Sun, and Americanah, her short story collection The Thing Around Your Neck, and the book-length essay We Should All Be Feminists; awarded a MacArthur Genius Grant in 2008.
- September 15, 1992 – Frances Cannon born, Australian queer author and multidisciplinary artist, working primarily with watercolour, gouache, and ink.
- September 15, 2019 – According to a Philadelphia Inquirer poll, over 66% of respondents said the Supreme Court should not overturn Roe v. Wade, while 33% said Roe v. Wade should be overturned. Anti-choice advocates insisted for years that the abortion restrictions they were pushing through Republican-dominated state legislatures were to protect patients. In 2016, the Supreme Court analyzed these claims in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt. The verdict? The justices recognized the patient-safety claims for these restrictions were bogus and ruled them unconstitutional. The Hellerstedt loss was a big blow to anti-choicers because it exposed their strategy as based on fraud. Forty-six years after Roe, sophisticated global public health data underscores the fact that criminalizing abortion doesn’t end abortion, it only ends safe, legal abortion for women who can’t afford travel to where it is legal. Currently, approximately 68,000 women die of unsafe abortions annually, making it one of the leading causes of global maternal mortality (13%). But since the 2016 U.S. election, there are at least 20 cases specifically designed to overturn Roe are wending their way through the federal courts toward the conservative-dominated Supreme Court.
- September 15, 2020 – The city of Louisville, Kentucky, reached a settlement of $12 million with the family of Breonna Taylor in a civil suit stemming from the fatal shooting by police of the 26-year-old woman inside her apartment in March 2020. Louisville Mayor Greg Fisher addressed Breonna Taylor’s mother, Tamika Palmer, at the press conference announcing the settlement, “I cannot begin to imagine Ms Palmer’s pain, and I am deeply, deeply sorry for Breonna’s death.” Tamika Palmer stated, “As significant as today is, it’s only the beginning of getting full justice for Breonna. We must not lose focus on what the real drive is and with that being said, it’s time to move forward with the criminal charges because she deserves that and much more.” Benjamin Crump, an attorney for Taylor’s family, declared, “We won’t let Breonna Taylor’s life be swept under the rug.” He said the $12 million agreement is the largest such settlement given out for a black woman killed by police. Separately, a grand jury was asked to weigh charges in a potential criminal case against three officers involved in the shooting. Local prosecutors came in for heavy criticism for the long delay. Ultimately, only one former Louisville police officer was charged in connection with the shooting, and his trial has been postponed until February 2022 because of a backlog of delayed trials caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
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