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Mary Ann Shadd Cary, Famous Abolitionist and Pioneering Publisher

Mary Ann Shadd Cary was a teacher, publisher, lawyer, and civil rights activist who published a weekly newspaper called The Provincial Freeman. The post Mary Ann Shadd Cary, Famous Abolitionist and...

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Lady Mary Montagu, Brilliant Autodidact Aristocrat

Lady Mary Montagu was an 18th century noblewoman whose contributions to the fields of travel writing and medicine were nearly forgotten due to her sex. The post Lady Mary Montagu, Brilliant Autodidact...

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Fannie Farmer, the mother of level measurements

Fannie Farmer was a teacher and the author of the innovative Boston Cooking-School Cookbook, the first cookbook to use strict standardized measurements. The post Fannie Farmer, the mother of level...

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Drowned in History: Malay’s Earliest Known Feminist Writer

Most people don’t know the existence of Raja Aisyah Sulaiman, yet if people were prompted with the question of writers that preached feminism in their works, a daring Southeast Asian woman would most...

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Constance Fenimore Woolson, Successful American Novelist

The author Constance Fenimore Woolson (1840-1894), who wrote five novels for adults and dozens of stories, was widely considered during her lifetime one of the most important American fiction writers...

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Julia Ward Howe: Abolitionist, Social Activist, Poet

In November 1861, while she was staying at Willard’s Hotel in embattled Washington, DC, Julia Ward Howe wrote the lyrics to the most famous patriotic anthem of the Civil War. “It would be impossible...

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Women of the California Gold Rush

In the mid-19th century, women had very few rights. But the circumstances of the California Gold Rush created unique opportunities for women, enabling many to make their fortune—and not just by...

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Simone de Beauvoir: Her Life and Significance

French writer and philosopher Simone de Beauvoir is most famous for her 1949 book The Second Sex. She had a significant impact on the development of modern feminist theory, though she never considered...

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5 Famous Women Atheists In History

Throughout history, women have challenged societal norms and religious doctrines. This list highlights some influential women throughout the centuries who defied expectations and openly identified as...

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4 Famous Black Women Of the Harlem Renaissance

Around the 1920s in Harlem, New York, a new movement celebrating African American art and culture thrived. The “New Negro Movement,” as it was called at the time, gathered together artists, poets,...

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