Victor E. Tiger
Fort Hays State University
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Diversity Affairs Feature

Women's History Month

Women's Suffrage 1912March 8, 1911, was the first celebrated International Women's Day in Europe. In many European nations, as well as in the United States, women's rights was a political hot topic. Woman suffrage — winning the vote — was a priority of many women's organizations. Women (and men) wrote books on the contributions of women to history.

But with the economic depression of the 1930s which hit on both sides of the Atlantic, and then World War II, women's rights went out of fashion, although there were certainly accomplishments being made by women in every field, such as those of Jane Addams in social reform.  We are also aware of the incredible effort put forth by women during World War II to keep the U.S. economy afloat.

Jane AddamsIn the 1950s and 1960s, after Betty Friedan pointed to the "problem that has no name" — the boredom and isolation of the middle-class housewife who often gave up intellectual and professional aspirations — the women's movement began to revive. With "women's liberation" in the 1960s, interest in women's issues and women's history blossomed.

World War II posterBy the 1970s, there was a growing sense by many women that "history" as taught in school — and especially in grade school and high school — was incomplete with attending to "her story" as well. In the United States, calls for inclusion of black Americans and Native Americans helped some women realize that women were invisible in most history courses. And so in the 1970s many universities began to include the fields of women's history and the broader field of women's studies.

In 1981, the United States Congress passed a resolution establishing National Women's History Week. Co-sponsors of the resolution, demonstrating bipartisan support, were Senator Orrin Hatch, a Republican from Utah, and Representative Barbara Mikulski, a Democrat from Maryland.  This encouraged even wider participation in Women's History Week. Schools focused for that week on special projects and exhibitions honoring women in history. Organizations sponsored talks on women's history. The National Women's History Project began distributing materials specifically designed to support Women's History Week, as well as materials to enhance the teaching of history through the year, to include notable women and women's experience.

Betty FriedenIn 1987, at the request of the National Women's History Project, Congress expanded the week to a month, and the U.S. Congress has issued a resolution every year since then, with wide support, for Women's History Month. Each year, the U.S. President issues a proclamation of Women's History Month.

To further extend the inclusion of women's history in the history curriculum (and in everyday consciousness of history), the President's Commission on the Celebration of Women in History in America met through the 1990s. One result has been the effort towards establishing a National Museum of Women's History for the Washington, DC, area, where it would join other museums such as the American History Museum.

Women's History Month posterThe purpose of Women's History Month is to increase consciousness and knowledge of women's history: to take one month of the year to remember the contributions of notable and ordinary women, in hopes that the day will soon come when it's impossible to teach or learn history without remembering these contributions.

To honor this special month, we encourage you to learn more about one important aspect of the history of all people. Women's history isn't just for women, although many women find that studying women's history helps them realize that women's place is everywhere.

References

Lewis, J. J. (2005). Women's' History Month.  Retrieved February 24, 2007 from http://womenshistory.about.com/od/womenshistorymonth/a/whm_history.htm

Web sites
Notable Kansas Women - http://www.kshs.org/people/women.htm

Articles, by the staff of the Kansas State Historical Society, written for the Women of History section published in Hers Kansas, a monthly magazine of the Topeka Capital Journal, 2003-2004.
http://www.kshs.org/people/hers_kansas/index.htm

Biographies of American Women
http://womenshistory.about.com/library/bio/blbio_list_american.htm

Women and WWII
http://www.teacheroz.com/WWIIHomefront.htm