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Erin Blakemore
Recent Articles
Buying Your Dad a Gift Is Why Father's Day Exists
Buying a necktie for your dad is a stereotypical way to celebrate Father's Day, but it's in keeping with the holiday's history
By Erin Blakemore
June 15, 2017
How the Daughter of a Slave Became the First African-American Woman to Earn a Bachelor’s Degree
She graduated from Oberlin 155 years ago
By Erin Blakemore
May 23, 2017
The Woman Who Helped Stop an Early Attempt on Abraham Lincoln's Life
Her name was Kate Warne
By Erin Blakemore
March 3, 2017
This Little-Known Abolitionist Dared to Speak in Public Against Slavery
Maria Stewart was one of her era’s most effective anti-slavery voices, breaking boundaries for women even as she advocated for an end to a brutal institution
By Erin Blakemore
January 24, 2017
How the First American Woman to Be a Political Journalist Got Her Start
In the 19th century, embittered and politicized by her struggle for property of her own, she began to build up her writing career
By Erin Blakemore
January 12, 2017
The Teenage Girl Who Circled the Globe in a Model T
Her name was Aloha Wanderwell, and she became famous as the most well-traveled girl in the world
By Erin Blakemore
December 15, 2016
The Surprising Story of America’s Most Famous Female Stagecoach Robber
Pearl Hart, who participated in a turn-of-the-century stagecoach robbery, turned her life of crime into national fame
By Erin Blakemore
November 21, 2016
The Songwriter Who Broke Barriers in the 1950s
At the time, women songwriters were almost unheard of
By Erin Blakemore
September 12, 2016
The Doctor Who Saved Countless Newborn Babies
Because she was a woman, she was discouraged from becoming a surgeon
By Erin Blakemore
August 29, 2016
This Woman May Have Helped Win the Union Win the Civil War
She served as an adviser to Abraham Lincoln
By Erin Blakemore
June 27, 2016
Here’s What People Once Said About How a Woman Would Never Be the Democratic Nominee
Shirley Chisholm ran in 1972, and exposed the degree to which many Americans believed a woman would never win a major-party nomination
By Erin Blakemore
June 7, 2016
The Woman Who Spied on Confederates In Jefferson Davis’ Own Home
Born a slave, Mary Richards Bowser returned to the South during the Civil War to spy on Confederate leaders
By Erin Blakemore
May 31, 2016
The Officer Who Opened the U.S. Navy for Asian-American Women
Cuddy recalled that a white male pilot once disobeyed her orders. “Down here,” she told him, “you will shoot when I tell you to shoot.”
By Erin Blakemore
May 3, 2016
How Boston Helped Invent the Modern Marathon
Today, marathons are a popular sporting event held all over the world—thanks, in large part, to Boston
By Erin Blakemore
April 18, 2016
How a Woman Won the Medal of Honor 150 Years Before She Could Serve in Combat
For Women's History Month, meet the first female recipient of that national honor
By Erin Blakemore
March 1, 2016
The Woman Who Schooled the Civil Rights Movement
Throughout her life, she fought for the right to teach
By Erin Blakemore
February 16, 2016
The Surprising Fear That Created the USO
The United Service Organizations was incorporated 75 years ago, on Feb. 4, 1941
By Erin Blakemore
February 4, 2016
This Forgotten Female Screenwriter Helped Give Hollywood Its Voice
Frances Marion was one of early Hollywood's most influential writers
By Erin Blakemore
January 21, 2016
These Iconic Figures of American History Were All Immigrants
Eight quintessentially American figures who started their lives somewhere else
By Erin Blakemore
November 12, 2015
The Real Women's Suffrage Milestone That Just Turned 100
Remembering the mammoth women’s suffrage parade of October 1915
By Erin Blakemore
October 23, 2015
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