Eliza Lucas Pinckney (1722 - 1793) - Women's History
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When her father suggested she look at more crops the plantations could grow, her botany knowledge gave her ideas.
Abby Brown
Mar 19, 2017
Margaret Knight (1838 - 1914) - Women's History
Almost all women have to invent something during some point in their lives. Most of those inventions are forgotten, or if they continue to
Abby Brown
Mar 16, 2017
Abigail Scott Duniway (1834 - 1915) - Women's History
Abigail Scott Duniway's work gave women the right to vote, and hope that in the future women may eventually be valued equal to a man in job
Abby Brown
Mar 15, 2017
Virginia Dare (1587 - ?) - Women's History
What happened to Virginia? The pioneering first European North American infant? No one really knows.
Abby Brown
Mar 14, 2017
Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811 - 1896) - Women's History
It is relevant today, as any social ill can be recognized as tearing both the individual, and the family, apart. That river.
Abby Brown
Mar 13, 2017
Rachel Carson (1907 - 1964) - Women's History
Her interests concerned the both the livelihood of the fisherman, as well as conserving the fish population for future generations.
Abby Brown
Mar 12, 2017
Margaret Bourke-White (1904 - 1971 - Women's History
It was also a life of firsts. Both as a woman, and in some cases, a photographer.
Abby Brown
Mar 10, 2017
Laura Dewey Bridgeman (1829 - 1889) - Women's History
Thanks to Laura Dewey Bridgeman, some people began to recognize that deafblind could be active members of society.
Abby Brown
Mar 9, 2017
Mary McLeod Bethune (1875 - 1955) - Women's History
She learned everything she could. At the time, like many young women, she balanced art, music, and dance, with the available book learning
Abby Brown
Mar 8, 2017
Clara Barton (1821 - 1921) - Women's History
Teaching wasn't enough. She sought to work for the federal government, though women had not been allowed to before that time.
Abby Brown
Mar 7, 2017
Florence Ellinwood Allen (1884 - 1966) - Women's History
Her judgeship was not her last. She continued onward through the legal system, including being the first female judge on the Ohio State Sup
Abby Brown
Mar 6, 2017
Hannah Adams (1755-1831) - Women's History
Her works, and court cases against male authors who wanted to write on the same topic, led to the beginnings of copyright law in the US. How
Abby Brown
Mar 3, 2017
Louisa Adams (1775 - 1852) - Women's History
As a daughter-in-law to Abigail Adams, she began to study and regard women's rights as innate. She wanted to do many things with her life,
Abby Brown
Mar 2, 2017
Abigail Adams (1744 - 1818) - Women's History
Abigail Adams (1744 - 1818) tried to make woman equal to men from day one in the United States. She fought against her husband, future sec
Abby Brown
Mar 1, 2017
Women's History Month
It isn't uncommon for employers to hire a bunch of people, and then choose who they want to work, not based on skill, or ability, rather on
Abby Brown
Feb 18, 2017
Science
Every breath, every movement, every cell growth and regeneration is part of science.
Abby Brown
Feb 17, 2017
PTSD
It puts the sufferer right back into that time, situation, and circumstances, as if no time had passed. If the precipitating event occurred
Abby Brown
Feb 16, 2017
Stockholm Syndrome
Someone will be talking, and they will go into a trance-like state, say something nonsensical, or self-abusing, and then shake their head an
Abby Brown
Feb 14, 2017
Science And Medical
Pharmacy companies are the only ones who have too much self-regulation. They run tiny sample sizes, ignore symptoms, and don't test
Abby Brown
Feb 13, 2017
LandFills
Landfills are the bane of the last 120 years.
Before then, our ancestors used and re-used items they created until they no longer useful.
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