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Rosa Parks - Blog Posts

4 years ago

To mark the end of Women’s History Month, here are 10 women who changed the world and inspired thousands.

Florence Nightingale, 1820 - 1910

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Florence Nightingale trained nurses and organized medical care for soldiers during the Crimean War (1853 to 1856) between the Ottoman and Russian Empires. Considered to be the founder of modern nursing.

Clara Barton, 1821 - 1912

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Clara Barton served as a nurse during the American Civil War, providing self taught nursing care, as she did not possess any formal medical training. Went on to found the American Red Cross in 1881.

Marie Curie, 1867 - 1934

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Marie Curie was a French-Polish physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research in the field of radioactivity, along with her husband Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel. First woman to win a Nobel prize, and only person to win a Nobel prize to two scientific fields (physics and chemistry). Also first woman to serve as a professor at the University of Paris in France.

Rosa Parks, 1913 - 2005

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Rosa Parks was an activist during the American Civil Rights Movement. In 1955, she was arrested for refusing to vacate her bus seat for a white man in Montgomery, Alabama. This incident helped inspire the Montgomery Bus Boycott that led to the desegregation of public buses in the State of Alabama in 1956.

Amelia Earhart, 1897 - disappeared 1937, declared dead 1939

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Amelia Earhart was a pilot who was the first female aviator to fly solo over the Atlantic Ocean. Instrumental in the formation of the Ninety-Nines, a female pilots organization. Disappeared while flying over the Pacific Ocean near Howland Island in 1937, along with her navigator Fred Noonan.

Eleanor Roosevelt, 1884 - 1962

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Eleanor Roosevelt was the First Lady of the United States as wife of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt from 1933 to 1945. Advocated for expanded roles of women in the work place and supported the civil rights of Black and Asian Americans. Served as the first chair of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and oversaw the creation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948.

Aretha Franklin, 1942 - 2018

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Aretha Franklin was a singer and songwriter best known for being the “Queen of Soul”. She started out singing in her church choir as a child, and signed with Columbia Records in 1960 and Atlantic Records in 1966. Sang hit songs that include “Respect”, “Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)”, “Think”, and “I Say a Little Prayer”.

Harriet Tubman, 1822 - 1913

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Harriet Tubman was an abolitionist and escaped slave who led approximately 70 slaves to freedom along the Underground Railroad. Served as a Union spy during the civil war and supported women’s suffrage after the war. Serves as a symbol for freedom and courage.

Katherine Johnson, 1918 - 2020

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Katherine Johnson was a mathematician whose calculations in orbital mechanics working at NASA were critical in the success in the first American crewed spaceflights. Pioneered the use of computers to perform the tasks. One of the first few black women to work as a NASA scientist. Awarded the Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2015.

Susan B. Anthony, 1820 - 1906

To Mark The End Of Women’s History Month, Here Are 10 Women Who Changed The World And Inspired Thousands.

Susan B. Anthony was a social reformer and women’s rights activist who was pivotal in the Women’s Suffrage Movement. Co-founded the National Woman Suffrage Association with Elizabeth Cady Staton in 1869, which merged with the American Woman Suffrage Association in 1890 to form the National American Women Suffrage Association, in which Anthony served as a dominant figure. Presented to Congress an amendment that allowed women to vote. The 19th amendment, nicknamed the “Susan B. Anthony Amendment” was passed in 1920, allowing women the right to vote.


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7 years ago

18,262 days later

Today has been a sad week, my heart has just had a constant ache the past few days, it hurts to the point where I can physically feel it pulling me down, holding me back. I am sad, for a feeling that nothing much has happened in the past 50 years, and that we have become more complacent with hatred and prejudice, tolerant and desensitized to injustice

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We have seen it all, and are surprised by nothing. You can say you refuse to get used to it or accept it, but eventually, you will as that’s how our brains work. We see something shocking enough, it becomes something we expect and it becomes normal, no matter how terrible it is. It is not a choice. And when that day comes when we all accept, we will officially not be able to create change

18,262 Days Later

Martin Luther King Jr. is known as an advocate for civil rights to bring equality to African Americans, but he was a civil rights advocate for all; regardless of race, gender or economic status he believed that everyone should be given the tools they needed to reach their full potential, especially if they worked for it. While progress continued, the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. greatly impacted the rights of all US citizens and unfortunately at 50 years later, I do not think we have recovered. We are still divided by race, religion, gender, poverty, sexual orientation and so many others. We are not a people of a country but individuals of ourselves, disconnected 

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I have become desensitised by gun violence, it saddens me but it doesn't shock me and that sadness doesn’t last. Like the news stations, and in the offices we hear about it and then move onto traffic, we scroll past it on Twitter, we hear it and move on. It has become a part of my everyday life. The similarities today from 50 years ago of those who are still fighting for equality, for our lives, do not give me hope but dread, for when we become desensitised by injustice to others I know our chance for equality and true prosperity for all will be over. 

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Let me explain, I knew who Etan Petz is, but I didn’t know who Emmett Till was

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6 years ago
This Show Has Grown So Much

this show has grown so much


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