Great Women In History

Henrietta Lacks (1920-1951)
Henrietta Lacks was a black woman born in the south, a descendant of a white plantation owner in Virginia. After having five children, Lacks was sent to Johns Hopkins Hospital, the only hospital in the area that treated blacks, with pain in her abdomen. She was diagnosed with cervical cancer and during her treatment, two samples were taken without her consent. They were given to a cancer researcher at Johns Hopkins and the cells became known as the HeLa immortal cell line, which is still used today in cancer research.

Her cells have led to major scientific discoveries regarding the growth of cancer cells and the effects of drugs on the human body and have also contributed to the development of the polio vaccine. Lacks’ story has brought into question the ethics of patient privacy and has exposed the mistreatment of people of color in healthcare.

When she died of cancer at age 31, she was buried in an unmarked grave. It took until 2010 for a headstone to be donated for Lacks, though her exact resting place is unknown.

Lacks’ headstone is etched with an epitaph written by her grandchildren:
“In loving memory of a phenomenal woman,
wife and mother who touched the lives of many.
Here lies Henrietta Lacks (HeLa). Her immortal
cells will continue to help mankind forever.
Eternal Love and Admiration, From Your Family”
 
Malala Yousafzai (Born1997)

As a young girl of 11, the Pakistani student wrote an anonymous diary about what life was like under the rule of an extreme group called the Taliban in north-west Pakistan.

In the diary, she talked about how she wanted to stay in education and about how girls should be able to go to school. The Taliban wanted to ban girls' education. Lots of people read the diary all over the world and she became well-known for fighting for her right to an education.

But the Taliban didn't like this. Because of what she said in her diary, in October 2012, she was shot by their soldiers - but she survived the attack.

The world was appalled by what happened to her and Malala quickly won the support of millions more people.

At 14, she became the youngest person ever to win the Nobel Peace Prize. When she received it, she joked that she was probably the first winner who still fought with her younger brothers!

She has gone on to write books, graduate from university and continues to campaign for girls' rights all over the world and inspire many generations.
 
Okay... This is a long one, sorry. Please understand how important it is and hope all understand.

Mildred Fish-Harnack (September 16, 1902 – February 16, 1943)

With the start of World War II, and even before to it, Resistance groups began emerging throughout Europe. Driven by a resolve to champion freedom and dismantle the tyrannical regimes of the Axis powers, their members frequently put their lives on the line. The deeds carried out by these groups were truly heroic, and among the most remarkable underground operatives who endangered her own safety was Mildred Fish-Harnack, an American living in Germany.

Mildred Fish-Harnack was born on September 16, 1902, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Raised in what many would consider a modest household that struggled with money problems, she was influenced by her mother, Georgina, a staunch supporter of the women's suffrage movement. A self-taught stenographer and typist, the elder Fish instilled in her daughter not just a sense of justice, but a passion for literature.

Fish-Harnack stoked her love for English at West Division High School, before attending George Washington University, followed by the University of Wisconsin. Throughout her post-secondary studies, she delved into the works of Walt Whitman and Ralph Waldo Emerson, who inspired the direction in which she took her own writing. It was during this time that she further became an advocate for social justice.

In 1926, Mildred Fish wed German economist Arvid Harnack. They had crossed paths while she was at the University of Wisconsin, and soon after, she followed her new husband back to Germany where he continued his studies. Fish-Harnack also advanced her academic career, enrolling at the universities of Jena and Giessen.

By the time Fish-Harnack moved to Germany, the country was increasingly influenced by the National Socialist German Workers' Party. She observed its ascent up close, with many of her professors and peers openly supporting the regime.

Nevertheless, Fish-Harnack remained dedicated to her studies, eventually becoming an assistant lecturer at the University of Berlin. Specializing in English and American literature, she discussed the works of notable authors like Theodore Dreiser and Thomas Hardy. Her passion made her a favorite among her students.

Mildred Fish-Harnack's career as an author flourished upon her arrival in Germany. She wrote essays about American literature, and her poignant writing style and analysis garnered praise. She was so talented, in fact, that some even compared her to famed American novelist Thomas Wolfe.

Fish-Harnack's work began being published in German literary magazines as she became more respected, despite her subtly using her notoriety to critique Germany's movement toward a dictatorship. She also became interested in the Soviet Union, as, unlike in the United States, women were afforded more rights. With Arvid, Fish-Harnack began hosting night meetings to discuss the USSR's economy, relaying insights gleamed from these gatherings to her students.

Her opinions about the regime ultimately led to Fish-Harnack losing her job as a lecturer at the University of Berlin. It was just a few years after this that she and her husband became involved in what was known as the "Red Orchestra."

The Red Orchestra was an underground Resistance group that emerged in Germany during the 1930s. With a membership made up of government officials, artists and intellectuals, it aimed to undermine the increasingly-oppressive regime through espionage and propaganda leaflets. It also helped Jewish individuals escape persecution.

Similar to other Resistance groups that operated throughout Europe during the Second World War, the Red Orchestra consisted of a network of cells. The vastness of the group meant that it eventually became infiltrated by enemy agents, but this didn't stop members from continuing their duties, in the hopes of freeing Germany from the Führer's grasp.

Mildred and Arvid Fish-Harnack were active in the Red Orchestra, with their fluency in English and German being a particular asset, as this allowed the group to communicate with Allied intelligence agencies. They participated in typical underground activities, such as distributing leaflets, and even connected with Lt. Harro Schulze-Boysen, a left-wing publicist and Luftwaffe officer who secretly documented German military efforts and forwarded them to the Soviets.

Among the couple's most notable efforts with the Red Orchestra involved them doing the same thing, filtering German military plans to the Red Army, which, if caught, would have undoubtedly led to their immediate executions. There's also evidence Fish-Harnack aided the Red Orchestra's efforts to help Jews flee Germany. Along with sheltering them, she secured false documents and safe passage out of the country.

Mildred and Arvid Fish-Harnack's work with the Red Orchestra led the Gestapo to arrest the pair on September 7, 1942, while vacationing on the Baltic Sea. How did the officers know they were involved? The Funkabwehr, which had decrypted messages and intercepted radio transmissions detailing the extent of their espionage.

While initially sentenced to six years imprisonment, the Führer intervened and ordered a retrial, upset about what he viewed as a lenient sentence. The second trial saw Mildred handed a death sentence, which was carried out by guillotine at Berlin's Plötzensee Prison on February 16, 1943.

According to reports, her last words were, "Und ich habe Deutschland auch so geliebt," which translates to, "And I, too, so loved Germany." Despite everything she'd faced and the oppression within the country, she still loved Germany and had hoped to free its citizens from tyranny.

Despite newspapers learning about Mildred Fish-Harnack's death upon the conclusion of World War II, the US government made a concerted effort to withhold information from the public, due to an investigation into whether her execution could be classified as a war crime. While they applauded her efforts, the case was ultimately closed, given she had been put on trial for her espionage work, making her prosecution "legally justifiable."

Fish-Harnack's legacy of courage and resistance continues to inspire over 80 years after her death, with her life memorialized in many ways. In her home state of Wisconsin, schools observe Mildred Fish-Harnack Day, while a street in Berlin's Friedrichshain neighborhood is named for her.
 
Ada Lovelace (Byron) Daughter of the famus poet Lord Byron, and English mathematician, Born 1815, died 1852. worked wirh Charles Babbage, on early ideas for computer programes like The Analytical Engine, but missed out on proper recognition until the 1950's.


Charlotte Brontë - mostly because Jane Eyre is an awesome book, the world her and her sisters, and brothe created in glass town is really interesting. - Born 1816 - died 1855. Jane Eyre was published in 1847, under the name Bell, and then again in 1848 under her real name, and still a famous book today.
 
Marie Tharp (July 30, 1920 – August 23, 2006) was an American geologist and oceanographic cartographer. In the 1950s, she collaborated with geologist Bruce-Heezen to produce the first scientific map of the Atlantic Ocean floor. Her cartography revealed a more detailed topography and multi-dimensional geographical landscape of the ocean bottom.

Tharp's discovery of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge caused a paradigm shift in earth science that led to the acceptance of the theories of plate tectonics and continental drift.
 
Billy Lee Tipton (December 29, 1914 – January 21, 1989) was a famous American jazz musician, bandleader, and talent broker. Tipton grew up in Kansas City, Missouri where he was raised by an aunt after his parents divorced when he was four. As a high school student, Tipton went by the nickname "Tippy" and became interested in music (especially jazz), playing piano and saxophone. Tipton wanted to join the school band at Southwest High School but was not allowed. He returned to Oklahoma for his final year of high school and joined the school band at Connors State College High School.
After releasing two successful albums, in 1958 the Billy Tipton Trio was offered a position as house band at the Holiday Hotel casino in Reno, Nevada, as well as opening for fellow musician Liberace. Tops Records also invited the trio to record four more albums. Tipton declined both offers, choosing instead to move to Spokane, Washington, where he worked as a talent broker and the trio performed weekly. In the late 1970s, worsening arthritis forced Tipton to retire from music.
Through the years, Tipton was never legally married, but five women called themselves Mrs. Tipton during his life. It was during a relationship in 1954 with a woman named Maryann, he had become involved with nightclub dancer Kathleen "Kitty" Kelly. Tipton and Kelly settled down together in 1961. They adopted three sons, John, Scott, and William; the adoptions were not legally recognized. After they separated around 1977, Tipton resumed a relationship with Maryann. Maryann reportedly discovered Tipton's birth certificate and asked Tipton about it once, but was given no reply other than a "terrible look".
It was after Billy Lee Tipton's death the truth was learned. The birth certificate found showed his real name was Dorothy Lucille Tipton and the autopsy confirmed that, yes, Billy was a woman.
In those times, it was an extreme rarity for a female to be allowed to perform in school bands but most certainly not as a professional musician. Tipton paved the way for many female musicians that we know today and should be remembered.
 
I think we should acknowledge every single girl that has ever stepped forward to become a mod or admin, simply to help our rooms with girls of the age 13+ to keep us safe and protected.
These girls go out of their way and take time out of their personal lives, away from whomever they may have in their lives, (even pets), just to be there for us girls. Protecting us from the creeps, weirdos, pervs and misogynists that insist on trying to ruin our good time.
Thank you Girls in All rooms. You are awesome.
Spread the Laughter! 🤣
 
Diane Fossey, born January 16, 1932 – c. December 26, 1985
Diane Fossey was an American primatologist and conservationist known for undertaking an extensive study of mountain gorilla groups from 1966 until her murder in 1985.
She studied them daily in the mountain forests of Rwanda, initially encouraged to work there by paleoanthropologist Louis Leakey. Gorillas in the Mist, a book published two years before her death, is Fossey's account of her scientific study of the gorillas at Karisoke Research Center and prior career.
Fosse made discoveries about gorillas including how females transfer from group to group over the decades, gorilla vocalization, hierarchies, and social relationships among groups, rare infanticide, gorilla diet, and how gorillas recycle nutrients.
Fossey spent 20 years in Rwanda, where she supported conservation efforts, strongly opposed poaching and tourism in wildlife habitats, and made more people acknowledge the sapience of gorillas. Following the killing of a gorilla and subsequent tensions, she was murdered in her cabin at a remote camp in Rwanda in December 1985.
It was common for poachers to take gorillas heads and hands as trophies for those that would use them for ash trays and, whatever. When Fossey's body was found, her head and hands were missing. This was believed to be a message for outsiders to stay out...
Live on Diane... We miss you.
 
Widely considered the first female astronomer in ancient Greece Aglaonice focused her studies on the moon's cyclical patterns. Her lunar eclipse predictions were so accurate that many claimed she was a sorceress who had the power to hide the moon and make it reappear at her whim. Due to her so-called "magical" reputation, Aglaonice became known as the leader of group of female astronomers called the "Witches of Thessaly." There is a crater on Venus named after her that measures 38.9 miles in diameter.
 
Rachel Balkovec made history in 2022 when she was named the first woman to manage an affiliate of an MLB team. Before the New York Yankees hired her to lead its Low-A Tampa Tarpons, she worked as the team’s minor league hitting coach.
 
Rachel Balkovec made history in 2022 when she was named the first woman to manage an affiliate of an MLB team. Before the New York Yankees hired her to lead its Low-A Tampa Tarpons, she worked as the team’s minor league hitting coach.
and we women run across the sun. hold on don't be scared when it gets dark if tomorrow never comes we will dance until we're gone then we run across the sun

Marvel Studios Smile GIF by Disney+
 
They call me "Nelly Bly" best compliment ever,cause I exposed alot of corrupted people like she did. She exposed corruption/corrupted staff at a women's lunatic asylum back in the 1800s, the only one who had guts.

She's a pioneer anddd a incredible woman who was impartial. She did what I would definitely do.!
 
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