League of Living Herstorians

League of Living Herstorians The League of Living Herstorians tell the story of women thru the ages dressed in reproduction and original period clothing to educate and inspire

Today marks the 74th Anniversary of the Women's Armed Services Integration Act. Currently, women make up 23% of the  . T...
06/12/2022

Today marks the 74th Anniversary of the Women's Armed Services Integration Act. Currently, women make up 23% of the . Their contributions, dedication & sacrifices for our military have left an immeasurable impact and must not be understated.

On June 6, 1942, Adeline Gray made the first jump by a human with a nylon parachute at Brainard Field in Hartford. Her j...
06/06/2022

On June 6, 1942, Adeline Gray made the first jump by a human with a nylon parachute at Brainard Field in Hartford. Her jump, performed before a group of Army officials, put the world’s first nylon parachute to the test. The Pioneer Parachute Company of Manchester fabricated the new nylon material, which was developed as an alternative to silk. Working in concert with the Cheney Brothers Company of Manchester and the DuPont Company, Pioneer Parachute developed a material that combined “compactness with lightness, resiliency and strength.”

Gray, who was 24 years old at the time of the jump, was from Oxford and worked as a licensed parachute rigger and packer at the Pioneer Parachute Company. She began jumping at age 19 and at the time of the nylon “jump test” had completed 32 jumps and was the only licensed female parachute jumper in Connecticut.

Elizabeth L. Gardner, age 22, WASP pilot, at the controls of a B-26 Marauder, during World War II.  One of the first WAS...
02/17/2022

Elizabeth L. Gardner, age 22, WASP pilot, at the controls of a B-26 Marauder, during World War II. One of the first WASPs, she was a trained test and instructor pilot. After the War, she had a long career in aviation, both as a commercial pilot and as a much more dangerous test pilot. Part of her work was testing parachutes for aircraft (a parachute for the whole aircraft, not just the pilot). On both of the tests she did for this equipment, the aircraft parachute failed, forcing her to bail out. She died in 2011, at the age of 90.

During World War II, the Women’s Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) (the follow-on organization to the earlier Women’s Flying Training Detachment (WFTD) and the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron (WAFS)), towed aerial targets, ferried aircraft, and performed test flights, freeing men for combat duty. Just over 1,000 of these pioneering women flew over 60 million miles in all types of military aircraft. Thirty-eight of these women lost their lives in service to their country, and one, Gertrude Tompkins, disappeared while on a ferry mission, her fate still unknown.

Although performing a military mission, the WASPs were seen as civilians — they did not gain status as US Veterans until 1977.

Biddy Bridget Mason (1815-1891) She was born into slavery and "given" as a wedding gift to a Mormon couple in Mississipp...
02/06/2022

Biddy Bridget Mason (1815-1891)

She was born into slavery and "given" as a wedding gift to a Mormon couple in Mississippi named Robert and Rebecca Smith. In 1847 at age 32, Biddy Mason was forced to walk from Mississippi to Utah tending to the cattle behind her master’s 300-wagon caravan. She "walked" from Mississippi to Utah. That's 1, 618.9 miles!

After four years in Salt Lake City, Smith took the group to a new Mormon settlement in San Bernardino, California in search of gold. Biddy Mason soon discovered that the California State Constitution made slavery illegal, and that her master's had a plan to move them all to Texas to avoid freeing them.

With the help of some freed Blacks she had befriended, she and the other Slaves attempted to run away to Los Angeles, but they were intercepted by Smith and brought back. However, when he tried to leave the state with his family and Slaves, a local posse prevented them from leaving.

Biddy had Robert Smith brought into court on a writ of habeas corpus. She, her daughters, and the ten other Slaves were held in jail for their own safety to protect them from an angry and violent pro-slavery mob until the Judge heard the case and granted their freedom.

Now free, Mason and her three daughters moved to Los Angeles where they worked and saved enough money to buy a house at 331 Spring Street in downtown Los Angeles. Biddy was employed as a Nurse, Midwife, and Domestic Servant. She was one of the first Black women to own land in the city of Los Angeles.

She had the intelligence and boldness to use part of her land as a temporary resting place for horses and carriages, and people visiting town paid money in exchange for the space. That particular area was considered the first "parking lot" in Los Angeles.

Knowing what it meant to be oppressed and friendless, Biddy Mason immediately began a philanthropic career by opening her home to the poor, hungry, and homeless. Through hard work, saving, and investing carefully, she was able to purchase large amounts of real estate including a commercial building, which provided her with enough income to help build schools, hospitals, and churches.

Her financial fortunes continued to increase until she accumulated a fortune of almost $300,000. In today's money, that would be $6M. Her most noted accomplishment is the founding of the First AME Church in California. In her tireless work she was known for saying "If you hold your hand closed, nothing good can come in. The open hand gives in abundance; even as it receives."

Biddy Bridget Mason died on January 15, 1891 at the age of 76. On March 27, 1988, ninety one years after her death, a special occasion event was given in her honor by members of the church she helped founded. Mayor Tom Bradley was among the dignitaries in attendance. Black women are legendary.
Black History is American History.

The lady circled in red was Lucy Higgs Nichols. She was born into slavery in Tennessee, but during the Civil War she man...
01/14/2022

The lady circled in red was Lucy Higgs Nichols. She was born into slavery in Tennessee, but during the Civil War she managed to escape and found her way to 23rd Indiana Infantry Regiment which was encamped nearby. She stayed with the regiment and worked as a nurse throughout the war.

After the war, she moved north with the regiment and settled in Indiana, where she found work with some of the veterans of the 23rd. She applied for a pension after Congress passed the Army Nurses Pension Act of 1892 which allowed Civil War nurses to draw pensions for their service. The War Department had no record of her, so her pension was denied. Fifty-five surviving veterans of the 23rd petitioned Congress for the pension they felt she had rightfully earned, and it was granted.

The photograph shows Nichols and other veterans of the Indiana regiment at a reunion in 1898. She died in 1915 and is buried in a cemetery in New Albany, Indiana.

Elfriede Elsner was in the USMC women’s reserve as an aerial photographer in WWII.
10/10/2021

Elfriede Elsner was in the USMC women’s reserve as an aerial photographer in WWII.

Margaret Bourke-White (1904-71) at 27, stands on the scaffolding enclosing the under-construction Chrysler Building, New...
10/01/2021

Margaret Bourke-White (1904-71) at 27, stands on the scaffolding enclosing the under-construction Chrysler Building, New York, 1931

Hidden Women: The Art of WWI Camouflage When the United States entered World War I in 1917, both men and women helped ou...
09/22/2021

Hidden Women: The Art of WWI Camouflage

When the United States entered World War I in 1917, both men and women helped out in the war effort. Women worked in factories, joined the Red Cross, and participated in a number of military organizations. In New York City, a group of female art students joined the National League for Women’s Service and trained to serve in the Camouflage Department of the United States Navy.

https://unwritten-record.blogs.archives.gov/2016/07/19/hidden-women-the-art-of-wwi-camouflage-photos/

Women Marines, Stateside, ca 1918. From the first enlistment in August of 1918 until the end of the War 305 women enlist...
09/10/2021

Women Marines, Stateside, ca 1918. From the first enlistment in August of 1918 until the end of the War 305 women enlisted in the Marines.
Photo credit: National Archives.

Rosie the Riveter's building flying boat during World War One c.1917
07/27/2021

Rosie the Riveter's building flying boat during World War One c.1917

This is Florence “Woo Woo” DiTullio Joyce, the first woman hired by the Fore River Shipyard in 1942.  She was hired beca...
07/03/2021

This is Florence “Woo Woo” DiTullio Joyce, the first woman hired by the Fore River Shipyard in 1942. She was hired because the shipyard lost most of their male employees to enlistment during WW2. Florence was hired before women were generally hired for defense industries because she had a local reputation as an excellent welder. There was not, at the time, a policy to hire women for defense industries. Several congressmen had sworn that it would never happen, despite a desperate need for labor. A local shift leader hired her because he knew of her, and he urgently needed somebody good with oxy-acetalene.

When she was hired, many folks believed various stereotypical things, and felt that she would not last long in a rough and tumble men's profession. She instead proved to just be a good welder, and handled the environment with aplomb, and, apparently, humor. Her self styled moniker ("Woo-woo") was what the shipbuilders shouted when she arrived on site the first day. She kept the nick name, and owned it, painting it across the back of her welding jacket.

Every single account I have found says she was just a good welder, who did her job with as little fuss possible.

This picture was featured in Life magazine, and might, possibly, be said to have greatly enhanced US industrial might during WW2.

It can be said, with some authority, that she made the hiring of tens of thousands of women possible, by being the example that allowed hundreds of defense contractors to say "Hey, Look at Flo. She handles it fine."

Rosie the Riveter was a painting created around a make believe character. Flo DiTullio Joyce was a real human being.

This picture taken in the field in Afghanistan shows our warrior women in the field. It has been brought to my attention...
06/30/2021

This picture taken in the field in Afghanistan shows our warrior women in the field. It has been brought to my attention that these are natives all of them...native women of American Indian descent, a native Puerto Rican, an Islander and a native Mexican American...all indigenous peoples...this picture has gone viral...overnight it has 8900 shares mainly by native women on facebook from the U.S. and Canada...just amazes me...it is a one of a kind picture and yes that is a Transformer figure on their vehicle.

Address

New Albany, IN
47150-47151

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when League of Living Herstorians posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share