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Women's History Month Quiz
- Who founded Bethune-Cookman College, established the National Council of
Negro Women, and served as an advisor on minority affairs to President
Franklin D. Roosevelt?
- What woman was the first African-American woman to win the Nobel Prize
for Literature. ?
- What Black woman refused to give up her seat to a White man, in
Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955, thus sparking the civil rights movement of the
following decade?
- Who was the first woman to run for President of the United States
(1872)?
- Who opened up social work as a profession for women, and also won the
1931 Nobel Peace Prize for her anti-war organizing work?
- Which Mexican-American woman has repeatedly been the leading money
winner in the Ladies Professional Golf Association?
- Who was the first woman Poet Laureate of the United States?
- Who was the first “First Lady” to have developed her own political and
media identity?
- Who wrote the first version of the Equal Rights Amendment, in 1923?
- Who was the first Black woman elected to Congress?
- What leading suffragist was arrested and convicted of attempting to vote
in the 1872 election?
- Who was the first Chinese-American woman ever elected to hold a
statewide office in the United States?
- What journalist traveled around the world in 72 days in 1890?
- What woman was turned down by 29 medical schools before being accepted
as a student, graduated at the head of her class, and became the first
licensed woman doctor in the U.S.?
- What former slave was a powerful speaker for the rights of women and
Black people?
- When was the Equal Rights Amendment first introduced into Congress?
- Who was the last queen of the Hawaiian Islands, deposed because American
business interests wanted to annex Hawaii to the U.S.?
- Which woman was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for holding
religious discussion meetings in her home?
- Who spoke out for the advancement of American Indians’ rights from
speaker’s platforms nationwide and before Congressional committees in the
1880s?
- Who drove a stagecoach across the roughest part of the West without
anyone knowing until she died that she was a woman?
- Who was the first Hispanic woman to serve as U.S. Treasurer?
- Who was the Shoshone Indian woman who served as guide and interpreter on
the Lewis and Clark expedition?
- Who was Chair of the Board and publisher of The Washington Post and
Newsweek magazine, and also oversaw six broadcasting stations?
- About 20,000 women shirtwaist workers staged a strike for better working
conditions. Their action was called the “Uprising of the 20,000.” When and
where did his strike occur?
- When did officials of Little League Baseball announce that they would
“defer to the changing social climate” and let girls play on their teams?
- As vice president of the United Farm Workers, what woman has been vital
in speaking for civil and economic rights for farm workers throughout the
U.S.?
- When did Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 go into effect,
prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded school
programs and activities?
- What woman was invited to teach nuclear physics at Princeton University,
even though no female students were allowed to study there?
- What woman served as a “conductor” on the Underground Railroad, freeing
hundreds of southern slaves and leading them to safety in the North? A
$40,000 reward was offered for her capture.
- What woman is credited with helping free more than 2,000 Chinese women
and children smuggled into San Francisco to be sold as slaves?
- Who was the first African-American woman poet to have her works
published?
Answers
1. Mary McLeod Bethune (1875–1955)
2. Toni Morrison (b. 1931)
3. Rosa Parks (b. 1920)
4. Victoria Woodhull (1838-1927)
5. Jane Addams (1860-1935)
6. Nancy Lopez (b. 1957)
7. Rita Dove (b. 1952)
8. Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962)
9. Alice Paul (1885-1977)
10. Shirley Chisholm (b. 1924)
11. Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906)
12. March Fong Eu (b. 1929)
13. Nellie Bly (1867-1922), real name Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman
14. Elizabeth Blackwell (1821-1910)
15. Sojourner Truth (C. 1797-1883)
16. 1923
17. Queen Liliuokalani (1838-1917)
18. Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643)
19. Sarah Winnemucca (1844-1891)
20. Charlie Parkhurst
21. Romana Bańuelos (b. 1925)
22. Sacajawea (c. 1786-1812)
23. Katherine Graham (b. 1917-2001)
24. 1909, New York City
25. 1974
26. Dolores Huerta (b. 1930)
27. 1976
28. Chien-Shiung Wu (1912-1997)
29. Harriet Tubman (c. 1820-1913)
30. Donaldina Cameron (1869-1968)
31. Phillis Wheatley (1753-1784)
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Federal Women's Program...
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