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Authors: Christine K. Jahnke

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What is next for Chelsea Clinton, Meghan McCain, Bristol Palin, Bar-bara and Jenna Bush, and Malia and Sasha Obama? The Obama girls may need to graduate from high school before they contribute to a political dynasty. In South Carolina, Nikki Haley shook up the old boys' network when, at the age of thirty-eight, she was elected the state's first woman governor. There were only a handful of women serving in Congress when Ellen Malcolm founded a political organization with the funny name of EMILY'S List twenty-five years ago. In 2010, when Malcolm turned the reins of power over to new leadership, a record number of women were serving. Stephanie Schriock now heads the fund-raising powerhouse committed to electing progressive women.

A new generation of activists has supplemented the banners and picket signs of the suffragists with blogs and tweets to mobilize young women across the political spectrum. Jessica Valenti founded the website
Feministing.com
in 2004 “to better connect feminists online and off.” Across the partisan divide, Karin Agness's Network of Enlightened Women is, as one member shared, “an organization of intellectual women that went to a shooting range last week, is hosting a traditional tea party next week, and will host a Health Care Roundtable next month.” Another online voice who also speaks the old-fashioned way is Morgane Richardson, founder of Refuse the Silence: Women of Color in Academia Speak Out. Richardson advocates on behalf of women of color who are navigating the issues of race, class, and gender on college campuses.

These Generation X and Y women are a small sample of the emerging voices that will continue to shape the business, cultural, and political landscape as the boomers retire. These women and their families are playing a role in determining what lies ahead for all of us. The generation Y'ers have
the added distinction of having grown up with access to cell phones, instant messaging, and the Internet, and as a result they are likely to be nimble users of new technologies. This familiarity with the virtual world provides them with more channels to speak out in service to their communities, causes, and country.

As the digital age of communications continues to expand, so, too, will the diversity and numbers of women presenters. The richness of their life experiences will enrich our public dialogue with valuable insights and innovative ideas. As more women seize new opportunities, they can contribute while knowing that they have been well served by the well-spoken women who came before them.

 

 

Ann Richards

 

Born:
 
September 1, 1933, Lakeview, Texas
Died:
 
September 13, 2006, esophageal cancer
Birth Name:
 
Dorothy Ann Willis
Education:
 
BA, Baylor University
Family:
 
Divorced, four children
Hardest Job:
 
Public schoolteacher, Fulmore Junior High, Austin, Texas
Accomplishment:
 
Created the “New Texas,” opening state government to more women and minorities than any previous governor
Legacy:
 
Ann Richards School for Young Women Leaders
Speech Collection:
 
Ann W. Richards Papers at the University of Texas at Austin

Indra Nooyi

 

Born
:
 
October 18, 1955, Chennai, India
Birth Name
:
 
Indra Krishnamurthy
Education
:
 
BA, Madras Christian College
MA, Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta
MA, Yale School of Management
Family:
 
Married, two daughters
Formative Training:
 
Studied Chicago Bulls videos to learn about teamwork
Interest:
 
Expert on New York Yankees statistics
Recognition:
 
2010 #1 on
Fortune
's List of 50 Most Powerful Women, #6 on
Forbes
's List of 100 World's Most Powerful Women

Barbara Jordan

 

Born:
 
February 21, 1936, Houston, Texas
Died:
 
January 17, 1996, complications of leukemia and multiple sclerosis
Birth Name:
 
Barbara Charline Jordan
Education:
 
BA, Texas Southern University JD, Boston University School of Law
Family:
 
Youngest of three sisters
Recognition:
 
Presidential Medal of Freedom, Barbara Jordan Statue at the University of Texas at Austin
Legacy:
 
Barbara Jordan Freedom Foundation, Barbara Jordan High School for Careers
Speech Collection:
 
Barbara Jordan: Speaking the Truth with Eloquent Thunder
, edited by Max Sherman (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2007)

Pat Summitt

 

Born:
 
June 14, 1952, Clarksville, Tennessee
Birth Name:
 
Patricia Sue Head
Education:
 
BA, University of Tennessee–Martin
Family:
 
Divorced, one son
Nickname:
 
Bone
Childhood:
 
As a baby was raised in a two-room log cabin
Accomplishments:
 
1975 Olympic silver medalist, coached US women to Olympic gold in 1984, eight NCAA championships, seven times NCAA Coach of the Year, Naismith Coach of the Century, 2000 Basketball Hall of Fame inductee
Legacy:
 
Created cradle of coaches, with nearly one-third of all players becoming coaches from youth leagues to the pros

Melinda Gates

 

Born:
 
August 15, 1964, Dallas, Texas
Birth Name:
 
Melinda Ann French
Education:
 
BA, Duke University MBA, Duke University
Family:
 
Married, three children
Household Ban:
 
iPhones® and iPads®
Interest:
 
Distance runner
Recognition:
 
Time
magazine Person of the Year along with husband for “giving away more money than anyone ever has”
Legacy:
 
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Elizabeth Dole

 

Born:
 
July 29, 1936, Salisbury, North Carolina
Birth Name:
 
Mary Elizabeth Hanford
Education:
 
Duke University MA, Harvard School of Education JD, Harvard Law School University of Oxford
Family:
 
Married, stepdaughter
Nicknames:
 
Steel Magnolia and Sugar Lips
Career:
 
First woman to serve as the president of the American Red Cross since it was founded by Clara Barton in 1881
Recognition:
 
1995 Raoul Wallenburg Award for Humanitarian Service, 1994 League of Women Voters Leadership Award, Churchwoman of the Year by Religious Heritage of America, North Carolinian of the Year

Maya Angelou

 

Born:
 
April 4, 1928, Saint Louis, Missouri
Birth Name:
 
Marguerite Ann Johnson
Education:
 
High school graduate
Self-taught Arabic, Fanti, French, Italian, Spanish
Family:
 
Divorced, one son
Recognition:
 
Presidential Medal of Freedom, Presidential Medal of Arts, Reynolds Professor of American Studies at Wake Forest University, thirty honorary degrees
Accomplishments:
 
Thirty-one books, including a cookbook; three Grammy Awards for spoken-word albums; nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for the film
Georgia, Georgia
Papers:
 
The Schomberg Center for Research in Black Culture

Suze Orman

 

Born:
 
June 5, 1951, Chicago, Illinois
Birth Name:
 
Susan Lynn Orman
Education:
 
BA, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Family:
 
Partner Kathy Travis
Early Job:
 
Waited tables until she was in her thirties
Recognition:
 
2010
Forbeis
“World's 100 Most Powerful Women,”2009,
Time
magazine “The World's Most Influential People,” seven Gracie Allen Awards for cable show, two Emmys for PBS specials
Accomplishments:
 
Single most successful fund-raiser in the history of PBS, authored six
New York Times
bestsellers, host of MSNBC cable show and QVC's
Financial Freedom Hour

Madeleine Albright

 

Born:
 
May 15, 1937, Prague, Czechoslovakia
Birth Name:
 
Maria Jana Korbelova
Education:
 
BA, Wellesley College MA, PhD, Columbia University
Family:
 
Divorced, three daughters
Early Job:
 
Babysat for twenty-five cents an hour
Early Ambition:
 
Journalist, copy girl at the
Denver Post
Career Path:
 
Chief legislative assistant to Senator Edmund Muskie,
member National Security Council, president of the Center for National Policy, US Representative to United Nations, secretary of state, chair of the Albright Stonebridge Group, chair of Albright Capital Management LLC
Legacy:
 
The Madeleine Korbel Albright Institute for Global Affairs at Wellesley College

Hillary Clinton

 

Born:
 
October 26, 1947, Chicago, Illinois
Birth Name:
 
Hillary Diane Rodham
Education:
 
BA, Wellesley College JD, Yale Law School
Family:
 
Married, one daughter
Early Job:
 
Gutted salmon in Alaskan factory
Political History:
 
Young Republican who campaigned for Barry Goldwater
Career Path:
 
Wellesley College valedictorian, attorney, child advocate, First Lady of Arkansas, First Lady of United States, US senator, presidential candidate, secretary of state

 

 

T
he words of women have power and make history. Yet the women who've used words to defend, heal, instruct, champion, and energize have not always been given the recognition they deserve. The speech collections that include women tend to focus on a narrow list of the most famous. An example is the compilation by former presidential speechwriter and columnist for the
New York Times
William Safire. He described his onethousand-page volume of speeches as “history's outstanding instances of oratorical eloquence.” The book contained two hundred speeches, a mere thirteen of which were given by women. Five years later, when the “instant classic” was revised and expanded, the percentage of women decreased!

The Well-Spoken Women's Timeline helps set the record straight and will serve as a useful reference to inspiring moments and significant achievements. The collection reminds us of the resolve to be heard, even when doing so was an act of extreme bravery. In colonial America, Mary Dyer's insistence on articulating her Quaker faith led to her execution by hanging. A contemporary of Dyer's named Anne Hutchinson was also persecuted for preaching her faith. Hutchinson was a Bible study leader and a member of the Massachusetts Bay Colony until she was tried in a legal court for teaching men in public. Banished from the colony, Hutchinson and her family were later killed in an Indian raid.

A gap of more than 150 years exists between those deaths and the first Women's Rights Convention held in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848. From that point on, women en masse took to the stage and the streets with
gusto. During the late nineteenth century, thousands organized on the state and federal levels for equal rights and social and labor reforms, sometimes facing angry, abusive audiences. The hatchet-wielding Carrie Nation was prepared for the resistance she encountered with her antialcohol campaign. The temperance movement leader used the hatchet to smash liquor barrels and paid her legal fines with money earned from lecturing. She also sold tiny hatchet lapel pins.

American's first black woman millionaire was a crusading mogul. Madam C. J. Walker, who developed, manufactured, and marketed a hair tonic for African American women, gave back to her community through economic empowerment programs and antilynching campaigns. Mary Parker Follett was one of the first recognized experts to speak on management theory and labor relations. Throughout the twentieth century, women spoke out on environmental conservation, international affairs, scientific discoveries, workplace issues, and civil rights. It has been forty years since Phyllis Schlafly emerged to disparage Gloria Steinem and the second wave of the women's movement. Honored with the Congressional Medal of Freedom, movie star Audrey Hepburn was the forerunner celebrity humanitarian to Mia Farrow and Angelina Jolie. Each of the featured women in this timeline opens a window on a unique perspective on the topics, questions, and challenges that have shaped our lives.

WELL-SPOKEN WOMEN THEN AND NOW

1637
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Anne Hutchinson, prayer meeting leader
Condemned for asserting leadership in the Boston Church
June 1, 1660
Boston, Massachusetts
Mary Dyer, Quaker preacher
Hung for refusing to renounce her faith
March 1802
Boston, Massachusetts
Deborah Sampson, Revolutionary War
soldier
“Address, Delivered with Applause”
July 4, 1828
New Harmony, Indiana
Frances Wright, social reformer
Independence Day address on patriotism
September 21, 1832
Boston, Massachusetts
Frances M. Stewart, education advocate
First public lecture by African American
woman. Stewart never spoke publicly
again.
May 16, 1838
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Angelina E. Grimke, abolitionist
“What Has the North to Do with
Slavery?”
July 19-20, 1848
Seneca Falls, New York
Lucretia Mott, Women's Rights
Convention organizer
Opening and closing remarks
May 29, 1851
Akron, Ohio
Sojourner Truth, former slave
Women's Rights Convention, “Ain't I a
Woman?”
1853
South Butler, New York
Antoinette Brown Blackwell, first
ordained minister
Participated in religious services at the
age of nine
February 8, 1858
Orange, New Jersey
Lucy Stone, first full-time lecturer on
suffrage
“Taxation without Representation”
1864
Washington, DC
Anna Dickinson, twenty-one-year-old
antislavery activist
First woman to address US Congress.
President Abraham Lincoln is in the
audience.
February 16, 1871
Washington, DC
Victoria Woodhull, first woman
presidential candidate
“Constitutional Equality”
1872-1873
New York
Susan B. Anthony, first woman honored
on US currency
Speaks in twenty-nine Post Office
Districts after her arrest for voting
1882
Saratoga, New York
Clara Barton, American Red Cross
founder
American Social Science Association,
“History of War”
January 18, 1892
Washington, DC
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, writer and
political strategist
US Congress Judiciary Committee,
“Solitude of Self”
1893
Chicago, Illinois
Anna Howard Shaw, physician and minister
“The Fate of Republics”
January 1900
Chicago, Illinois
Ida B. Wells-Barnett, journalist and
daughter of slaves
“Lynch Law in America”
January 16, 1906
Washington, DC
Belva Lockwood, attorney
First woman to argue before the US
Supreme Court; wins $5 million settle-
ment for the Cherokee Nation
February 23, 1906
Chicago, Illinois
Jane Addams, first American woman to
receive Nobel Peace Prize
Pays tribute to first US president,
George Washington
October 10, 1906
Washington, DC
Mary Church Terrell, social justice
activist
“What It Means to Be Colored in Capital
of US”
June 1911
Eureka Springs, Arkansas
Carrie Nation, antialcohol crusader
Collapses on stage and later dies
June 13, 1911
Stockholm, Sweden
Carrie Chapman Catt, fought for
Nineteenth Amendment
“Is Woman Suffrage Progressing?”
August 15, 1912
Charleston, West Virginia
Mother Jones, labor activist
“Appeal to the Cause of Miners in the
Paint Creek”
March 13, 1913
Washington, DC
Inez Miholland, suffrage orator and
attorney
Dresses as Joan of Arc and, riding white
horse, leads massive suffrage parade
April 1917
Washington, DC
Rep. Jeanette Rankin, first woman
elected to Congress
Brief speech in vote against World War I
July 9, 1917
New York, New York
Emma Goldman, queen of the anarchists
“Address to the Jury,” trial for antiwar
activities
August 1917
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Madam C. J. Walker, entrepreneur
“Woman's Duty to Woman” keynote at
Beauty Culturists Union convention
May 14, 1921
Vassar College, New York
Marie Currie, physicist and chemist
“On the Discovery of Radium”
November 18, 1921
Park Theater, New York
Margaret Sanger, founder American
Birth Control League
“The Morality of Birth Control”
June 30, 1925
Cedar Point, Ohio
Helen Keller, first deaf-blind person
to earn BA degree
Lion's Club International, campaign
against blindness
January 1933
London, England
Mary Parker Follett, management guru
Speaks on management theory at
London School of Economics
June 30, 1933
Chicago, Illinois
Mary McLeod Bethune, civil rights
activist
“A Century of Progress of Negro
Women”
December 9, 1948
New York, New York
Eleanor Roosevelt, United Nations
delegate
“Adoption of Declaration of Human
Rights”
June 1, 1950
Washington, DC
Margaret Chase Smith, US senator
“Declaration of Conscience”
February 2, 1953
New York, New York
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, labor leader
Statement at the Smith Act Trial to
refute allegations of advocating govern-
ment overthrow
April 21, 1954
Columbus, Ohio
Rachel Carson, marine biologist and
environmentalist
“Exceeding Beauty of the Earth”
1964
San Francisco, California
Betty Friedan, feminist and author
“The Crisis in Women's Identity”
April 1966
Sacramento, California
Dolores Huerta, National Farm Workers
Association founder
Rallied for worker's rights
April 1968
Memphis, Tennessee
Coretta Scott King, civil rights activist
Marched on Memphis following hus-
band's assassination
November 12, 1969
Oakland, California
Angela Davis, Black Panther activist
Protests against racial inequality and
Vietnam War
August 10, 1970 Washington, DC
Shirley Chisholm, US Representative
“For the Equal Rights Amendment”
September 23, 1971
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Gloria Steinem, feminist
“Why Harvard Law School Needs
Women More Than Women Need It”
February 1972
Washington, DC
Phyllis Schlafly, founder Eagle Forum
Launches the Stop E.R.A. campaign
July 25, 1974
Washington, DC
Barbara Jordan, US Representative
Presents case for impeachment of Presi-
dent Nixon
November 18, 1977 Houston, Texas
Bella Abzug, US Representative
Presides over National Women's
Conference
January 1980
Long Beach, California
Beverly LaHaye, Concerned Women
for America founder
American Pro-Family Conference for
Christian Right
September 6, 1983
New York, New York
Jeanne Kirkpatrick, US ambassador to
the United Nations
Condemns Soviet Union aggression.
December 26, 1983
Kobe, Japan
Samantha Smith, eleven-year-old
“Ambassador of Peace”
“Look Around and See Only Friends”
July 19, 1984
San Francisco, California
Geraldine Ferraro, US Representative
Accepts vice-presidential nomination
February 1986
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Mary Kay Ash, cosmetics mogul
Addresses Harvard University students
1988
New York, New York
Audrey Hepburn, Goodwill Ambassador
Launches UNICEF tour
July 19, 1988
Atlanta, Georgia
Ann Richards, Texas State Treasurer
Democratic National Convention
keynoter
October 11, 1991
Washington, DC
Anita Hill, professor
Testimony at Clarence Thomas sexual
harassment hearing
August 1992
Waterville Valley,
New Hampshire
Orit Gadiesh, Bain & Co. vice chair
“True North: Pride at Bain & Co.”
August 19, 1992
Houston, Texas
Mary Fisher, activist
“A Whisper of AIDs”
September 25, 1992
Washington, DC
Bernadine Healy, National Institutes of
Health director
“Diversity in the Scientific and Techno-
logical Workforce”
January 19, 1993
Washington, DC
Maya Angelou
Presidential inauguration poem, “On the
Pulse of Morning”
April 2, 1993
Sweet Briar, Virginia
Wilma Mankiller, Cherokee Nation chief
“Rebuilding the Cherokee Nation”
December 8, 1992
Stockholm, Sweden
Toni Morrison, Nobel Prize in
Literature recipient
Nobel lecture
May 25, 1995
Washington, DC
Kathleen Sullivan, astronaut
“Challenges to the Marine Eco-System”
September 5, 1995
Beijing, China
Hillary Clinton, First Lady
UN Fourth World Conference on
Women
September 1995
Washington, DC
Elizabeth Birch, Human Rights
Campaign
Addresses Christian Coalition on gay
rights
August 14, 1996
San Diego, California
Elizabeth Dole, former cabinet member
Republican National Convention
July 14, 1997
Prague, Czech Republic
Madeleine Albright, secretary of state
Address to the People of Prague
March 23, 1998
Geneva, Switzerland
Sister Helen Prejean, anti-death penalty
activist “Hands Off Cain”
April 12, 2000
West Point, New York
Charlene Barshefsky, US trade
representative
“The Case of China's WTO Accession”
April 2001
Colorado
Ingrid Newkirk, PETA cofounder
“Animal Rights”
January 7, 2005
Las Vegas, Nevada
Carly Fiorina, Hewlett-Packard CEO
Keynote at Consumer Electronics Show
March 9, 2006
Washington, DC
Sandra Day O'Connor, retired Supreme
Court justice
Defends judicial independence against
conservative attacks
January 4, 2007
US Capitol
Nancy Pelosi, US Representative
Sworn in as first woman Speaker of the
House.
March 7, 2007
Washington, DC
Condoleezza Rice, secretary of state
International Women's Day, Women of
Courage
October 12, 2007
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Drew Faust, Harvard University's first
woman president
Installation address
January 8, 2008
Manchester, New Hampshire
Hillary Clinton, first woman to win
presidential primary
Election night victory speech
March 24, 2008
New York, New York
Indra Nooyi, PepsiCo CEO
Keynote at Catalyst Awards
September 3, 2008
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Sarah Palin, governor of Alaska
Accepts vice-presidential nomination
June 9, 2009
New York, New York
Muriel Siebert, first woman to own a
seat on New York Stock Exchange
American Museum of Finance honors
women of Wall Street
May 26, 2010
Norwalk, Connecticut
Ursula Burns, Xerox CEO
First African American woman Fortune
500 CEO; keynote on technology's
shifting role in business

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