Women Pioneers in American Memory, a feature presentation for teachers, provides an investigation of the curricular theme, pioneering women and women's suffrage, through use of primary sources from the American Memory collections - from the Learning Page, The Library of Congress.
memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpedu/features/women/women.html
Annie Oakley Navigate Home About the Library Adult Services/Programs Childrens' Services/Programs Friends of the Library Visitor Information Search Internet Online Databases Genealogy/Local History Government/Law Community Organizations The Annie Oakley House in Cambridge, Maryland is the only surviving residence that was either owned or occupied by Annie Oakley as a primary and permanent ...
www.dorchesterlibrary.org/library/aoakley.html
Calamity Jane Martha Jane Canary (1848-1903) was born in Princeton, Missouri. This hard drinking woman wore men's clothing, used their bawdy language, chewed tobacco and was handy with a gun. She traveled from Arizona through the Dakota territories during her rough life. At her death, the White Devil of the Yellowstone was remembered as a saint by the citizens of Deadwood, where she helped nurse ...
www.cowgirls.com/dream/cowgals/calamity.htm
Annie Oakley She Shot The Ashes Off The Kaiser's Cigaret Her name was Phoebe Moses and she was born in Darke County, Ohio in 1860 and she could shoot the head off a running quail when she was twelve years old. Once, at the invitation of Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany, she knocked the ashes off a cigaret he was holding in his mouth. When she out-shot the great exhibition marksman, Frank Butler, he ...
www.cowgirls.com/dream/cowgals/oakley.htm
Web site of the Natalie Curtis Burlin Association, an online resource for historians, ethnomusicologists, folklorists, and other scholars and enthusiasts. Provides information about the life and work of Natalie Curtis Burlin (1875-1921).