South Carolina Women: A Timeline

This publication gives a timeline of women in South Carolina from 1540, when the Queen of Cofitachiqui entertained Spanish conquistador Hernando DeSoto on the Wateree River, until 1995 when the timeline was published. Each page is full of familiar and less familiar names and achievements of South Carolina women and how they impacted the Palmetto State.

Women on the Way Up: The Federal Women’s Program

This federal document highlights the growth of women’s employment in the United States and the increasing presence of women in the workforce during the 1970s. It emphasizes the federal government’s role in setting an example by encouraging the employment of women and increasing their representation in government positions. The document also notes President Carter's efforts in appointing more women to senior government roles.

United States Women in Aviation, 1940-1985

Covering the years 1940-1985, this study explores two main periods—World War II and the postwar era-in the story of American women in aviation. It is a history of the female pilots, engineers, aircraft industry personnel, and flight attendants who met the challenges of the aviation world, and who had to overcome particular barriers because they were women. Their contributions and achievements in times of war and peace are illustrated by photographs, documents and newspaper accounts of the day, and by personal memoirs.

The Very Few, The Proud: Women in the Marine Corps, 1977-2001

This history follows and examines both the expanding opportunities for women in the Marine Corps and the fading cultural gender distinctions in the last quarter of the twentieth century. The work is derived from official documents and personal files, interviews, conversations, letters, newspaper articles, Internet access to research archives, and hundreds of email submissions from current and former Marines. The generation of women described in this history proved themselves in every clime and place, including in command and in combat.

American Women: A Library of Congress Guide for the Study of Women's History and Culture in the United States

This important publication is designed to introduce researchers to the opportunities for discovering American women's history and culture at the library of Congress. Covers materials such as textual sources, films, sound recordings, prints and photographs, and other audio or visual material. Intended for academics, advanced graduate students, genealogists, documentary filmmakers, set and costume designers, artists, actors, novelists. --Provided by publisher.

Preserving Charleston's Past, Shaping Its Future: The Life and Times of Susan Pringle Frost

During Reconstruction, Frost was also an outspoken advocate for women’s and African-Americans’ rights, as well as a more transparent local government and many other causes. Learn how this Charlestonian led a historical preservation movement that became a model for preservationists throughout the country.