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  2. Women's suffrage in Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_suffrage_in_Texas

    Women's suffrage efforts in Texas began in 1868 at the first Texas Constitutional Convention. In both Constitutional Conventions and subsequent legislative sessions, efforts to provide women the right to vote were introduced, only to be defeated. Early Texas suffragists such as Martha Goodwin Tunstall and Mariana Thompson Folsom worked with ...

  3. First ladies and gentlemen of Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_ladies_and_gentlemen...

    Margaret Lea Houston's great-great granddaughter Jean Houston Baldwin Daniel also served as First Lady of Texas 1957–1963. Frances Cox Henderson, wife of the state's first governor James Pinckney Henderson, was an outgoing supporter of women's suffrage, and a multi-linguist who had been a book translator before she met Henderson. [4]

  4. Texas Women's Hall of Fame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Women's_Hall_of_Fame

    Texas Women's Hall of Fame. The Texas Women's Hall of Fame was established in 1984 by the Governor's Commission on Women. The honorees are selected biennially from submissions from the public. The honorees must be either native Texans or a resident of Texas at the time of the nomination. [1]

  5. Emily D. West - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_D._West

    It is unknown if she did carry James Morgan's surname, as was supposed, although this was the custom for indentured servants and slaves at the time. [1] Also, arriving coincidentally in Morgan's Point on board Morgan's schooner from New York was Emily West de Zavala, [1] the wife of the interim vice president of the Republic of Texas, Lorenzo de Zavala, and grandmother of Adina Emilia De ...

  6. Carole Baskin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carole_Baskin

    Carole Ann Stairs was born on June 6, 1961, on Lackland Air Force Base in Bexar County, Texas. [5] She expressed an interest in saving cats when she was nine, but she decided against pursuing a career in veterinary medicine after she learned that veterinarians euthanize animals. [6]

  7. Berachah Industrial Home for the Redemption of Erring Girls

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berachah_Industrial_Home...

    Berachah Home dedication service, May 1903. The Berachah Industrial Home for the Redemption of Erring Girls was a facility for unwed mothers in Arlington, Texas. Rev. James T. and Maggie May Upchurch opened the home on May 14, 1903, and it took in homeless, usually pregnant, women from Texas and the surrounding states.

  8. Category:History of women in Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:History_of_women...

    Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt. Disappearance of Kelly Dae Wilson. Woman's Club of Beaumont Clubhouse. Woman's Club of El Paso. Woman's Club of San Antonio. Woman's Commonwealth. Women on Trial. The Women's Museum.

  9. Woman's Commonwealth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woman's_Commonwealth

    Woman's Commonwealth. The Woman's Commonwealth (also Belton Sanctificationists and Sisters of Sanctification) was a women's land-based commune first established in Belton, Texas. [1] It was founded in the late 1870s to early 1880s by Martha McWhirter and her women's bible study group on land that was inherited when the women's husbands died or ...