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Pages in category "History of women in Montana" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
History of women in Montana (1 C, 16 P) I. Industrial Workers of the World in Montana (3 P) L. Labor disputes in Montana (2 P) Lynching deaths in Montana (5 P) M.
Moved to Montana from New Hampshire after finishing college; lived and worked in Helena, Butte, and then Glendive: Pioneer of women's rights in Montana; teacher; first woman to practice law in Montana and the first woman ever to plead a case before the U.S. Circuit Court; first woman to run for state Attorney General [191] George Horse-Capture
An Illustrated History of the State of Montana Containing a History of the State of Montana from the Earliest Period of the Discovery to the Present Time, Together With Glimpses of its Auspicious Future, Illustrations and Full-Page Portraits of Some of it (PDF). Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Co.
The Montana Memory Project was established in 2005 when Bruce Newell, the Montana State Library commissioner, “pushed for the creation of a program to help libraries statewide collect and preserve the history and culture of their communities.” [3] The MMP developed slowly out of this original project as logistics and technology evolved alongside interest in the project.
Caroline M. McGill was born on a farm in Mansfield, Ohio and was one of five children. [3] Her father was a farmer and music teacher and her mother was a midwife.Although later living on a hardscrabble farm on the Missouri Ozarks, Caroline's parents were strong supporters of higher education for all their children [4] and Caroline received her Teaching Certificate from Lebanon Normal School in ...
History of women in Montana (1 C, 16 P) M. Female models from Montana (4 P) P. ... Pages in category "Women in Montana" The following 8 pages are in this category ...
Childbirth was serious and sometimes life-threatening for rural women well into the 20th century. Although large families were favored by farm families, most women employed birth control methods to space their children and limit their family size. Pregnant women had little access to modern knowledge about prenatal care.