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Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction / Marjorie Julian Spruill, Valinda W. Littlefield, and Joan Marie Johnson -- Ruby Forsythe and Fannie Phelps Adams, teaching for confrontation duringJim Crow / Valinda W. Littlefield -- Mary Gordon Ellis, the politics of race and genderfrom schoolhouse to statehouse / Carol Sears Botsch -- Julia Mood Peterkin and Wil Lou Gray, the art and scienceof race progress / Mary Mac Ogden -- Dr. Hilla Sheriff, caught between science and the state at theSouth Carolina, midwife training institutes / Patricia Evridge Hill --Julia and Alice Delk, from rural life to welding at the Charleston Navy Yard in World War II / Fritz P. Hamer -- Louise Smith, thefirst ladyof racing / Suzanne Wise -- Mary Blackwell Baker, her quiet campaign for labor justice / Constance Ashton Myers -- Susan Dart Butler and Ethel Martin Bolden, South Carolina's pioneer African American librarians /Georgette Mayo -- Harriet Simons, women, race, politics, and the League of Women Voters of South Carolina / Jennifer E. Black -- Alice Buck Norwood Spearman Wright, a civil rights activist / Marcia G. Synnott -- Modjeska Monteith Simkins, I cannot be bought and will not be sold / Cherisse Jones-Branch -- Septima Poinsette Clark, the evolution of an educational stateswoman / Katherine Mellen Charron -- Mary Elizabeth Massey, a founder of women's history in the South / Constance Ashton Myers -- Polly Woodham, the many roles of rural women / Melissa Walker -- MaryJane Manigault, a basket maker's legacy / Kate Porter Young -- Dolly Hamby, the rise of two-party politics in South Carolina / John W. White -- Harriet Keyserling, political trailblazer / Page Putnam Miller -- Victoria Eslinger, Keller Bumgardner Barron, Mary Heriot, Tootsie Holland, and Pat Callair, champions of women's rights in South Carolina / Marjorie Julian Spruill -- Jean Hoefer Toal, the rise of women in the legalprofession / W. Lewis Burke and Bakari T. Sellers -- Notes on contributors -- Index. |