Women’s History Month began with a workers’ protest

Scary bacteria, a job-application bot, and being “smart” (Issue #283)

The Medium Newsletter
The Medium Blog
Published in
Sent as a

Newsletter

3 min read1 day ago

--

Almost exactly a year ago, we wrote a newsletter on the anti-establishment origins of International Women’s Day, and by extension, Women’s History Month. One notable point of origin for both holidays? The historic 1908 workers’ protest, when 15,000 women marched in New York City demanding shorter hours, better pay, and the end of child labor. (Child labor didn’t officially end in the U.S. until 1938.)

As we wrote in 2024, Women’s History Month was a grassroots effort for decades — until 1987, when Congress signed it into law. Former legislative aide Susan Scanlan recalls that the holiday was originally going to be in August, surrounding the 26th, when women got the right to vote. But right before Scanlan and Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski submitted their bill, Scanlan paused. “Barbara, do you really want to be outside parading on August 26… when it’s hotter than the hinges of hell???” (If you’ve been to Maryland in summer, you get it.)

That’s how they landed on March, which coincided with International Women’s Day. “We wanted the cherry blossoms in bloom,” she remembers, “and we wanted it to be marching weather.”

What I like about this story is they designed a holiday they’d actually want to celebrate. Tomorrow marks the 117th anniversary of that 1908 protest by women workers — and for more history, I recommend starting with Medium writer and U.S. history PhD Melissa DeVelvisWomen’s History Syllabus. It was first published a few years back but the reading recommendations still hold up, beginning with Salem Witch Trial transcripts and leading up to shows like I Love Lucy, 30 Rock, and Insecure.

Harris Sockel

👋 To help us build the best place to read and write on the internet, we need your input. Please take a few minutes to share your feedback in this survey and shape how we think about the future of Medium.

Also today…

🧠 Practical wisdom: on being “smart enough”

“I’m not that smart” is just code for “I don’t care that much.” In other words: I don’t care enough to do the reading, to fail along the way, to show up, to make a promise, to learn as I go, to confront failure, to get better at the work. Even if that’s true, you’re probably smart enough. — Liam D.

Deepen your understanding every day with the Medium Newsletter. Sign up here.

Edited and produced by Scott Lamb & Carly Rose Gillis

Questions, feedback, or story suggestions? Email us: tips@medium.com

Like what you see in this newsletter but not already a Medium member? Read without limits or ads, fund great writers, and join a community that believes in human storytelling.

--

--

Responses (4)