Women's History Month is a celebration of women's contributions to history, culture, and society. This annually declared month had its beginning as a single day, March 8, 1911. A school district in Sonoma, California built a week around Women's History Day in 1978. This led to a fifteen-day conference about Women's History in 1979 at Sarah Lawrence College. Gerda Lerner, an influential historian, along with National Women's History Alliance advocated for women to have more than a day of recognition. In 1980 Women's History Day became Women's History Week. By 1987 it had been allotted the full month of March. 

Women's History Month means celebrating the accomplishments of women and recognizing their contribution to society. In doing so we are able, as a society, to equip, empower, and encourage women to believe in themselves and the accomplishments they can achieve. Many school districts build their curriculums around the national months and having the month of March dedicated to Women's History promotes equality of the sexes in the classroom. Promoting strong, influential, women in history allows for a more rounded understanding of our past. This year’s theme for the month is “Women Providing Healing and Promoting Hope.”

Our book display on the second floor of the library near the elevators highlights the stories of influential women throughout history. Be sure to pay special attention to those books that focus and healing and hope. For example, A Shining Thread of Hope: The History of Black Women in America by Darlene Clark Hine and Kathleen Thompson "chronicles the lives of black women from indentured servitude in the early American colonies to the cruelty of antebellum plantations, from the reign of lynch law in the Jim Crow South to the triumphs of the Civil Rights era." In another inspiring story of healing and hope This Was Not Our War: Bosnian Women Reclaiming the Peace by Swanee Hunt shares “first-person accounts of twenty-six Bosnian women who are reconstructing their society following years of devastating warfare.” Medicine Women, Curanderas, and Women Doctors  by Bobette Perrone, H. Henrietta Stockel, and Victoria Krueger is literally about women healers. The book focuses on ten different women and their healing paths.

The display includes other inspiring stories of women. Deborah G. Felder’s The 100 Most Influential Women Of All Time: A Ranking Past And Present provides an good overview. Becoming by former first lady Michele Obama is an autobiography of this compelling woman’s accomplishments and the meaning she finds in her life. Tara Westover’s Educated: A Memoir tells the story of her life in a survivalist household and her quest for knowledge that eventually allowed her to attend Brigham Young University without any preceding formal schooling, highlighting what education offers. Margot Lee Shetterly’s Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race has also inspired a major motion picture. In response to these women’s stories, Shetterly also founded The Human Computer Project, an endeavor that is recovering the names and accomplishments of all of the women who worked as computers, mathematicians, scientists and engineers at the NACA and NASA from the 1930s through the 1980s. Check out these books and others as you commemorate Women’s History Month.