Many women who have changed Britain for the better weren’t originally from our shores. Here are the stories of just some of those inspirational immigrants.
From female scientists whose work was credited to men to ancient high priestesses, these women truly changed history—but were also overlooked by it.
Last Thursday, Ipswich High School celebrated the second annual Rosa Weekes Prize, marking an increased participation from local Year 6 pupils.
To celebrate Women's History Month this March, and International Women's Day on 8 March, we've put together a collection of primary and secondary classroom reosurces ...
Soon to go on display at the National Gallery of Art in DC, it took a female artist to portray the biblical figure not as shamed and repentant but in the throes of ecstatic rapture A woman knocks her ...
LUBBOCK, Texas — Lubbock ISD trustee, Mary Ann Lawson, turned history into her story by upholding educational values in her hometown. Mary Ann Lawson grew up in Lubbock during the 1950s and 1960s. She ...
Mary Meeker has been called everything from “The Queen of the Internet” to “the Nostradamus of technology.” Add to the list first female winner of the team portion of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in ...
MONROE, La. (KTVE/KARD) — Monroe’s Black History Heritage Parade turns 46, but it started with 17-year-old Mary Alice Bryant, who was inspired by her mother and months of planning to launch a lasting ...
A free performance of a play about nursing pioneer Mary Seacole will be staged for teenagers in Islington at half term. The Marvellous Adventures of Mary Seacole will be performed at the Rosemary ...