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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

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On the morning of September 4, 1957, fifteen-year-old Dorothy Counts set out on a harrowing path toward Harding High, where-as the first African American to attend the all-white school – she was greeted by a jeering swarm of boys who spat, threw trash, and yelled epithets at her as she entered the building.

Charlotte Observer photographer Don Sturkey captured the ugly incident on film, and in the days that followed, the searing image appeared not just in the local paper but in newspapers around the world.

People everywhere were transfixed by the girl in the photograph who stood tall, her five-foot-ten-inch frame towering nobly above the mob that trailed her. There, in black and white, was evidence of the brutality of racism, a sinister force that had led children to torment another child while adults stood by. While the images display a lot of evils: prejudice, ignorance, racism, sexism, inequality, it also captures true strength, determination, courage and inspiration.

bellecs

Here she is, age 70, still absolutely elegant and poised.

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she deserves to be re-blogged. 

samwinchesterhatesfire

she’s so goddamned inspirational

rivernymph

this makes me want to cry

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coolchicksfromhistory:
“ Khutulun (circa 1260-1306)
Art by Tara (tumblr)
Khutulun was the great-great granddaughter of Genghis Khan. Her father, Kaidu, ruled a large swath of Central Asia and actively opposed his uncle, Kublai Khan.
Khutulun...
coolchicksfromhistory

Khutulun (circa 1260-1306)

Art by Tara (tumblr)

Khutulun was the great-great granddaughter of Genghis Khan.  Her father, Kaidu, ruled a large swath of Central Asia and actively opposed his uncle, Kublai Khan.

Khutulun accompanied her father on military campaigns, which was not unusual in her culture.  Mongolian women were known as skilled horseback riders and hunters.  It was not unheard of for Mongolian women to participate in battle.

What made Khutulun unique was her wrestling ability.  She competed in public wrestling competitions and is said to have won 10,000 horses from her opponents.   According to Marco Polo, Khutulun refused to marry unless a man could first defeat her in wrestling.   No prospective groom ever won her hand and Khutulun eventually chosen her own husband, possibly in attempt to quell rumors that she was sexually involved with her father.

Khutulun was her father’s favorite child and one of his most trusted advisers.  Kaidu may have hoped to make Khutulun his successor.   After Kaidu’s death in 1301, Khutulun formed an alliance with her brother Orus which allowed her to remain commander of the military until her own death in 1306.

More information: The Wrestling Princess (Lapham’s Quarterly)

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“ “ A pioneering female journalist at a time when women were relegated to the lifestyle section, Elizabeth Jane Cochran, writing under the pen name “Nellie Bly,” pulled off stunt journalism that entranced America and had its part in...
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A pioneering female journalist at a time when women were relegated to the lifestyle section, Elizabeth Jane Cochran, writing under the pen name “Nellie Bly,” pulled off stunt journalism that entranced America and had its part in shifting the world a bit.  So why is Nellie Bly’s reputation such that people have to seek her out, that we don’t read her words today? 

Was Nellie Bly the Great American Journalist?

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