The Second Line of Defense: Grand Rapids Women and the Great War

Ryerson Auditorium, Grand Rapids Public Library 111 Library NE, Grand Rapids, MI, United States

Presenter: Melissa Fox, President, Greater Grand Rapids Women's History Council Upon U.S. entry into WWI, national women's groups transformed their organizational structures for war work. Grand Rapids women are among the midwestern leaders whose pioneering efforts have been too long neglected. Get ahead of history--credit them! Co-sponsored by the Greater Grand Rapids Women’s History Council, […]

The Wives (and Lives) of the Early Dutch Pastors – Janet Sheeres

Ryerson Auditorium, Grand Rapids Public Library 111 Library NE, Grand Rapids, MI, United States

START the new year with new women's history! On Saturday at 1:30pm, "The Wives (and Lives) of Early Dutch Pastors" -- Unlike the biographies of early male ministers of the Christian Reformed Church in North America, which have been well documented and honored, the stories of their wives, who were important community builders in their […]

Elective Detectives & Crowdsourcing Grand Rapids Women’s History

Grand Rapids Public Library 111 Library NE, Grand Rapids, MI, United States

At History Detectives, the Grand Rapids Public Library’s day-long offering of local history programming, Julia Bouwkamp and Jo Ellyn Clarey will report on how the charting of 19th-century local women’s candidacy for public office is upending conventional wisdom and offering surprises about dates, the numbers of races, and the identities of losers. This unique historical […]

African Americans in Early Grand Rapids

Grand Rapids Public Library 111 Library NE, Grand Rapids, MI, United States

At History Detectives, GGRWHC’s Ruth Van Stee will present African Americans in Early Grand Rapids—including, of course, more women’s history. From 1850 to 1920 African Americans here were a steady one percent of the city’s rapidly growing population. After an overview of this vibrant community as a whole, Van Stee will provide snapshots of individual business, […]

A Team of Her Own: Minnie Forbes & Negro League Baseball

Grand Rapids Public Library 111 Library NE, Grand Rapids, MI, United States

The last female owner of a Negro League baseball team will talk with former Grand Rapids Press columnist Jaye Beeler at Taste of Soul Sunday about playing softball at fifteen for Cook's Brown Dolls, a traveling team from Grand Rapids, and playing baseball with the Kansas City Monarchs against the Grand Rapids Black Sox. When […]

Links to the Local: Building a National Women’s Elective History

GVSU, Allendale Campus, Kirkhof Center, RM2270

The historical charting of Grand Rapids women's runs for public office upends conventional wisdom and offers surprises about dates, the numbers of races, and the identities of women who participated in local politics beginning in 1887. Julia Bouwkamp and Jo Ellyn Clarey will report on how the national crowdsourcing project Her Hat Was in the […]

Atmosphere of Distinction

Holland Museum 31 W. 10th Street, Holland, MI, United States

Open to the public on March 2!  During the twentieth century, women throughout the country took great strides toward equality and began abandoning their traditional roles, as well as restrictive fashions, in search of greater opportunity and comfortable clothing.  “Atmosphere of Distinction” displays how the emergence of the women’s rights movement impacted West Michigan fashion trends […]

Author Lecture with Rebecca Traister

GVSU, Allendale Campus, Kirkhof Center, Grand River Room

Community Reading Projects Author Lecture with Rebecca Traister, author of All the Single Ladies! Door open at 6:00pm, book signing will follow the lecture.  Free and Open to the Public!

The GGRWHC Annual Reception

John F. Donnelly Conference Center at Aquinas College

The annual reception immediately follows author Rebecca Traister's visit to Grand Rapids on March 13 discussing her book All the Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and the Rise of an Independent Nation. The GGRWHC will add to the conversation by complicating the relationship between singledom and progress for women. To Traister's examples we will add vivid anecdotes […]

Where Have All the Flowers Gone? Rediscovering Emma Cole’s 19th-Century Grand Rapids Flora

Bunker Interpretive Center at Calvin College

 In 1901 Emma J. Cole published Grand Rapids Flora, a catalogue of plants growing without cultivation in the vicinity of Kent County. Enormous changes have taken place since those “horse and buggy” days, yet her book remains the most complete account of plants specific to our area. Who was this remarkable high school teacher, world traveller and Kent Scientific Institute botanist? […]