How about some women's history for your Wednesday? Today we're sharing stories and objects from women who have shaped America with #BecauseOfHerStory. Discover more:http://womenshistory.si.edu/herstory
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In the 1920s and 1930s, Chinese American actress Anna May Wong struggled to find roles that fought stereotypes. In World War II, she put her career on hold to help the U.S. with Chinese war relief. Her portrait by Nickolas Muray is in the collection of our
@smithsoniannpg.pic.twitter.com/Ikgaic0jBV
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Wilma Rudolph, an Olympic medalist, brought integration to her hometown of Clarksville, Tennessee because she refused to attend segregated homecoming events. Our
@NMAAHC has this souvenir program.pic.twitter.com/ogxdNgNdQV
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“We just plowed ahead and went into the fields we found most exciting.” –Astronomer Heidi Hammel Hammel, Fran Bagenal, Candice Hansen and Carolyn Porco broke into male-dominated astronomy on the Voyager program in 1977. This model of the Voyager probe is in our
@airandspace.pic.twitter.com/dFjHnmKJ7V
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Learn more women’s history with more than 60 objects on our website—and with more than 300 objects in
@SmithsonianBook’s “Smithsonian American Women.” http://womenshistory.si.edu/herstory#BecauseOfHerStorypic.twitter.com/U77DHULqaB
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