Mary Ruthsdotter

Mary Ruthsdotter

Mary Ruthsdotter (Oct. 14, 1944Jan. 8, 2010) was a feminist activist who co-founded the National Women's History Project, for which she produced curriculum guides, teacher training programs and videos on womens history. She played an influential role in obtaining Congressional resolutions and Presidential proclamations designating Women's History Week and, later, Women's History Month.[1]

Contents

Early life and education

Born Mary Pegau in 1944 in Fairfield, Iowa, Ruthsdotter lived many places in her youth as her father, a U.S. Marine Corps pilot, was assigned to bases in Arizona, California, Florida, North Carolina, Texas, Virginia, and Taiwan. Settling in Los Angeles, she married Dave Crawford in 1964, taking his last name. She attended UCLA in the 1970s, earning a BA in urban geography. She became a feminist, and changed her legal name to Ruthsdotter, in honor of her mother, Ruth Moyer, in 1978.[2][3]

Womens history advocate

Ruthsdotter became an activist for women after moving from Los Angeles to Sonoma County, California, in 1977. In 1980 she joined with Molly MacGregor, Bette Morgan, Paula Hammett, and Maria Cuevas to found the National Womens History Project (NWHP). Working as projects director for 20 years, Ruthsdotter raised money for materials for students, teachers and librarians. She wrote press releases promoting womens history through radio, television, magazines and newspapers. She gathered an extensive collection of the leading books and materials pertaining to womens history and biography, making the NWHP the leading national resource on womens history. She traveled extensively, making presentations, training teachers, and lobbying for the cause of womens history.[4][5]

The observance of Womens History Week began in Sonoma County in 1978, timed to coincide with International Womens Day on March 8. The idea caught on across the country. By 1981 National Womens History Week had been designated by the U.S. Senate and 24 governors and state legislatures, and President Jimmy Carter had issued a proclamation. The U.S. Congress passed a joint resolution declaring Womens History Week in March 1982.[6][7] In 1987, Womens History Week was expanded to a month, with a proclamation from President Ronald Reagan.[8][9]

Ruthsdotter also served as the chair of the Sonoma County Commission on the Status of Women, and worked three years as an aide to state assemblywoman (later state senator) Pat Wiggins. She was a supporter of progressive causes and politicians, including Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey. She backed the creation of a National Women's History Museum on the National Mall in Washington, DC.[10]

After living in Windsor and Santa Rosa, she and her husband were among the founders of the Two Acre Wood cohousing community in Sebastopol, California, where they lived since 2000. Following her retirement in 2004, Ruthsdotter developed multiple myeloma. She died suddenly of congestive heart failure in January 2010.[11]

References

  1. ^ Derek Moore, “Sebastopol Activist Dies at 65,” The Press Democrat, Jan. 12, 2010, p. B1.[1]
  2. ^ Moore, “Sebastopol Activist Dies at 65,” p. B2.
  3. ^ Susan Swartz, “Women honor their past,” The Press Democrat, March 24, 1996, pp. D1.
  4. ^ George Snyder, “Co-founder of Womens History Project dies at 65,” Sonoma West Times & News, Jan. 14-Jan. 20, 2010, pp. A1, A13.
  5. ^ Sara Peyton, “The Way it Was,” The Paper, March 5-18, 1992, p. 11.
  6. ^ Sara Mandelbaum, “Womens History Week,” Ms., March 1983, p. 77.
  7. ^ Bonnie Eisenberg, “National Womens History Week Project Still Growing,” Womens Voices, March 1983, pp. 7, 10.
  8. ^ Sara Peyton, “March is National Womens History Month,” The West Sonoma County Paper, March 9-15, 1989, p. 9.
  9. ^ Linda Berlin, “Putting their Stamp on History,” San Francisco Chronicle, March 5, 1999, pp. NB1-2.
  10. ^ Moore, “Sebastopol Activist Dies at 65,” p. B2.
  11. ^ Snyder, “Co-founder of Womens History Project dies at 65,” p. A13.

External links

  • National Womens History Project[2]
  • Site for tributes to Mary Ruthsdotter[3]

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