2014 -- H 7918 | |
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LC005108 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2014 | |
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H O U S E R E S O L U T I O N | |
CELEBRATING MARCH, 2014, AS "WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH" IN THE STATE OF | |
RHODE ISLAND | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Tomasso, Messier, Hearn, Naughton, and Fellela | |
Date Introduced: March 12, 2014 | |
Referred To: House read and passed | |
1 | WHEREAS, Throughout the history of this great state and our nation, women have |
2 | pursued just and noble goals, significantly contributing to the very bedrock of our history. |
3 | Women faced a unique set of obstacles in having their views recognized and in managing work |
4 | and family, but possessed the strength and initiative to imagine the future's possibilities while still |
5 | handling the enormity of their day-to-day responsibilities. They challenged gender barriers, |
6 | fought inequality, won the right to vote, overcame job discrimination, and gave birth to a more |
7 | enlightened world; and |
8 | WHEREAS, Women such as Rhode Island’s founding mother, Anne Hutchinson, who, |
9 | after being banished from Massachusetts Bay Colony for her views on religious freedom and |
10 | gender equality, helped to settle Aquidneck Island in 1637. This great woman was considered a |
11 | rebel for voicing an alternate view of religion and promoting equality against a male-dominated |
12 | society, whose law was based on church doctrine. She did this over a century before our |
13 | "founding fathers" and at a time when women were chattel and questioning the church was |
14 | unlawful. Her efforts helped to form the cornerstone of Rhode Island and America's historic |
15 | acceptance of equality for the numerous religious beliefs and various cultures that make this |
16 | country great; and |
17 | WHEREAS, Elizabeth Buffum Chace (1806-1899) was often referred to as "the |
18 | conscience of Rhode Island." She battled slavery, fought for women's suffrage, and defended mill |
19 | workers' rights. Abolitionist Christiana Carteaux Bannister (1820-1902) spent her life battling |
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1 | social inequities and prejudice, and rose to become a successful entrepreneur and philanthropist; |
2 | and |
3 | WHEREAS, More recently, some of the great women shaping our state and broadening |
4 | the horizon for all women include the late retired Supreme Court Justice Florence Murray, a |
5 | former legislator who became Rhode Island's first female Chief Judge of the Superior Court in |
6 | 1978, and the first woman to become a member of the Rhode Island Supreme Court in November |
7 | 1999. Senator Lila M. Sapinsley was the first female Minority Leader in Rhode Island. Known |
8 | as a true "Grande Dame" of Rhode Island Democratic politics, the late Honorable Eleanor F. |
9 | Slater was a former Rhode Island State Representative and State Senator who significantly |
10 | contributed to Rhode Island's elderly and fair housing laws. Most recently, the Honorable Senator |
11 | M. Teresa Paiva Weed became and currently serves as the first woman President of the Rhode |
12 | Island Senate; and |
13 | WHEREAS, Our foremothers have often been unsung heroines who sacrificed and |
14 | endured immense hardships in order to build a robust and equitable nation, and their efforts have |
15 | paved the way for all women, in every walk of life, to succeed and be recognized; and |
16 | WHEREAS, Women have demonstrated accomplishments in sports, industry, and the |
17 | arts, including Mary Katherine Goddard and her widowed mother, who became publishers of the |
18 | Providence Gazette newspaper, making them the first women publishers in America; Mary Kies, |
19 | the first woman to receive a patent; Elizabeth Blackwell, the first women to receive a medical |
20 | degree in the United States; Rebecca Lee Crumpler, the first black woman to receive an M.D. |
21 | degree; Arabella Mansfield, the first women granted admission to practice law, making her the |
22 | first woman lawyer; Edith Wharton, the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for fiction; Gertrude |
23 | Ederle, the first woman to swim across the English Channel; Amelia Earhart, the first woman to |
24 | fly solo across the Atlantic; Muriel "Mickey" Siebert, the first woman to own a seat on the New |
25 | York Stock Exchange; Pearl S. Buck, the first women to receive the Nobel Prize in literature; |
26 | Rosa Parks, whose brave refusal to yield her seat on a bus ignited the civil rights movement; and |
27 | Diane Crump, the first female jockey to ride in the Kentucky Derby, have helped to strengthen |
28 | and enrich this nation; and |
29 | WHEREAS, Great women in government such as Victoria Claflin Woodhull, who was |
30 | the first woman presidential candidate in the United States; Susanna Medora Salter, the first |
31 | woman elected mayor of an American town; Jeannette Rankin, the first woman to be elected to |
32 | the U.S. House of Representatives; and Sandra Day O'Connor, the first woman Justice of the |
33 | Supreme Court, have all helped to mold and shape our democracy; and |
34 | WHEREAS, Let us also never forget all the brave Rhode Island women and women |
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1 | across America who have served and are serving in the United States military, facing grave |
2 | dangers, and whose actions are courageous and noble beyond words; and |
3 | WHEREAS, Women have thoroughly encompassed every undertaking, advancement, |
4 | and triumph, historically and currently attained in this country, and the magnificent women from |
5 | Rhode Island's past played a major role in sculpting Rhode Island's history. They are all truly |
6 | deserving of our recognition and praise; now, therefore be it |
7 | RESOLVED, That this House of Representatives of the State of Rhode Island and |
8 | Providence Plantations hereby recognizes the month of March, 2014, as "Women’s History |
9 | Month" and proclaims such in the State of Rhode Island. We invite the citizens of the state to join |
10 | us in celebrating the myriad of contributions women have made in our state and nation's history; |
11 | and be it further |
12 | RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and he hereby is authorized and directed to |
13 | transmit duly certified copies of this resolution to the League of Women Voters, the Rhode Island |
14 | Commission on Women, the Rhode Island Chapter of the National Organization of Women, and |
15 | the Rhode Island General Assembly Women's Caucus. |
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LC005108 | |
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