01-16 TABLE of CONTENTS:
Rosetta Wakeman, Civil War Soldier
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTES by
Felice N. Schwartz and Margaret Sanger.
Rosetta Wakeman, Civil War Soldier
Born 01-16-1843, Sara
Rosetta Wakeman, aka Lyons/Edwin Wakeman died while with the 153rd NYSV,
Co. G&H, as a regular soldier in the Civil War. Her letters, a
photo in uniform identifying her, and some personal belongings were found
in a trunk in the family attic almost 100 years after her death.
Her war record was found
under the name of Lyons Wakeman. Her last letter was from Brandycore Landing,
Louisiana, "Made advance up the river
about 40 miles to Pleasant Hill - had a fight. Retreated 10 miles, next
day the fight resumed at 8."
While on guard duty at
Cairo Prison in 1863 she had written of a female Union prisoner who had
gone into battle as a Major leading her men. The ring she wore, which was
inscribed "Rosetta Wakeman, NY Vol. Co.
H, 153rd," was sent home after her death
in the Marine U.S. Army General Hospital in New Orleans. She had been hospitalized
for chronic diarrhea, a major killer of soldiers during the Civil War.
She is buried in grave
#4066, Section 52, of what is now the Chalmette National Cemetery, Chalmette,
LA.
| PRIOR DATE |
| HOME |
| WOA INDEX |
| NEXT DATE |
| RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE
|
01-16 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
B. 01-16-1901, Laura Riding, American poet
and critic who influenced a generation in pre-World War II with her
style and composition verve.
B. 01-16-1909, Ethel Merman (Ethel Zimmerman),
one of the great American entertainers, whose 29-year Broadway and
screen career went from hit to hit, starting with Girl Crazy (1930)
and going on to Gypsy (1959) with a stop in 1951 to win the Tony
for her work in Call Me Madame. She is probably best known for the
show-stopping "There's No Business Like Show Business" from the
1954 show of the same name. EM was awarded the 1972 Tony for her overall
distinguished work on behalf of the Broadway theatre. Brassy, exuberant,
and energetic, her strong song styling was once described as having "a
trumpet in her throat." Won the New York
critics award three times.
B. 01-16-1925, Felice N. Schwartz , founding
president of Catalyst, a company that worked with businesses to effect
changes for women and created Felice N. Schwartz Fund for the Advancement
of Women in Business and Profession.
"...the cost of
employing women in management is greater than the cost of employing men...The
greater cost of employing women is not a function of inescapable gender
differences. Women are different from men, but what increase their cost
to the corporation is principally the class of their perceptions, attitude,
and behavior with those men, which is to say, with the policies and practices
of male-led corporations."
She authored Breaking
with Tradition (1992.)
B. 01-16-1932, Dian Fossey, American zoologist
became the world's leading authority on the mountain gorillas of Africa.
Founded the Karisoke Research Centre for the study of gorillas. Wrote the
noted study, Gorillas in the Mist which was made into a Hollywood
movie. She was murdered in 1985 evidentally for her conservation measures
on behalf of the gorillas.
B. 01-16-1933, Susan Sontag, American writer,
critic, and novelist known for her reflections on modern culture. She
draws amazing parallels between Nazi terrorism and the swing to the philosophical
right in American culture. In her critical essays, she has disagreed with
many of the simplistic outlooks on life by the leaders of many modern American
movements including feminism.
B. 01-16-1934, Marilyn Horne, debuted with
Metropolitan Opera in 1970. In 1984 Horne was the only living artist
on the New York Times' list of nine "all-time,
all-star singers in the Met's 100 years." National
Medal of Arts from President Bush. MH was noted for her seamless delivery
with an exceptional range and flexibility. Like many powerful women in
opera, she revived a number of "forgotten" operas.
Event 01-16-1935, Kate 'Ma' Barker, organizer
and probably the brains of the notorious Barker-Karpis criminal gang,
killed in gun battle with FBI.
Event 01-16-1957, Columbia University announces
that a basic law of physics - the conservation of parity - is disproved
by Dr. Chien Shiung Wu, a China-born nuclear physicist. A participant
in the Manhattan Project and an expert on beta decay and weak interactions,
Dr. Wu later worked to find a cure for sickle-cell anemia. She believed
that "even the most sophisticated and
seemingly remote basic nuclear physics research has implications beneficial
to human welfare."
The law of conservation
of parity held that a phenomenon of nature is symmetrical and looks the
same whether observed directly or in a mirror with left and right reversed.
Dr. Wu devised the experiment for theoretical physicists Tsung-Dao Lee
and Chen Ning Yang, who suggested the parity principle would not apply
when dealing with weak interactions of subatomic particles.
On the basis of Dr. Wu's
work, Drs. Lee and Yang theory was proved and were awarded the Nobel Prize.
Dr. Wu got nothing. Chien-Shiung was the American Association of University
Women's 1962, Woman of the Year. In 1964, Wu (born in 1912 and who received
her Ph.D. physics degree from Berkeley) would be acclaimed as the first
female winner of the National Academy of Sciences' Comstock Prize.
Event: 01-16-1978, The newly created post of
"Mission Specialists" was created by NASA and six women appointed
to fill the posts. It marked the first time NASA had recognized women.
Early in the program, NASA held secret training tests for women and were
shocked into stopping the tests when the women scored higher than the male
astronauts such as John Glenn in the same tests. The high test results
of women was finally admitted to US Congressional probers by NASA in the
mid 1970's.
Finally on February 5, 1995, an American woman astronaut
Eileen Collins was co-pilot on
a space mission.
| PRIOR DATE |
| HOME |
| WOA INDEX |
| NEXT DATE |
| RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE
|
QUOTES DU JOUR
SCHWARTZ, FELICE N.:
"...The cost of employing
women in management is greater than the cost of employing men...The greater
cost of employing women is not a function of inescapable gender differences.
Women are different from men, but what increases their cost to the corporation
is principally the class of their perceptions, attitude, and behavior with
those men, which is to say, with the politicks and practices of male-led
corporations."
-- Felice
N. Schwartz
SANGER, MARGARET:
"I was enough of a
feminist to resent the fact that woman and her requirements were not being
taken into account in reconstructing this new world about which all were
talking. They (the labor movement leaders) were failing to consider the
quality of life itself."
--
Margaret Sanger in her Autobiography.
| PRIOR DATE |
| HOME |
| WOA INDEX |
| NEXT DATE |
| RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE
|
|