WE THE WOMEN: THE HIDDEN HEORES WHO SHAPED AMERICA By Norah O’Donnell

Women’s History Month, celebrated annually in March, honors the contributions of women to American history, culture, and society. Originating from a local California celebration in 1978, it grew into a national observance in 1987, featuring notable figures like Harriet Tubman, Amelia Earhart, and Rosa Parks. The month includes International Women’s Day on March 8.”

To celebrate Women’s History Month, I read Nora O’Donnell and Kate Andersen Brower’s We the Women: The Hidden Heroes Who Shaped America (2026). I confess: I was unfamiliar with many of the important women listed in the early chapters of this book. Fascinating nonetheless!

I did know all the women in the last section of the book–recency bias perhaps. But my favorite chapter in We the Women was Chapter 24: Agnes Meyer Driscoll: The Code Breaker. What an amazing woman! She was born in 1889 and excelled at mathematics, music, and physics. She was proficient in five languages: German, French, Latin, Japanese, and English. Driscoll worked for the Director for Navel Communication in the Code an Signal Section in Washington, D.C. during World War I. She became one of the first Navel instructors in the field of cryptography.

During World War II, Driscoll worked on cracking the German and Nazi codes. “In 1959, just before her retirement at the age of seventy, Agnes received her final assignment: to decode a set of ‘unreadable’ messages that others in her section had found impossible to solve. Two weeks later, she figured it out. Of course she did!” (p. 202)

Norah O’Donnell honors the many women who have made the cause of Women’s Rights key to success and freedom in America. Although the battle continues, my allegiance is with the women and not the stupid men who run this country right now. GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction — 3

Part 1: The first fifty years : the women behind America’s fight for independence, 1776-1826

  1. Mary Katherine Goddard: The Printer — 13
  2. Phillis Wheatley: The Poet — 18
  3. Mercy Otis Warren: The Intellectual — 25
  4. Elizabeth Ellet: The Historian — 32
  5. Elizabeth Freeman: The Freedom Seeker — 39
  6. Deborah Sampson: The War Fighter — 46
  7. Patience Lovell Wright: The Sculptor — 51

Part 2: Risk takers and rulebreakers : Seneca Falls and the Civil War, 1826-1876

8. The Grimke Sister: The Truth Tellers — 67

9. Charlotte Forten: The Abolitionist — 76

10. The Women of Seneca Falls: The Signers — 83

11. The Blackwell Sister: The Doctors — 95

12. Dr. Mary Edwards Walker: The Medal of Honor Recipient — 103

13. Susan and Susette La Flesche: The Advocates — 111

14. Anna Dickinson: The Orator — 118

15. Belva Lockwood: The Lawyer — 121

Part 3: Blood, sweat, and tears : the Gilded Age and the great demand : 1876-1926

16. Emily Warren Roebling: The Builder — 143

17. Katharine Wright: The Aviator — 151

18. Inez Milholland, The Suffragist — 157

19. Maggie Lena Walker: The Titan of Finance — 164

20. Mary Tape: The Determined Mother — 170

21. Zitkala-Sa: — The Writer — 175

22. The Hello Girls of World War I: The Operators — 182

23. The Ninetieth Amendment: The Vote — 190

24. Agnes Never Driscoll: The Codebreaker — 198

25. Margaret Sander and Katharine McCormick: The Birth Control Pioneers — 205

Part IV: Warriors, rebels, and visionaries : women at war at home and abroad, 1926-1976

26. Mary McLeod Bethune: The First Lady of the Struggle — 220

27. Eleanor Roosevelt: The Great “Agitator” — 232

28. Frances Perkins: The Cabinet Member — 245

29. The Six Triple Eight: The Soldiers — 252

30. The New Orleans Four: The Barrier Breakers —258

31. Romana Acosta Banuelos: The Treasurer — 267

32. Babe Didrikson: “The Greatest Athlete Who Ever Lived” — 273

33. Patsy Mink: The Mother of Title IX — 280

34. Pat Schroeder: The Legislator — 287

35. Constance Baker Motley: The Judge — 296

Part V:  My lifetime : women’s progress in America, 1976-today

Acknowledgements — 327

Photo Credits — 333

Notes — 337

Index — 397

17 thoughts on “WE THE WOMEN: THE HIDDEN HEORES WHO SHAPED AMERICA By Norah O’Donnell

  1. Todd Mason

    “…excelled at mathematics, music, and physics”–these three do tend to cluster in some fortunate people. The languages as well is, I suspect, rarer…but clearly she was destined for cryptography.

    Seems like at least a good survey of underappreciated people, and perhaps a few who have gotten more of their due attention and respect. Patsy Mink, who put herself in contention in 1972, along with Shirley Chisolm, for the Dem nomination for US Pres/VP…both would’ve been better candidates than McGovern, in several ways. Even if the US electorate in ’72 might have had difficulty with them. In my time in Hawaii, she was only elected to the Honolulu City Council, and I voted for her. My term in the U Hawaii student Senate overlapped with her term in the HCC, between her two stretches in the US House.

    And, of course, even Nixon was closer to sanity than Drumpf.

    Reply
  2. Jeff Meyerson

    You know you’re in trouble when your Secretary of Defense, sorry, War, is President of the He-Man Woman Haters Club.

    What a sad, pathetic lot they are.

    Reply
  3. Todd Mason

    And, George, do you hear from very many who find they are getting a lack of security warning from you blog’s address for not having the https// prefix? Using Alice’s computer (so that I can post Anything on Jerry’s) means I always get the warning if I come over to post on yours.

    I’ve just had a discussion with Alice as to whether Hegseth is even more stupid than Mullen…I think of Mullen as a lunkhead, but not quite as malignant as either Drumpf or Hegseth, even if my fellow partial Cherokee who looks pretty Caucasian is a bit too ready for a fistfight if flustered. As was the Teamster he was annoyed by.

    Hegseth brings all and any heat he suffers on himself, as a blithering fool (and unsurprisingly someone who fantasizes he’s better than others, when he’s a drunken dumbass whose contempt for women might even exceed Drumpf’s…albeit Drumpf holds any non-worshiper of himself in contempt., along with his idolators, to a slightly lesser extent). Finally have access to my online accounts again.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Todd, I’ll check with Patrick over the security warnings. Trump surrounds himself with fools and wonders why everything is turning to shit.

      Reply
      1. george Post author

        Todd, driving the U.S. into bankruptcy looks likely when Trump spends a Billion dollars a day on this stupid war.

    1. george Post author

      Bob, I’m sure Norah O’Donnell didn’t want WE THE WOMEN banned because it included Margo St. James in it. We live in the Age of Self-Censorship.

      Reply
      1. Cap'n Bob

        I’m not so sure! There’s porno of every stripe available and TV shows contain rough language and situations! I noticed a commercial today in which a man happily applied deodorant! Katy Winters would be apoplectic at the very idea!

      2. Todd Mason

        Seems to me that even with her transphobia, J. K. Rowling is still more decried and removed by those claiming to represent the religious right. There is some hostility from censorious feminists to certain books, but none of that gets such widespread support from the widest range of feminists…while some of the loudest complaints from the right usually have widespread support except among the more libertarian rightiists.

        The Rs could use a few more Thomas Massies. https://archive.ph/XBFKy

      3. george Post author

        Todd, all movements fracture along ideological lines. The ones who can repair the rifts tend to be most successful.

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