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Category: Birth Locations

622) Rebecca Peterman

622: Rebecca Peterman

Union Soldier Who Fought With the 7th Wisconsin Infantry During the War Between the States

Born: c. 1846, Location Unknown

Death Date Unknown, as is Location

Also Known As: Georgianna Peterman

Rebecca enlisted in 1862 at the age of sixteen. She fought at the Battles of Antietam and South Mountain.

Escaping the battles unscathed, she served as a drummer boy, and she picketed and scouted—continuing to serve after her brother was killed in 1862.

Rebecca was eventually wounded above the temple at Gettysburg but would survive her injuries. After the war, she fades from history.

Badges Earned:

Located In My Personal Library:

They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the Civil War by DeAnne Blanton and Lauren M Cook

Sources:

https://southmountaincw.wordpress.com/category/south-mountain/

http://civilwarsaga.com/female-soldiers-at-the-battle-of-antietam/

http://digital.graphcompubs.com/article/Civil+War+Journal/1161864/124480/article.html

621) Catherine E Davidson

"The finger that used to wear that ring will never wear it again. The hand is dead but the soldier lives on."

-Catherine to the Pennsylvania Governor After he tried to return the ring she gave him after he carried her off the battlefield

621: Catherine E Davidson

Union Soldier of the Ohio 28th Infantry During the War Between the States

Birth and Death Dates Unknown, as are Locations

Catherine fought in the battles of Antietam and South Mountain. She was wounded in the arm severely but would survive after receiving a partial amputation.

It’s been reported her fiancé was killed in the battle and Catherine was carried off the field by the Governor of Pennsylvania at the time.

Her gender was discovered because of her wound and she was not allowed to reenlist. After that, Catherine fades back into the pages of history.

Badges Earned:

Located In My Personal Library:

They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the Civil War by DeAnne Blanton and Lauren M Cook

Sources:

http://civilwarsoldierwomen.blogspot.com/2011/01/catherine-davidson.html

https://southmountaincw.wordpress.com/category/south-mountain/

620) Clara Quintanilla

Courtesy of El Pais

620: Clara Quintanilla

Art Restorer

Birth Date Unknown, as is Location

Died: 29 October 2016, Most Likely Madrid, Spain

The little we know about Clara tells us she worked for the Museo del Prado in Madrid, Spain.

Clara restored over two hundred paintings at the museum during the thirty-four years she worked there.

Sources:

https://spanishbaroqueart.tumblr.com/post/152873418827/in-memoriam-clara-quintanilla-clara-quintanilla

https://gallerix.org/news/world/201211/v-prado-vystavlena-otrestavrirovannaya-kartina-ticiana-san-xuan-bautista/

https://english.elpais.com/elpais/2012/11/09/inenglish/1352488463_820161.html

https://www.museodelprado.es/aprende/enciclopedia/voz/restauracion-en-el-museo-del-prado/6aee105c-9c94-4ef8-a726-de393fd7eaea?searchMeta=clara%20quintanilla

619) Marianne Cope

Courtesy of The Catholic Travel Guide

To see the infinite pity of this place,
The mangled limb, the devastated face,
The innocent sufferers smiling at the rod,
A fool were tempted to deny his God.

He sees, and shrinks; but if he look again,
Lo, beauty springing from the breast of pain!—
He marks the sisters on the painful shores,
And even a fool is silent and adores.

Robert Louis Stevenson
Kalawao, May 22, 1889

619: Marianne Cope

Helped Hawaiian Hansen's Disease Patients and was known as the Leprosy Saint

Born: 23 January 1838, Heppenheim an der Bergstrasse, Kreis Bergstraße, Hessen, Germany

Died: 9 August 1918, Kalaupapa, Hawaii, United States of America

Also Known As: Saint Marianne of Moloka’i

Birth Name: Maria Anna Barbara Koob

Marianne has been a Roman Catholic Saint since 2012.

Before she became a nun, Marianne left school after the eighth grade to help care for her family. Her father had become an invalid and so she began working in a factory. When her father died in 1862, Marianne was free to enter a life focused on her religion.

She took her post in Hawaii at the age of forty-five after already spending twenty-one years in various positions and roles as a nun. Over the years, she had already worked to teach German immigrants, open various hospitals, and even worked as a principal for a school in New York. It was at one of her hospitals that Marianne granted patients the right to refuse care or treatment. This radical approach to bodily autonomy was almost unheard of in the medical field.

In 1883, Marianne agreed to help the people of Hawaii after they had been turned down by fifty other religious institutions. In November of that year, she and six other nuns arrived in Hawaii.

Marianne arrived in time to care for Father Damien before his death. You can read more about him by clicking his name to link to his own biographical page.

Marianne helped in the founding of schools and orphanages across four islands and never contracted leprosy herself, living to the age of eighty and surviving kidney disease and being confined to a wheelchair.

Marianne was honored in a poem by Robert Louis Stevenson.

Today, Marianne’s feast day is January 23rd. She is seen as a patron to those with Hansen’s Disease, HIV/AIDS, and other outcasts of society.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Sources:

https://www.franciscanmedia.org/saint-marianne-cope/

https://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=7727

https://sosf.org/our-history/st-marianne-cope/

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8657679/marianne-cope

618) Clementine Churchill

Courtesy of the Churchill Book Collector

618: Clementine Churchill

So Much More Than Winston’s Wife

Born: 1 April 1885, Mayfair, Westminster, London, United Kingdom

Died: 12 December 1977, Knightsbridge, London, United Kingdom

Nobody knows for certain who Clementine’s father was (her aristocratic parents were notorious for having affairs and hating one another, and her “father” left her mother when she was six). The man who was most likely Clementine’s biological father happened to be her uncle, her mother’s sister’s husband. Clementine’s aunt and the wife of her possible father was also named Clementine, making this already twisted family tree just a bit more confusing.

After Clementine’s mother became divorced from Clementine’s “father” (at least in legalese), Clementine and her older sister went to live with their “father’s” sister, who evidently thought the best way to discipline a child was through a whip. Luckily the arrangement didn’t last long, and soon Clementine was being raised by a governess. She never had quite enough food and lived very modestly. This stark contrast to the way her future husband was raised would be invaluable in Winston’s political future.

Eventually, Clementine was returned to her mother. Though her mother’s ex-husband refused to pay for any of the bills, so Clementine’s struggles with money were far from over. Eventually, her mother moved Clementine and the other children to France, where their hardships continued, albeit away from the prying eye of the British aristocracy. After a few years of this, Clementine’s “father” paid a visit and, I kid you not, literally tried to kidnap Clementine and drag her back to England. Luckily Clementine was able to escape.

After Clementine’s beloved older sister Kitty died, the family returned to England. It was here that Clementine was enrolled in grammar school. Her teacher would encourage Clementine to take up a variety of causes, including raising money for the poor, championing suffrage (something Clementine was eventually able to get Winston to support, despite his own mother Jeanette’s beliefs), and use her big beautiful brain to think of politics and other things beyond the role of a normal housewife.

Clementine hoped to continue her studies at university, but her mother would have none of it. Clementine was now a beautiful young woman and would be her mother’s ticket back into high society. Losing that ticket to a university education simply would not do. She received so many hopeful queries from suitors Nellie, Clementine’s sister, kept them in files labeled “Rejected” “Pending” and “Accepted.” In fact, Clementine was engaged three times (twice to the same man) but she broke off each of her own accord, wanting to marry someone exciting and, well, not boring.

By 1908, Clementine was teaching French to earn money, and was worried she would never marry at all. One night, she accepted an invitation to a dinner party. Guess who also happened to be in attendance? Winston Churchill. Six months later, they were married, and would stay married for fifty-seven years, until Winston passed away.

In 1909, Clementine saved her husband’s life after a Suffragette tried to push him in front of a moving train. She had to literally grab him by his coattails as he went spinning towards the tracks, but she did it, Winston survived. In fact, she helped him through his entire career and personal troubles and should be remembered for it.

However, their marriage was far from perfect. One time, Clementine even flung a plate of spinach at Winston after they fought over money. Clementine was also much more liberally minded to Winston’s conservative views, and both parties suffered from frequent time spent apart. The stress was so much that Clementine suffered at least one mental breakdown, but nothing kept her down long.

During World War One, Clementine organized canteens to raise munitions for soldiers through the Young Men’s Christian Association in London. During World War II, she served as the Chairman of the Red Cross Aid to Russia fund, the President of the Young Women’s Christian Association War Time Appeal and the Chairwoman of Fulmer Chase Maternity Hospital for Wives of Junior Officers.

Clementine held three honorary degrees (from Oxford, Glasgow, and Bristol University).

Of Clementine and Winston’s five children: one daughter died aged two, one daughter committed suicide, their son grappled with suicide attempts and depression, and one daughter married three times (once without her parents’ knowledge). The only child to grow up without any public struggles was their daughter Mary, and this was because she was born after Marigold’s death at the age of two. Mary was raised by her parents and was shown love and affection. The older children, Sarah, Diana, and Randolph, all struggled as shown above.

She was a member of the British aristocracy, Baroness Clementine Spencer-Churchill, and was named a Dame Order of the British Empire in 1946. Clementine was even a member of the House of Lords.

Clementine hated publicity and became a bit reclusive in the twelve years she lived after Winston’s death.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

Clementine: The Life of Mrs. Winston Churchill by Sonia Purnell

Consuelo and Alva Vanderbilt: The Story of a Daughter and a Mother in the Gilded Age by Amanda Mackenzie Stuart

The Roosevelts and the Royals by Will Swift

Sources:

https://winstonchurchill.org/publications/finest-hour/finest-hour-175/women-churchill-loved-clementine/

https://www.history.com/news/meet-the-woman-behind-winston-churchill
https://www.npr.org/2015/12/31/461480007/how-clementine-churchill-wielded-influence-as-winstons-wife

https://www.historyextra.com/period/second-world-war/clementine-churchill-facts-winston-churchill-wife/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clementine_Churchill#World_War_I

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/10487320/clementine-ogilvy-churchill

617) Rachel Weisz

Courtesy of Wikipedia

617: Rachel Weisz

Academy Award Winning Actress

Born: 7 March 1970, Westminster, London, United Kingdom

Rachel is best remembered for her roles in The Mummy franchise, Constantine, and other feature films and television programs.

Before she was an actress, Rachel started modeling at the age of fourteen.

She has one son from a former relationship and a daughter with current husband Daniel Craig.

Rachel should also be noted for her portrayals of Hypatia of Alexandria in the film Agora and for her portrayal of Deborah Lipstadt in Denial.

In 2020, Rachel will officially enter the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the film Black Widow.

Sources:

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001838/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Rachel-Weisz

616) Malala Yousafzai

Courtesy of the Nobel Prize

“This award is not just for me. It is for those forgotten children who want education. It is for those frightened children who want peace. It is for those voiceless children who want change.”

616: Malala Yousafzai

Activist and Nobel Peace Prize Winner

Born: 12 July 1997, Mingora, Pakistan

Malala is also the youngest recipient of the Nobel—receiving it when she was seventeen years old.

Malala was raised in a small village in Pakistan, where her father worked as a teacher and ran a school for girls. Everything changed in 2008, when the Taliban took control of her village and closed the school.

When she was eleven, Malala started a blog for the BBC under a false name to chronicle what life living under the Taliban was like. Not only were girls barred from attending school, but the Taliban also enforced other harsh rules, like no longer allowing people to watch television or listen to the radio. They couldn’t even dance or partake in other cultural activities.

Malala refused to take this new way of life lying down. She began speaking out across the country, advocating and fighting for the right for girls to attend school. By the end of 2008, the Taliban had destroyed over four hundred schools, and showed no signs of stopping. In 2009, Malala and her family became IDPs, or Internally Displaced Persons, by Pakistan’s war against the Taliban, before being able to return home and continuing her activism.

When she was fifteen, Malala was shot in the head and shoulder by a member of the Taliban because of her activism. She woke up ten days later in a hospital in Birmingham, England. Incredibly she was still alive.

After her shooting, Pakistan introduced their first Right to Education Bill and a $10 Million education fund in her honor, but by then Malala and her family had relocated to the United Kingdom permanently. It was after months of rehabilitation and numerous surgeries that Malala was able to open Malala Fund, a charity that is dedicated to ensuring women can receive any kind of schooling they wish. Her goal is to ensure every girl can receive twelve years of quality education.

When she was eighteen, Malala opened a girl’s school for Syrian refugees in Lebanon. In 2018, she began attending Oxford University. Malala has also published two books and worked on various documentaries.

Badges Earned:

Located In My Personal Library:

The Book of Awesome Women: Boundary Breakers, Freedom Fighters, Sheroes, and Female Firsts by Becca Anderson

Time Magazine's 100 Women of the Year (Malala appears in the 2009 article, "Malala Yousafzai”)

Sources:

https://malala.org/malalas-story

https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/peace/2014/yousafzai/biographical/

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Malala-Yousafzai

615) Antoinette Tuff

Courtesy of NPR

615: Antoinette Tuff

Stopped an Active School Shooter

Born: c.1967

Antoinette did this by literally convincing him to give her his AK-47—making it the only case of a school shooting in the United States that ended with zero deaths or injuries.

Antoinette now teaches seminars on hostage negotiations and how to deal with other stressful situations. She is a mother to one son.

She was a guest of Michelle Obama at the State of the Union in 2014.

Antoinette has a Lifetime movie based on her story called “Faith Under Fire”. She also wrote a memoir entitled Prepared For a Purpose: The Inspiring True Story of How One Woman Saved an Atlanta School Under Siege.

Sources:

https://antoinettetuff.com/meet-antoinette/

https://www.cnn.com/2013/08/22/us/georgia-school-shooting-hero/index.html

https://www.npr.org/2014/01/31/268417580/how-one-womans-faith-stopped-a-school-shooting

Entries Born in Somalia

These are the entries born in the country of Somalia, or entries born within the modern-day boundaries of Somalia.

Entries:

  • Arawelo, The First Feminist Ruler in History
  • Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Free Speech Advocate Who Fights Against FGM & Honor Killings
  • Dr. Hawa Abdi, Humanitarian, Doctor, and Badass Who Fights off Somali Militias

614) Dr. Hawa Abdi

Courtesy of Vital Voices

“When the war broke out, many people fled from Mogadishu. I welcomed them. It was not planned. It just happened. It became a big camp, which reached 90,000 people. The situation was critical. People were suffering, women were delivering their babies in the road. It was a danger for the mother’s life and the child’s life. So, people came to me. I thought I could be useful.”

614: Dr. Hawa Abdi

“One Part Mother Teresa, One Part Rambo”

Born: 17 May 1947, Mogadishu, Somalia

Died: 5 August 2020, Mogadishu, Somalia

Hawa was best remembered for fighting Somali Militias.

When she wasn't out putting Militias in their place; Hawa was an advocate, humanitarian, and doctor.

She was once described as “One Part Mother Teresa One Part Rambo.”

Hawa was also one of the first female OBGYN’s in Somalia (which is even more impressive seeing as the country works under Sharia Law). In 1971, she officially became the first gynecologist in Somalia.

The Dr. Hawa Abdi Foundation provides healthcare, education, access to sanitation, and shelter to hundreds of displaced Somali families. Hawa opened the foundation and had been operating Hope Village just outside Mogadishu since 1983, on her family’s ancestral lands.

In 1991, Somalia devolved into civil war, and Hawa stepped in to help. She converted her one room clinic into a fully functioning hospital. 90,000 people fled to her compound for safety. She even established a school with over eight hundred students. The compound is operated by Hawa’s two daughters: Deqo and Amina. They state that in order to live on the compound you must abide by two rules. Number one—they do not recognize any clans or political distinctions; everyone must work together. And two—any man who beats his wife is thrown in prison.

In 1993, when United States President George HW Bush visited Somalia (the first and as of 2020 only US president to visit the country), Hawa was the first Somalian the president was introduced to.

In 2010, Islamic militia members took control of her hospital and held Hawa and her nurses hostage. Not only did she kick them to the curb, Hawa also demanded and received an apology letter from the militants. They tried to attack again in 2012 and were similarly forced out.

In 2012, Hawa was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, but she was not awarded it. She was also an author and has given a TED Talk, which is linked in this article.

Sources:

https://www.vitalvoices.org/people/hawa-abdi/

https://face2faceafrica.com/article/the-heroic-hawa-abdi-one-of-somalias-first-female-obstetricians-who-saved-thousands-during-the-civil-war

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/06/obituaries/hawa-abdi-dead.html 

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