Radio Blue Heart is on the air!
Forgotten By History

injuries-in-dust:

image
image

Female firefighters at Pearl Harbor (1941).

image

Donna Tobias - the first woman to graduate from the US Navy’s Deep Sea Diving School in 1975.

image

Brave women of the Red Cross hitting the beach at Normandy.

image

Dottie Kamenshek was called the best player in women’s baseball and was once recruited to play for a men’s professional team.

image

Kate Warne - Private Detective. Born in New York City, almost nothing is known of her prior to 1856 when, as a young widow, she answered an employment advertisement placed by Alan Pinkerton.
She was one of four new agents the Pinkerton Detective Agency hired that year and proved to be a natural, taking to undercover work easily. She had taken part in embezzlement and railroad security cases when in 1861 the Pinkertons developed the first lead about an anti-Lincoln conspiracy.

image

Catherine Leroy, female photographer in Vietnam.

image

The three women pictured in this incredible photograph from 1885 – Anandibai Joshi of India, Keiko Okami of Japan, and Sabat Islambouli of Syria – each became the first licensed female doctors in their respective countries.
The three were students at the Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania; one of the only places in the world at the time where women could study medicine.

image

Female Samurai Warrior - Onno-Bugeisha - Female warrior belonging to the Japanese upper class. Many women engaged in battle, commonly alongside samurai men. They were members of the bushi (samurai) class in feudal Japan and were trained in the use of weapons to protect their household, family, and honour in times of war.

image

One of the most feared of all London street gangs from the late 1880’s was a group of female toughs known as the Clockwork Oranges. They woulde later inspire Anthony burgess’ most notorious novel. Their main Rivals were the All-female “the Forty Elephants” gang.

image

Maureen Dunlop de Popp, Pioneering female pilot who flew Spitfires during Second World War. She joined the Air Transport Auxiliary (ATA) in 1942 and became one of a small group of female pilots who were trained to fly 38 types of aircraft.

image

In 1967, Kathrine Switzer was the first woman to run the Boston marathon. After realizing that a woman was running, race organizer Jock Semple went after Switzer shouting, “Get the hell out of my race and give me those numbers.” However, Switzer’s boyfriend and other male runners provided a protective shield during the entire marathon. The photographs taken of the incident made world headlines, and Kathrine later won the NYC marathon with a time of 3:07:29.

  1. koreanbibliophilegirl reblogged this from tang0w0tek
  2. linguinibitchguini reblogged this from radfem-suggestion
  3. buzzkillers reblogged this from ladysantos
  4. coffee-and-seasalt reblogged this from gardentragedy
  5. herehaveafandom reblogged this from sassy-lesbian
  6. cheshiremadd reblogged this from jessilynallendilla
  7. wonder-vixen said: Gang women in suits…kinda hot
  8. pirata27 reblogged this from oldrugger82
  9. oldrugger82 reblogged this from bookbookery
  10. lamentropy reblogged this from spaghetticordez
  11. my-sweet-vxlentine reblogged this from spaghetticordez
  12. spaghetticordez reblogged this from charlesoberonn
  13. injuries-in-dust posted this