Notable events in the history of women, courtesy of Encyclopedia Britannica online edition.
1800
The U.S. logs the highest birth rate worldwide, 7.04 children per woman.
1833
Oberlin Collegiate Institute (later Oberlin College) is founded in Ohio as the first American college to admit men and women on an equal basis.
1893
Largely through the efforts of suffragist Kate Sheppard, New Zealand becomes the first country to grant women the right to vote.
1900
British tennis player Charlotte Cooper wins the first women’s gold medal at the Olympics.
1904
In French law, women are no longer permanent minors.
1908
A group of women storm the British Parliament demanding suffrage. Twenty-four of them are arrested.
1909
In New York, shirtwaist factory workers go on strike. The International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union and the Women’s Trade Union League work together in support of the strike.
1911
Marie Curie is awarded the Nobel Prize for chemistry for the isolation of pure radium.
1912
Juliette Gordon Low founds the Girl Guides (later Girl Scouts) in the United States. By 1927 there will be a troop in every state.
1913
Norwegian women win the right to vote. In 1915, Danish women win the right to vote.
1914
In Russia, Princess Eugenie Shakhovskaya is the first female military pilot. She flies reconnaissance missions.
1917
The United States Navy hires 12,000 women as clerks in the same job classifications and for the same pay as men. This is so that it can send men overseas.
1918
Canadian and British women are granted the right to vote, although in Great Britain a woman must be over age 30.
The U.S. government reports that 1.4 million women work in war industries. After World War I these women are forced out of industrial work.
1920
The Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is signed into law, giving women the right to vote.
Despite death threats from the Ku Klux Klan, Mary McLeod Bethune begins a voter registration drive for African American women.
The University of Oxford admits its first full-degree female students.
1945
More than six million American women who entered the workforce during World War II are pushed out of their traditionally male jobs at the war’s end.
1975
The U.S. Supreme Court rules that women cannot be excluded from juries because of their sex.
1986
The U.S. Supreme Court upholds affirmative action on the basis of race or gender.
2002
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her Golden Jubilee, marking 50 years on the throne.
2016
Hillary Rodham Clinton is the democratic nominee to run for President of the United States of America.