Wikipedia:Meetup/Indianapolis/Hoosier Women at Work

Join us for the Hoosier Women at Work edit-a-thon with Indiana Historical Bureau Thursday, November 2nd at the Indiana State Library!

What: Hoosier Women at Work Edit-a-thon

When: Thursday, November 2nd from 11 am–3 pm

Where: Indiana State Library, 4th Floor, 315 W. Ohio Street Indianapolis, IN

Suggested Focus: significant Hoosier women, Indiana women's organizations, Indiana history

What to bring: You preferred editing device (personal computer, tablet) and necessary charging cables.

More information: See the IUPUI project page here: https://cds.ulib.iupui.edu/digitalscholarship/wikipedia

Parking: There is metered parking available on Ohio St. and Senate Ave. There are several downtown garages in walking distance.

RSVP edit

Please sign up below or you can also add your name if you are not attending, but would like to be contacted about future events.

Please sign up on Eventbrite.

Attending

--Biblioamp (talk) 16:35, 3 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Maybe
Regrets

To do edit

Here are a few suggested articles to create or improve during this edit-a-thon, but you are welcome to work on anything you like.
Please note: This is a crowdsourced list. You can help us by adding to it!

Article Sources Notes
Roberta West Nicholson [1][2][3] [4] [5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12] Notable legislator and civic leader.
Amelia R. Keller [13][14] [15][16][17][18][19][20] [21] Notable physician and suffragist.
Kathy Sarris [22][23] [24][25][26][27][28][29] LGBTQ+ activist
Marjorie Kitselman [30][31][32][33][34][35] Aviator, reported to be the youngest pilot in the state in 1932.
Helene Knabe Brea is editing [36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43] Notable physician, scientist, health officer (cold case, murdered with one of her medical instruments in 1911).
Draft:Elizabeth Fletcher Allen. Olivia is working on creating this article! [44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53] Attorney, civil rights activist, first Black woman to be an attorney in Indiana.
Sarah Parke Morrison [54] [55] [56] [57] [58] [59] First woman to be a student & then a professor at Indiana University.
Eleanor P. Barker [60] [61] [62] Attorney, suffragist, head of Indiana's Congressional Union/Woman’s Party.
Draft:Adele Storck this is being edited slowly [63] [64] [65] First woman admitted to the Indianapolis Bar; created a women-owned law firm.
Jessie Levy [66] [67] [68] [69] [70] One of the attorneys that defended the Dillinger Gang.
Hannah Graham (physician) - Jill building in sandbox [71] [72][73] Physician, suffragist, leader of the Equal Suffrage Association in Indiana.
Lucinda Burbank Morton [74] [75] [76] [77] Abolitionist, established the U.S. Sanitary Commission in Indiana.
Blanche McNeeley Wean [78] [79] [80] [81] First woman to enroll in the IU School of Business.
Eugenie Nicholson [82] [83] [84] [85] [86] [87][88][89] Suffragist; vice president of the Woman’s Franchise League of Indiana.
Edna Stillwell [90] [91] [92] [93] [94] [95] [96] [97] [98] Comedian and screenwriter. Key writer for Red Skelton.
Sarah Stockton [99][100][101] Physician at Central State Hospital; suffragist.
Mary Ellen Cable [102] [103] [104] [105] [106] IPS teacher and principal, educator, civic leader, NAACP leader. Established the first "fresh air" classroom for Black students in Indianapolis.
Kate Debs [107] [108] [109] [110][111] [112] Socialist thinker, suffragist in Terre Haute.
Draft:Sarah Wolf Goodman [113][114] [115] [116] [117][118] Civic leader, Jewish community leader, philanthropist. First woman to serve as president of the Jewish Federation of Greater Indianapolis.
Mary Donovan Hapgood [119][120] [121] [122][123] OA version Political leader, labor leader, founder of Indiana Civil Liberties Union.
Alfaretta Hart - Lindsey B Editing [124][125][126] [127] Social reformer, first policewoman of Muncie, opposed prohibition.
Madge Rutherford Minton [128][129][130][131][132][133][134][135] Women’s Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs), biologist and herpetologist. Some of her biography is recounted on Sherman A. Minton.
Mary Rigg - editing, Curious-Researcher219 [136] [137] [138] [139] Social worker for immigrant neighborhoods, namesake for Mary Rigg Neighborhood Center.
Laurel C. Thayer [140][141] [142] [143] Suffragist, reformer, probation officer.
Maria Carmen Velasquez [144][145][146][147][148] Advocate for migrant workers; contributed to the founding of AMOS, subject of a mural in Marion, Indiana.
Carolyn Barnes [149][150][151][152][153][154][155] AKA Carrie Barnes Ross. First president of Branch No. 7, Equal Suffrage Association, Indy's Black ESA Branch.
Rachel Peden [156]not reliable[157][158][159][160][161][162][163][164] Author from rural Indiana.
Hannah Toliver [165][166][167][168][169] Free Black woman who aided escaping enslaved people.
Evangeline Harris [170][171][172] [173][174] [175] Educator, author, and vocalist--created primary reader for Black children.
Roselyn Richardson [176][177][178][179][180][181] Equal rights activist, worked to desegregate IPS and founded the Friends of Indianapolis Urban League.
Sarah M. Wilmer [182][183] [184] [185] [186] Entertainer and WWI nurse.
Indiana Crossdresser Society, IXE [187][188] [189] Social and activist organization for transgender women and gender non-conforming people.
Marie Stuart Edwards [190][191][192] [193] [194] [195] [196] [197] [198] Suffragist and social reformer. President of the Woman’s Franchise League of Indiana.
Mindwell Crampton Wilson [199] [200] [201][202] Journalist, columnist, newspaper owner.
Gertrude Amelia Mahorney [203] [204] [205] first Black Butler grad, translator, and educator
Massaw or Mas-saw [206] [207] [208] [209] [210] Potawatomi leader
Susannah Clark [211] [212] [213] [214] Civil War nurse
Ella Kehrer [215][216][217] humanitarian; founder of hospital
Grace Urbahns finished editing [218] [219] [220] [221] Treasurer of the State of Indiana 1926-1931; Republican Party organizer
Emma Christy Baker [222][223] first woman Indianapolis police officer; juvenile court officer
Mae Dickinson [224][225][226] state legislator; legislation to protect children
Mary Jancosek Bercik [227][228] Mayor of Whiting; first Indiana women to be mayor
Z. Mae Jimison [229][230][231][232][233] [234] Judge; attorney; first Black woman to win major party primary (Indianapolis mayoral race)
Sara Messing Stern-Sheri R. [235] [236] [237] [238] Suffragist; National Council of Jewish Women
Phyllis Fleming [239][240][241] Physicist, physics educator
Ada Harris [242] Civic leader, educator, and entrepreneur
Maddie Coney [243] Civic leader, educator, and municipal beautification leader; related image- [244]
Frances Berry Coston [245] Civic leader, journalist for the Indianapolis News
Jane Dabney Shackelford [246][247] Author, educator; wikidata page
Martha Dicks Stevens [248][249] civil engineer, Purdue's 'first' female engineer
Mary Ellen Bussel Westerfield [250][251] spiritualist, founder of Camp Chesterfield
Hello Girls

[252][253][254][255]

Indiana's WWI switchboard operators includes: Helen Bixby, Bertha A. Carrel, Martha L. Carrel, Elizabeth Marion Shovar

To Improve edit

Article Sources Notes
Helen Corey [256], [257] [258][259][260] Syrian-American cookbook author, political and civic leader; article needs photo of Corey. Create an infobox.
Esther Griffin White [261][262] writer, suffragist; needs photo; create an infobox; add a page description.
Flossie Bailey [263] civil rights and anti-lynching activist; needs photo. Strong article, widely covered person ... look for additional sources.
Vivian Carter [264] record producer and DJ; needs photo
Eliza George [265] Civil War nurse; needs photo
Mary Bidwell Breed [266] IU Dean of women and chemistry professor; needs photo
Marie Goth [267][268][269] Brown County artist, portraitist; needs photo and images of paintings
Ada Walter Shulz [270][271] Brown County artist; needs photo and images of paintings
Mary Hamilton Swindler [272][273] archaeologist, art scholar; page needs more on time in Indiana
Merze Tate [274][275] Scholar of diplomacy, professor; page needs more on time in Indiana
Emma Barrett Molloy [276] women's rights and temperance leader, journalist; needs image
Polly Strong [277][278] enslaved woman successfully sued for freedom; add historical marker. Strong article. Could add in clipping from the legal decision. See 1 or 2.
Mary Bateman Clark [279][280][281][282][283] indentured woman who successfully sued for freedom; add historical marker
Mary Holloway Wilhite [284][285] physician, suffragists; add historical marker and photo of. Strong article.
Earline S. Rogers [286][287][288][289][290] Indiana State Senator; Indiana State Representative; member of Indiana Black Legislative Caucus. Stub. Expand by describing her accomplishments.
Emily Kimbrough [291][292] Best-selling novelist, fashion writer, magazine editor. Add citation for details about her death.
Phyllis Pond [293][294][295][296] Indiana State Representative; education legislation. Expand by describing her accomplishments.
Bertita Carla Camille Leonarz de Harding [297][298][299] Author. Entry uses only one source. Look for others and supplement as needed.
Mary F. Thomas [300][301][302][303] Physician, early suffrage leader. Add image. Add information about historical marker.
Linton, Indiana Lindsey B. [304][305] Include the Linton Telephone Operators Strike in the history section.
Wilma Gibbs Moore [306][307] Historian, empowering educator and mentor, archivist, Black history leader
Mari Evans [308] poet, dramaturg, musician, Black Arts Movement; needs photo

Help us find reliable, secondary sources edit

Article Sources Notes
Sadie Hider [309] Indianapolis community leader of Syrian origin
Julia David [310] Indianapolis community leader of Syrian origin
Ann Zarick [311][312] Indianapolis community leader of Syrian origin
Harriet Noble (suffragist) [313] Suffragist. Treasurer for the Women's School League; field secretary for the Women's Franchise League of Indiana.

Outcomes edit