Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Meetup/298

    Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR)!
    Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our project's scope is women's representation on all language Wikipedias (biographies, women's works, women's issues, broadly construed). Did you know that, according to Humaniki, only 19.81% of the English Wikipedia's biographies are about women? Not impressed? Content gender gap is a form of systemic bias, and this is what WiR addresses. We invite you to participate, whenever you like, in whatever way suits you and your schedule. Editors of all genders are equally and warmly welcome at Women in Red!
    Black women editathon
    Online event
    February 2024
    Meetup298
    TypeEdit-a-thon
    SeriesBlack women
    CategoryWikiProject Women in Red meetup 298 articles
    Use social media to promote our work!
    FacebookWiki Women in Red
    Twitter@wikiwomeninred
    Instagram@wikiwomeninred
    PinterestFebruary-2024-editathons
    Hashtag#wikiwomeninred
    Add to articles
    Authority controlAuthority control should be included at the foot of every biography: {{Authority control}}. It will remain hidden until relevant identifiers have been added to Wikidata.
    CategoriesChoose applicable categories including relevant subcategories of Category:Women.
    StubIf applicable, add stub template at the foot of an article: {{stub}}.
    Add to article talk pages
    {{WikiProject Biography}}
    {{WikiProject Women}} if born after 1950; or {{WikiProject Women's History}} if born before 1950.
    Editathon banner: {{WIR|298}}
    Black women
    February 2024
    Recently completed: Alphabet run: Q & R Art+Feminism Find Her
    April 2024: Alphabet run: S & T Gender studies Health
    Ongoing initiatives: #1day1woman Education
    Upcoming events: Press women Alphabet run: U, V & W Geofocus: Central and Eastern Europe Ideas
    Welcome!

    In February 2024, Women in Red is once again focusing on Black women in conjunction with Black History Month. In this connection, we welcome the collaborative efforts of WikiProject Black Lives Matter.

    We hope both inexperienced and seasoned editors will join us in creating biographies and other articles about Black women, as well as their achievements, writings, organizations, and awards. This virtual editathon allows enthusiasts from around the globe to participate in our initiative. You are of course also welcome to add articles on any other notable women who deserve to be covered, for example under our #1day1woman priority.

    The main goals of the event are:

    • to encourage inexperienced editors and show them how they can contribute to Wikipedia by creating biographies of some of the world's most prominent women
    • to draw the attention of more experienced editors to the need for concerted action on a specific area
    • to support Wikipedia in combating the systemic bias against the coverage of women and women's works
    • to promote the new/improved articles and images through social media (Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, Instagram)

    What else?

    • Below, you'll see a section where you can list the articles you create this month, and another section where you can add the images you have uploaded to Commons.
    • This essay on creating women's biographies and our Ten Simple Rules might be helpful to newer editors.
    • If you tweet about any of the articles, or upload any of the images to Pinterest, please indicate you have done so next to the article name.
    Thank you!

    Redlists edit

    These are lists of redlinked articles to be created. A wide variety of redlink lists can be found on our Redlist index. Those relating to Black women are listed below:

    • African-American women (WD)
    • Black history (CS)
    • Black women in Food History (CS)
    • Black women in the Visual Arts (WD)
    • Indigenous women (CS)

    Biographical dictionaries and encyclopedias edit

    • BlackPast (WD)
    • Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia (CS)
    • Dictionary of African Biography (WD)
    • Encyclopedia of African American Women Writers (WD)
    • Notable Black American Women (CS) (WD)
    • Noted Negro Women: Their Triumphs and Activities (CS)
    • Who's Who among the Colored Baptists of the United States (CS)
    • Women of Distinction (WD)

    There are also individual lists which incorporate Black women from the countries of Sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean. These include:

    • Angola (WD)
    • Bahamas (WD)
    • Barbados (WD)
    • Benin (WD)
    • Botswana (WD)
    • Burkina Faso (WD)
    • Burundi (WD)
    • Cameroon (WD)
    • Central African Republic (WD)
    • Chad (WD)
    • Democratic Republic of the Congo (WD)
    • Djibouti (WD)
    • Dominica (WD)
    • East Timor WD)
    • Equitorial Guinea (WD)
    • Eritrea (WD)
    • Eswatini (WD)
    • Ethiopia (WD)
    • Fiji (WD)
    • Gabon (WD)
    • Gambia (WD)
    • Ghana (WD)
    • Guinea (WD)
    • Guinea-Bissau (WD)
    • Haiti (WD)
    • Ivory Coast (WD)
    • Jamaica (WD)
    • Kenya (WD)
    • Lesotho (WD)
    • Liberia (WD)
    • Madagascar (WD)
    • Malawi (WD)
    • Mali (WD)
    • Mozambique (WD)
    • Namibia (WD)
    • Niger (WD)
    • Nigeria (CS) (WD)
    • Republic of the Congo (WD)
    • Rwanda (WD)
    • Saint Kitts and Nevis (WD)
    • Senegal (WD)
    • South Africa (WD)
    • Tanzania (WD)
    • Uganda (WD)
    • Zambia (WD)
    • Zimbabwe (WD)

    Add other red links here, if possible with a source:

    Participants edit

    Outcomes (articles) edit

    Promote our work edit

    Key:

    • Add FB after the article if you mention it on Facebook
    • Add PIN after the article if you pin the image on Pinterest
    • Add TW after the article if you tweet it on Twitter
    • Add IG after the article if you post it on Instagram
    • Add LI after the article if you post it on LinkedIn
    • Add ITN after the article if it was posted on the main page via WP:In The News

    New or upgraded articles edit

    • Most recent on top, please, specifying upgraded if not new
    1.   Anna Minerva Henderson (added photo) (also 294)
    2.   Angela Elayne Gibbs
    3.   Daiana Santos
    4.   Denise Hinton - PIN
    5.   Dominique Leach
    6.   Chandra G. Pitts
    7.   Betty Fairfax
    8.   Ersa Poston - added image, PIN
    9.   Jeninah Karungi (also 294)
    10.   RoseEmma Mamaa Entsua-Mensah (also WIR 294)
    11.   Lula Warlick - PIN
    12.   Roberta Clarke (also 299)Round the World challenge - PIN
    13.   Ana Fabricia Córdoba
    14.   Olivene Chambers (also 294, 297)
    15.   Kate Bradley Stovall - PIN
    16.   Thainara Faria - PIN
    17.   Juanita Ollie Diffay Tate - PIN (also 294, 297)
    18.   Karen Schuster Webb (also 294)
    19.   Esther Merle Jackson (also 294)
    20.   Fahima Hashim
    21.   Imagene Stewart - PIN
    22.    Jennie Joseph
    23.   Norah Olembo (also WIR 297) - PIN
    24.    Harriette Estelle Harris Presley - PIN
    25.   Sarah A. Hughes
    26.   Jacqline - PIN
    27.   Dani Balbi - PIN
    28.   Zélia Amador
    29.   Cornelia Read
    30.   Vilma Reis - PIN
    31.   Phebe Hayes
    32.    Vivienne Newton Gray - PIN
    33.   Alyne Dumas Lee - PIN
    34. African Methodist Episcopal women preachers
    35.   Denise Charles
    36.   Christine Benton Cash - PIN
    37.   Amélia Mingas (also 294)
    38.   Marjorie Pitter King - added image, PIN
    39.   Carrie Still Shepperson - PIN
    40.    Paula Cardoso (also 297)
    41.   Rashid Mohamed Mbaraka Fatma
    42.   Dinah Whipple
    43.   Carrie Burton Overton - PIN
    44.   Lyda Moore Merrick
    45.   Brenda Swann Holmes - PIN
    46.   Ana Cardoso (enslaved woman)
    47.   Denice Santiago - PIN
    48.   Andrea Lykke Oehlenschlæger (also 297)
    49.   Saba (singer)
    50.   Leïla Sy
    51.   W. Gertrude Brown - PIN
    52.   Mari Malek
    53.   Susan Wakhungu-Githuku
    54.   Miss Diddy
    55.   Tomikia P. LeGrande (also 294/297)
    56.   Dominga Lucía Molina
    57.   Nicole Pride (also 294/297)
    58.   Geraldine Peten - added image, PIN
    59.   Katherine J. Boskins Barr - PIN
    60.     Soraya Milla - PIN
    61.   Vivian Schuyler Key, expanded
    62.   Phyllis Wheatley Settlement House
    63.   Denise Ferreira da Silva - PIN
    64.   Wezlynn Tildon - PIN
    65.   Liesl Zühlke (also 294) - PIN
    66.   Christine Johnson McPhail (also 294)
    67.    Gisela Casimiro
    68.    Anne Shongwe
    69.   Stacey Franklin Jones (also 294)
    70.   Georgia L. McMurray
    71.   Lillie Patterson - added image, PIN
    72.     Rougui Dia
    73.   Louise Parrott Cochran - PIN
    74.   Karrie G. Dixon (also 294)
    75.   Bertha LaBranche Johnson - PIN
    76.   Dana Tippin Cutler
    77.   Frances Rains - PIN
    78.   Thereza Piloya (also 294/297)
    79.   Flávia Oliveira (also 293), PIN
    80.   Dinha do Acarajé (also 293) - PIN
    81.   Yalemtsehay Mekonnen (also 294)
    82.   Annie Walker Blackwell - PIN
    83.   Pholile Shakantu (also 297) TW, PIN
    84.    Tendai Moyo
    85.   Enass Muzamel
    86.   Marguerite Pétro-Koni-Zezé (also 293)
    87.   Safiya George (also 294)
    88.   Patricia Hardaway (also 294/297)
    89.   Wilma Mishoe (also 294)
    90.   Scholastica Kimaryo
    91.   Florence "Frankie" Adams - added image TW - PIN
    92.   Anita Turpeau Anderson - PIN TW
    93.   Ibijoke Faborode
    94.   Molly Gaskin
    95.   Renita Holmes
    96.   Leonne Theodore-John - PIN TW
    97.   Susan Chomba
    98.   Esi Buobasa
    99.   Mary Black (Arizona)
    100.   Vernell Coleman
    101.   Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan (also 294/297)
    102.    Alyce Fraser Denny - PIN
    103.   Mary Garnet Barboza Women of Distinction
    104.   Marguerite Frierson - PIN
    105.   Lillian Steele Proctor (also 297)
    106.   Dulce Pereira (also 293) - PIN
    107.   Latonia Moore - upgraded
    108.   Ivy Baxter
    109.   Kristen Lovell
    110.   Josephine Harreld Love
    111.   Oda Gasinzigwa (also 297)
    112.   Tchinda Andrade
    113.   Julia Jeter Cleckley
    114.   Johanna July
    115.    Lola N. Vassall - PIN
    116.   Rosemarie Freeney Harding - PIN
    117.   Picramnia antidesma
    118.   Ana Rita Santiago (also 293)
    119.   Samira Sabou
    120.   Juanita Ellsworth Miller - PIN
    121.   Sylvia Olden Lee - added image, PIN
    122.   Emma Kantema-Gaomas
    123.   Jane Dabney Shackelford - PIN
    124.   Natalia ǀGoagoses
    125.   Shennette Garrett-Scott (also 294)
    126.   Gladys L. Catchings - PIN
    127.   Josephine Lemoyan
    128.   Altamira Cecília dos Santos (also 293) - PIN
    129.   Ruth Braswell Jones - PIN
    130.   Petita Palma and 297 TW - PIN
    131.   Carla Akotirene (also 293)
    132.   JoNina Abron-Ervin (also 294)
    133.  Upile Chisala
    134.   Venice Tipton Spraggs
    135.   Maria do Carmo Gerônimo (also 293) - PIN
    136.   Mo-Mamo Karerwa
    137.   Wendy Phipps (also 297) TW
    138.   Veora Johnson
    139.   Eva C. Mitchell - PIN
    140.   Ethna Beulah Winston - PIN
    141.   Anna W. Ludlow - PIN
    142.   Alice Callis Hunter
    143.   Mary Evans Wilson - added free img, PIN
    144.   Yolande Du Bois - added img, infobox, PIN
    145.   Deirdre Cooper Owens (also 294/297)
    146.   Mae Virginia Cowdery - added img, PIN
    147.   Eulalie Spence - added img, PIN
    148.   Georgia Caldwell Smith -added img, PIN
    149.   Jane Ellen McAllister -added img, infobox, PIN
    150.   Sarah Kamya
    151.   Auzerais Bellamy
    152. Safe House Black History Museum

    Did you know? articles edit

    • ... that Esther Merle Jackson, as a specialist in theatre and dance education at the United States Office of Education, intended to expand theater's role in the Great Society? (2024-03-31)
    • ... that one of the buildings that house the Safe House Museum (pictured) was where Martin Luther King Jr. hid from the Ku Klux Klan on 21 March 1968, just weeks before he was assassinated? (2024-03-21)
    • ... that trans women in Cape Verde are colloquially referred to as tchindas, named after Tchinda Andrade, the first trans woman in the country to come out publicly? (2024-03-13)
    • ... that Enass Muzamel established the Sudanese Female Cyclists Initiative to challenge the stigma against women riding bikes in Sudan? (2024-03-10)

    Outcomes (media) edit

    Add here – most recent at the top

    Event templates edit

    References edit

    1. ^ Brooke Cunningham
    2. ^ "DOMINIQUE LEACH". Chicago Gourmet. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
    3. ^ Sharon Lewis
    4. ^ Ayanna Bennett