THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 2021 • THE BULLETIN GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 17 cover story Overlooked women through the ages BY MAKENZIE WHITTLE • The Bulletin W omen have been shaping and changing the world since time immemorial, but their works have often gone unrecognized, covered up or otherwise forgotten to the pages of history books. Reading this on a screen? You have a woman to thank for it. Reading it over a Wi-Fi connection? You have a woman to thank for it. Fan of Bob Dylan or Johnny Cash? Thank a woman for her musical influence on them. Like Monopoly, sci-fi books, chocolate chip cookies? Women are behind it all. Here are just a few women from history worth remembering. Ada Lovelace (1815-52) — The with two versions of play, one English countess befriended an where the wealth was distrib- older mathematician named uted to all players, and an- Charles Babbage when she other where the goal was was 17, and the two worked to create a monopoly and closely together. Babbage keep the wealth for your- came up with the concept self. A few decades later, for a calculation machine Parker Brothers bought (computer) and asked the rights to the game for Lovelace to translate another $500 and wrote Magie out engineer’s thoughts on his of the story. She was also a idea into English. She added feminist who held a patent Ada Lovelace her own notes, tripling the for an invention that allowed length and wrote on concepts paper to flow more smoothly of codes and theorizing ways for the machine through a typewriter, wrote poetry and per- to repeat a series of instructions. The ideas formed on stage. she laid out, are part of computer Fatima al-Fihri (800-880) — programming today, and as such The Arabic woman is credited she has been referred to as the with founding the world’s first computer programmer. oldest university, Al-Qa- Dolores Huerta (1930- rawiyyin in Fez, Morocco. present) — The activist While little is known of worked alongside Cesar her early life, she and Chavez in creating the her family immigrated United Farm Workers or- from Tunisia and settled ganization in 1962 and in Fez. Her father became directing the national Del- a wealthy merchant and ano grape strike in 1965 as left his daughters a for- a way to negotiate contracts tune who used their inher- Dolores Huerta between the workers and the itance to build mosques for farms to improve the lives of those pick- the increasing Muslim population. Fatima ing the grapes. Her famous phrase “Si, founded Al-Qarawiyyin eventually se puede” still echoes today after expanding it to be a center for President Barack Obama used study in science, mathemat- it for his campaign slogan ics, medicine and astron- in 2008, “Yes, we can,” and omy regardless of religion. April 10 is Dolores Huerta Hedy Lamarr (1914- Day in California. 2000) — The Hollywood Elizabeth “Lizzie” Magie star was also an inventor. (1866-1948) — The fem- During World War II, inist and anti-monopolist she developed a concept was politically far left and in that became known as fre- her 30s, she created a board quency hopping where one game that expressed these torpedo guidance signal Hedy Lamarr strong political leanings, pat- would bounce to different enting The Landlord’s Game frequencies and make it im- in 1904. Originally, the game was more of a possible for an enemy to locate and block. teaching tool for her anti-monopolist ideas Though the military at the time thought the A campaign poster for Shirley Chisholm’s presidential run in 1972. idea and prototype developed by Lamarr and her partner, George Antheil, wouldn’t suit their needs (they would later go back to it and not pay Antheil and Lamarr for their ideas), the technology she developed would be the catalyst to eventually create Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and GPS technology we use today. Martha Gellhorn (1908-98) — The novel- ist and journalist was one of the first female war correspondents and snuck aboard a hos- pital ship to cover the D-Day landing at Nor- mandy when women were banned from re- porting from the front lines. When the battle subsided, she even joined the medics with a stretcher to help gather the wounded. Shirley Chisholm (1924-2005) — Not only was Chisholm the first African American woman to make it to the U.S. Congress, she was also the first to run for president in a ma- jor party. The Democrat ran in the 1972 elec- tion and became the first woman to appear on a presidential debate stage. She lost the overall election but was quoted as running “in spite of hopeless odds … to demonstrate the sheer will and refusal to accept the status quo.” Sister Rosetta Tharpe (1915-73) — The godmother of rock-and-roll served as an in- spiration to the men who would take it to the stratosphere of popularity. Tharpe mixed traditional gospel tunes with a rhythm-and- blues style on an electric guitar and thus be- gan weaving the first threads of a music that would forever change the game. The queer, Black musician’s voice and artistry served as a direct inspiration to Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, Little Richard, Elvis Presley, Carl Per- kins and many other contemporaries. e e Reporter: 541-383-0304, mwhittle@bendbulletin.com Where Empowerment Replaces Fear & Knowledge Creates Options 541-788-5858 905 SW Rimrock Way Suite 100A Nolan Town Square • Redmond, OR ladiesofleadusa@gmail.com Sharon Preston