Looking beyond the 19th Amendment centennial, we will highlight the ways women have been and continue to be trailblazers, pioneers, innovators, and leaders in their fields. • Make Connections: Share your site’s connections to women's history, especially with women as leaders, innovators, and influential advocates. • Virtual Experiences: Create and highlight virtual ways that people can connect with the theme using historical places, museum collections, oral histories, photos, film, and more. • Partnering Success: Give a shoutout to the work that your partners do related to the theme, including programs, events, ongoing or finished projects, outreach, or research. • Volunteering: Encourage people to volunteer and provide examples of how they can get involved in volunteering with projects related to the theme and highlight the work of current and past volunteers. Featured NPS.gov/lecl Webpages Sacagawea Women and the Lewis and Clark Expedition Social Media Hashtags: #LewisandClarkTrail #WomensHistoryMonth #FindYourPark Ready-Made Posts Sacagawea was either 16 or 17 years old when she joined the Corps of Discovery. She made important contributions to the Expedition west. #LewisandClarkTrail Learn more about her life: https://www.nps.gov/people/sacagawea.htm While she’s often overlooked, Lucy Meriwether Lewis Marks made an indirect but important contribution to the Lewis and Clark Expedition’s outcome. #LewisandClarkTrail Find out how: https://www.nps.gov/articles/lucy-meriwether-lewis-marks.htm After the men of the Expedition finished the brutal crossing of the Bitterroot Mountains and reached the home of the Nez Perce in September 1805, some warriors considered killing the exhausted and starving explorers. But Watkuweis, an elderly woman who had once lived among Canadian traders, heard about the plans and stopped the warriors, saying something to the effect, “These are the people who helped me. Do them no harm.” #LewisandClarkTrail Read more: https://www.nps.gov/articles/watkuweis-and-the-lewis-and-clark-expediton.htm Lewis and Clark Events That Happened This Month (Ready-Made Posts) When Jefferson was elected President on March 6, 1801, he asked the 29-year-old Lewis to serve as his personal secretary (assistant). Some believe that Jefferson was grooming Lewis to lead the new expedition he was proposing. Preparing an Expedition (U.S. National Park Service) (nps.gov) In early March 1804, the citizens of St. Louis must have been a bit confused and bewildered. Up until March 9, the flag flying over the city was Spanish (even though France regained control in 1800). For just under 24 hours, the French colors were flown, only to be replaced by the U.S. flag on March 10. It’s a complicated, yet interesting story. This multi-part switcheroo, which many call “Three Flags Day,” was the culmination of a nearly year-long bureaucratic transfer between France and the U.S. -- we know it as the Louisiana Purchase. More: U.S. Takes Possession of Louisiana (U.S. National Park Service) (nps.gov) On March 23, 1806, the Lewis and Clark Expedition left Fort Clatsop and started the long journey back to St. Louis. #LewisandClarkTrail More: https://www.nps.gov/articles/lewis-and-clark-leaving-fort-clatsop.htm |
Last updated: January 21, 2021