In honour of #WomensHistoryMonth here's some female sporting heroes who challenged the male domination of sport, making way for women to have their own competitive sports, and to make playing sport and publicly exercising socially acceptable for women. #twitterhistorians#IWD
Katherine Switzer (pic above) is the first woman to run the Boston Marathon. Since the marathon began in 1897 only men were allowed to enter. In 1967 Katherine was officially registered to run, but during the race, the manager ran after her and tried to grab her bib from her to
end her race. Several men came to her aid, and Katherine finished the marathon. Women were not officially allowed in any US marathons until 1972. The first women's Olympic marathon was in 1984 (men's was 1896), won by US runner Joan Benoit.
From the age of 9 American Bianca Valenti wanted to be a professional surfer and trained every day. There were female competitions but she soon found out it was virtually impossible for women to make a living from this because of tiny sponsorship deals for them, and no one was
promoting female big-wave competitions in the media. She founded the Committee for Equity in Women's Surfing and encouraged big-name male surfers to promote the women's version. Something she fought for, the world's biggest surf competition to have equal prize money for men and
women happened in 2016. In 2019 the US women's football team (soccer) launched a legal bid to get paid as much as their male counterparts, having been told for years that they get paid less because women's football doesn't bring in as much money. The US women's team had
consistently achieved more success than the men's team, but were paid less than half the men were. In February 2022 the women's team settled for $24m and their sporting federation agreed to make conditions better for women but didn't confirm equal pay.
Londoner Elizabeth Wilkinson was one of the first professional female boxers, a champion between 1725 and 1728, then becoming an instructor. She was famous, but stopped being written about by the Victorian era when women's professional sport was greatly diminished.
Nettie Honeyball founded the British Ladies Football Club in 1895. She had to use a fake name as she was from a middle class family, and sports that 'weren't ladylike' were seen to be beneath her class. Their first match had over 12,000 men and women watching. They were unable to
logistically keep a professional league going, not having access to money as easily as men, and having family and childcare issues. Womens professional football league in the UK didn't start again until 2010. There are 12 professional teams, all earning a fraction of male players
Frenchwoman Michele Moulton (left) is the only woman to have recorded a World Rally Championship victory. Italian Leila Lombardi (right) is the only woman to have won Formula One points (both in 1970s). Women were not allowed to enter races until 1958 when Italian Maria de
Filippis (1926-2016) was the first woman to enter Formula One. She paved the way for other female professional drivers. One female driver gave an anonymous interview in the 90s saying sponsors are only interested in sexy women who will provocatively pose to promote their cars,
this is the only way they can earn a living in racing, and it's still nowhere near what men earn. People underestimate how hard it has been for women to get their own professional sports and how they still face challenges of sexism and inequality #WomensHistoryMonth#IWD#IWD2022
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MASSIVE fawning TRA Adam Buxton speaks to Helen Lewis this week, and admits him saying women should be kind in the gender ID debate (i.e the debate over how to define women and what rights they should have) is offensive to some (doesn't admit he's wrong to do it tho). In the
podcast Helen says the culture is shifting, there used to be people setting out to attack views and then make sure that person is always labelled as transphobic or whatever. She's on Twitter less though 😂 Cultural criticism in the press was reduced to why everything is
problematic, mostly because these articles were easy to write and it was an easy way for new writers to get published. Adam says online discussions were always people thinking the absolute worse of each other (even though he thinks the worst of women challenging his beloved
Today I heard about a friend's sister who just started her teacher training course at a uni. Already they've had training on equality and diversity that got the Equality Act wrong, and were told to consider gender identity in every lesson plan in order to pass. @GillianKeegan
They have been asked to think about inclusion in all lesson plans, but to focus on gender ID because this is 'the biggest problem in schools right now' and something new teachers can 'assert in teaching going forward'. My friend said her sis was so confused, and there were
about 100 or more in the session, secondary teachers, and no one is saying anything because someone in authority is telling them this is what they need to do to pass. I've heard about this indoctrination on PGCE and other ITT courses, it's a huge problem @educationgovuk can sort
Been temping this week in a big secondary school. Got some amazing staff room tea about a teacher who “came out” as non-binary last term. She wanted it announced in assembly so that no one ever called her she, but the Head told her that’s not necessary and she can just gently
correct people as and when. So she made a big scene in a staff meeting and said she’d been called “miss” by pupils and this wouldn’t have happened if they’d done the assembly announcement. She said she was going to take action with her union. The Head was unfazed and said
they’d discuss it. The teacher said she’d feel better if the whole staff had training from an expert group at the next INSET day (which was the first day of this term). Because the Head didn’t agree to this the teacher called in sick. I’ve seen her around, she looks like a clown
A thread of schools who changed their house named after @jk_rowling to something else... just because she spoke up for the rights of women, children and gay people. This is thousands of children and their parents being told equality means putting men's identities above all else.
@BoswellsSchool said JKR's views do not align with their policies and beliefs. Must be great being a female student there 🙄 They renamed the house after Kelly Holmes, who at the time was sharing the exact same pro-women stance as JKR on Twitter.
@Becky_High said JKR was an exceptional, inspiring woman. Just a year before denouncing her, they were encouraging pupils to use her as inspiration for a lit competition. The house is now named after Malorie Blackman, who co-signed a letter chiding JKR tinyurl.com/4bar762r
I fell into a Reddit hole about munchausen's syndrome, and it illuminated something about transgenderism. There was a bit of plot in the otherwise brilliant Norwegian film Sick Of Myself that I didn't get, so I sought answers, and ended up on a Reddit section called faked illness
Sick Of Myself is a very dark comedy about a young woman who makes herself deformed and ill just to get attention, and so this film was of interest to the people in that particular corner of the internet. I was gobsmacked to read people's experiences as nurses and counsellors how
common this type of extreme self-harm is, and far worse examples. They discussed trans-ableism, where people take off limbs or go blind to become permanently disabled, and some people were very angry this was being called a mental disorder, they wanted it to be as 'respected' as
A teacher friend told me a boy at her school is no longer trans, it happened shortly after xmas break when he met his first serious boyfriend. The boy is now 18 and in his final year, his boyf is two years older and told him he doesn't mind femme boys but does not want to
pretend his partner is female. My friend said she's glad he's finally happy, but feels exhausted after the past 5 years and what he's put the school through. It started in Year 8, he was getting bullied for being gay. He only hung around with girls and would sometimes be found
in their toilets. He wanted to be a drag queen and was talking to people online and watching social media videos about being more than a drag queen, about being transgender. He became rude and aggressive, demanding things change for him. He made enemies of some of his female