YWCA Timeline 1858-2013
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Established in 1858 as a voice for women's issues, The YWCA opened the first employment bureau for women several years later. That was only the beginning of more than 150 years of active advocacy and programming for women's rights and civil rights. YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. This YWCA mission statement was adopted by the General Assembly in 2009.
The YWCA continues to evolve to meet today's challenges in eliminating racism and empowering women. It has shifted to a bottoms-up, grassroots structure. It launched a revitalized brand that reaffirms the mission of working aggressively for women and people of color and is engaging women 18- to 34-years old to carry on the YWCA mission for years to come.
The YWCA advocacy issues reflect its mission and the values of the organization. It promotes solutions to improve the lives of women, girls and people of color across the country. From lobbying for pay equity and hate crimes legislation to the increased funding for Head Start and the Violence Against Women Act, the YWCA advocates on Capitol Hill while employees and volunteers empower women and girls in local communities.
YMCA
YWCA Timeline <br /><br />Source: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA <br /><br />See also: <a href="https://www.ywca.org/what-we-do/">YWCA</a>
Library of Congress
1917
YMCA
Library of Congress
Link to <a href="https://www.ywca.org/about/history/">YWCA Timeline </a>
Medium: Lithograph
English
Poster
Timeline
Historic
U.S Customs and Border Protection - Border Patrol History from 1924
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The priority mission of the Border Patrol is preventing terrorists and terrorists weapons, including weapons of mass destruction, from entering the United States. Undaunted by scorching desert heat or freezing northern winters, they work tirelessly as vigilant protectors of our Nation's borders.
While the Border Patrol has changed dramatically since its inception in 1924, its primary mission remains unchanged: to detect and prevent Agents on bike patrol the illegal entry of aliens into the United States. Together with other law enforcement officers, the Border Patrol helps maintain borders that work - facilitating the flow of legal immigration and goods while preventing the illegal trafficking of people and contraband.
The Border Patrol is specifically responsible for patrolling nearly 6,000 miles of Mexican and Canadian international land borders and over 2,000 miles of coastal waters surrounding the Florida Peninsula and the island of Puerto Rico. Agents work around the clock on assignments, in all types of terrain and weather conditions. Agents also work in many isolated communities throughout the United States.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
<a href="https://twitter.com/cbp/status/1001207461448159234">https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DeUAxRLUQAAjy0k.jpg</a>
Department of Homeland Security
None
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Source: U.S. Customs and Border Protection. <a href="http://www.cbp.gov/border-security/along-us-borders/history">Link to Border Patrol Timeline </a><br /><br /><a href="https://twitter.com/cbp/status/1001207461448159234">Twitter</a>
<a href="https://www.cbp.gov/border-security/along-us-borders/overview#">Border Patrol</a>
Medium: Photograph
English
History
Timeline
United States
Herbert Hoover Timeline 1874-1964
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Hoover, Herbert C. 1874-1964, mining engineer, humanitarian, U.S. secretary of commerce, and 31st president of the United States, was the son of Jesse Hoover, a blacksmith, and Hulda Minthorn Hoover, a seamstress and recorded minister in the Society of Friends (Quakers). Hoover was born in West Branch, Iowa, where he enjoyed fishing in the local creek and working in his father’s blacksmith shop. Hoover lived in Iowa only for the first decade of his life. Orphaned at the age of nine, he began an odyssey that would make him a multi-millionaire, international humanitarian, secretary of commerce, and 31st president of the United States. He left Iowa in November 1885, bound for Oregon and the home of his maternal uncle, Henry Minthorn. Hoover lived with the Minthorns for six years; at the age of 14 he left school to work as a clerk in his uncle's real estate business. Three years later, Hoover decided to pursue a career as mining engineer, Hoover sought to resume his studies and applied to a new school, Leland Stanford Junior University, set to open in 1891.
It was at Stanford that he made life long friends, found a mentor in Professor John Caspar Branner; and met his future wife, Lou Henry. He was active in extracurricular activities, serving as student body treasurer and as manager of both the baseball and football teams. In 1928, when President Coolidge chose not to run for another term, Hoover easily won the Republican nomination despite never having held an elective office. In the November election, he defeated Alfred E. Smith, the Democratic governor of New York, in a landslide.
As president, Hoover had hoped to govern in the progressive tradition of Theodore Roosevelt. And true to his dream, he devoted the first eight months of his presidency to a variety of social, economic, and environmental reforms. Following the stock market “crash” of October 1929, the president became increasingly preoccupied with the collapse of the American economy. He established new agencies such as the Federal Farm Board, the Federal Drought Relief Committee, and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.
The president would not, however, provide direct federal relief to the unemployed. As an alternative, he promoted indirect relief through public works projects and loans to the states. His programs proved inadequate, however, as the number of unemployed workers increased from seven million in 1931 to eleven million in 1933. The president’s political reputation as the “master of emergencies” plummeted in the face of rising unemployment. He nonetheless mounted a vigorous campaign for reelection in 1932 and traveled the country by train defending his policies at every stop. But it came as no surprise to Hoover that he lost to Franklin D. Roosevelt in the general election. Hoover departed Washington with a heavy heart on March 4, 1933.
Elmer Wesley Greene
Source: <a href="http://www.hoover.archives.gov/">Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum</a>
White House Research
1956
Elmer Wesley Greene
White House Research
Link to <a href="https://hoover.archives.gov/timeline#event-/timeline/item/herbert-hoover-was-born">Herbert Hoover Timeline 1874-1964 </a><br /><br />Link to <a href="https://hoover.archives.gov/hoovers/president-herbert-hoover">Herbert Hoover Biological Sketch </a>
Medium: Painting
English
Portrait
Timeline
Historic
National Science Foundation Celebrating 50 Years 1950-2000
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The U.S. national Science Foundation promotes the progress of science to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare and to secure the national defense among other other purposes.
The "Nifty50" are NSF-funded inventions, innovations and discoveries that have become commonplace in our lives.
National Science Foundation
National Science Foundation<br /><br />Source: <a href="https://www.nsf.gov/nsb/documents/2000/nsb00215/nsb00215.pdf">The National Science Foundation Link to NSF Timeline</a>
National Science Foundation
No date
National Science Foundation
National Science Foundation
Link to <a href="https://www.nsf.gov/about/history/nifty50/index.jsp">NSF Nifty50</a>
Logo & Poster
English
Celebration
Timeline
Historic
NASA’s First A- Aeronautics History 1958-2008
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That the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is more than a space agency may come as a surprise to some. Aeronautics, the first A of the NASA acronym, has always been a part of NASA, but against the headline exploits of rocket launches, Moon landings, Space Shuttle missions, and Mars rovers, aeronautics is easily lost in the shadows of NASA’s marquee space programs. The list of accomplishments for NASA’s first A is long, and this book goes a modest way toward sketching these developments.
NASA
NASA <br /><br />Source: Robert G. Ferguson National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Link to <a href="http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/files/NASAsFirstA-508-ebook.pdf">NASA Timeline </a>
NASA
2013
NASA
NASA
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA">Wikipedia</a>
Medium: Logo
English
History
Timeline
Space
FBI a Centennial History: 1908 - 2008
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In 2008 the United States Department of Justice Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) celebrated its 100th anniversary as a crime fighting and national security agency dedicated to protecting America and the international community from world dangers. During this period there really has not been the investigative equivalent of a dull moment for the FBI. Each point in the Bureau’s history has had its own cast of colorful characters, its own investigative challenges and controversies, its own milestones and major cases.
In this publication you will see an organization that has come a long way, starting as a tentative experiment, maturing and evolving at every step, learning from success and stumbles alike, gaining experience from the latest threat du jour, from gangsters and mobsters, from spies to several killers, from Internet predators to international terrorists.
Over the century the FBI has constantly added to its investigative and intelligence tools and talents, launching a Disaster Squad one decade, a “Most Wanted” list the next; a computer forensics team one decade, a terrorist fly team the next - each innovation building on the last like so many foundation stones.
Over time, the FBI became expert at mapping crime scenes and surveying targets; at poring over financial ledgers and diving into the depths in search of clues; at staging complex undercover operations and breaking cryptic codes; at peering into human cells to help determine guilt or innocence and using intelligence to get its arms around a threat and then disable it. As a result, the FBI has developed a suite of capabilities that is unmatched in any other single national security agency in the world.
U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation
Source: United States Department of Justice Federal Bureau of Investigation.
FBI
No date
FBI
FBI
Link to <a href="https://www.fbi.gov/file-repository/fbi100book.pdf/view">Timeline </a><br /><br />Link to the <a href="https://www.fbi.gov/history/">FBI Historical Trailer</a>
Logo
English
History
Timeline
United States
Women in Law Enforcement - Timeline: 1854-2011
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In 1854, the first known police matrons (also called jail matrons) were hired by New York City to search and guard female prisoners, but they were civilians with no law enforcement powers. Sarah Hill (pictured) became the second police matron in Davenport, Iowa, hired in 1893. Part of a larger police matron movement in the United States that began in Portland, Maine, in 1878, Matron Hill worked for 27 years to care for female criminals and their children. Police matrons’ duties varied, but they included sheltering and protecting women and children in police custody<br />
National Law Enforcement Museum
Women in Law Enforcement <br /><br />Collection of the National Law Enforcement Museum, Washington, DC. <br /><br />Source: National Law Enforcement, Washington, DC
National Law Enforcement Museum
Circa 1900
National Law Enforcement Museum
National Law Enforcement Museum
Link to Women in Law Enforcement <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20150214122930/http://www.nleomf.org/museum/experience/the-collection/artifacts/women-in-law-enforcement/">Timeline 1854-2011 </a>
Photograph
English
History
Timeline
Historic
Fire History Timeline 1804-2004 National Park Service
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Since the establishment of Yellowstone National Park as the world’s first national park in 1872, the desire to suppress, control, and manage fire has been an integral part of the management of federal park areas. Managers, first the U.S. Army and, after 1916, the National Park Service, have tried to put fire out, to use it as a tool while trying to prevent harm to property and people, and ultimately to strike some balance between the presence of fire and its enforced absence. These goals and ideals shifted over time, as culture and science suggested better alternatives.
National Park Service
National Park Service <br /><br />Source: Night Monitoring. Bandelier National Monument, New Mexico. <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fire/careers-in-wildland-fire.htm">See more photographs from NPS</a>
National Park Service
No date given
National Park Service
National Park Service
Also, source: Hal K. Rothman. National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior. See also: <a href="https://www.nps.gov/subjects/fire/wildfire-history-timeline.htm">Timeline</a>
Photograph
English
History
Timeline
United States
Senator Robert J. Dole Born 1923- Served 45 Years in Public Office
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Robert Dole served for 45 years in public office including service in the Kansas state legislature, both houses of the U.S. Congress, as leader of his party’s national committee, floor leader in the U.S. Senate, and the Republican Party’s nominations for vice president and president of the United States. He left his imprint on a mass of legislation and campaigned for countless other candidates. As a committee chairman and party leader, he mastered the art of forging consensus and compromise. He also seasons the seriousness of politics and government with a ready supply of good humor, candor, and a common sense approach, earning him respect from both sides of the aisle. Overall he served in the U.S. House of Representatives for 8 years and the Senate for more than 27 years
Everett Raymond Kinstler
U.S. Senate Leadership Portrait Collection <br /><br />Source: <a href="https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/art/artifact/Painting_32_00045.htm">United States Senate</a><br /><br />Source: Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics, University of Kansas
United States Senate
2006
Everett Raymond Kinstler
United States Senate
See also: <a href="http://doleinstitute.org/about-bob-dole/timeline-of-life/">Robert J. Dole Timeline</a>
Medium: Oil on Canvas
English
Figures
Timeline
Historic
Senator Robert. C. Byrd (1917-2010) Longest Serving Member of the United States Congress
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Senator Robert Byrd was U.S. Representative from 1953 until 1959 and a U.S. Senator from 1959 to 2010. Sen. Byrd served over 51 years of continuous service with an extraordinary lifetime attendance record of nearly 99 percent. Sen. Byrd has held more elected Senate leadership posts than any other member. These include secretary of the Senate Democratic Conference, Democratic whip, majority leader, minority leader, president pro tempore, and chairman of the Committee on Appropriations.
Michael Shane Neal
Robert C. Byrd <br /><br />U.S. Senate Leadership Portrait Collection Source: United States Senate <br /><br />Source: Robert C. Byrd Center for Legislative Studies See also: <a href="http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/Civil_Rights_Filibuster_Ended.htm">1964 Civil Rights Filibuster</a> <br /><br />See also: <a href="https://www.byrdcenter.org/byrd-biography.html">Biography</a>
U.S. Senate
2007
Michael Shane Neal
U.S. Senate
Youtube: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJcbzfsmW5w&feature=youtu.be">The Senator plays fiddle with the Harvest Band for then President Jimmy Carter, 1980 </a>
Medium: Oil on Canvas
English
Figures
Timeline
Historic