Michele Gillespie (Editor) MICHELE GILLESPIE is a professor of history and dean of the undergraduate college at Wake Forest University. She is also author of
Free Labor in an Unfree World: White Artisans in Slaveholding Georgia, 1789–1860 (Georgia) and co-editor of ten books, including
North Carolina Women: Their Lives and Times (Georgia).
Sally G. McMillen (Editor) SALLY G. McMILLEN is the Mary Reynolds Babcock Professor of History at Davidson College. She is the author of
Motherhood in the Old South: Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Infant Rearing;
Southern Women: Black and White in the Old South;
To Raise Up the South: Sunday Schools in Black and White Churches, 1865–1915; and
Seneca Falls and the Origins of the Women’s Rights Movement.
By the twentieth century, North Carolina’s progressive streak had strengthened, thanks in large part to a growing number of women who engaged in and influenced state and national policies and politics. These women included Gertrude Weil who fought tirelessly for the Nineteenth Amendment, which extended suffrage to women, and founded the state chapter of the League of Women Voters once the amendment was ratified in 1920. Gladys Avery Tillett, an ardent Democrat and supporter of Roosevelt's New Deal, became a major presence in her party at both the state and national levels. Guion Griffis Johnson turned to volunteer work in the postwar years, becoming one of the state's most prominent female civic leaders. Through her excellent education, keen legal mind, and family prominence, Susie Sharp in 1949 became the first woman judge in North Carolina and in 1974 the first woman in the nation to be elected and serve as chief justice of a state supreme court. Throughout her life, the Reverend Dr. AnlĂ