What'sHerName show

What'sHerName

Summary: What’sHerName women’s history podcast is hosted and produced by academic sisters Olivia Meikle and Katie Nelson. Committed to reclaiming forgotten history, What’sHerName tells the stories of fascinating women you’ve never heard of (but should have). Through compelling interviews with guest historians, writers, and scholars, Katie and Olivia bring to life the “lost” women of history. Fascinating and funny, thought-provoking and thoughtful, What’sHerName restores women’s voices to the conversation. New episodes every other Monday.

Join Now to Subscribe to this Podcast
  • Visit Website
  • RSS
  • Artist: Dr. Katie Nelson and Olivia Meikle
  • Copyright: What'sHerName Podcast

Podcasts:

 THE REBORN Jemima Wilkinson & Publick Universal Friend | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:04

Jemima Wilkinson, born in 1752, was a devout Quaker and skilled medical practitioner in colonial Rhode Island. When a typhus outbreak in 1776 left her feverish and near death, she experienced a series of dramatic religious visions. When the fever finally cleared, the person who rose from Wilkinson’s sickbed declared that Jemima Wilkinson was gone (dead?) and had been replaced by Publick Universal Friend, a genderless evangelist who would become a wildly influential and popular preacher throughout New England. Publick Universal Friend would launch a completely unique (and distinctly American) religious movement, and Friend’s teachings and social influence would permanently shift American views on religion, slavery, race, gender and colonialism. Yet somehow Wilkinson and Friend were nearly forgotten to history until our guest Michael Bronski “reintroduced” the world to this fascinating enigma of a story. Several of Friend’s possessions are housed at the Yates County Historical Museum and Friend’s final home still stands nearby in Jerusalem, New York. A full transcript of this episode is available here.   Michael Bronski is an independent scholar, journalist, writer and long time activist. He is Professor of the Practice in Activism and Media in the Studies of Women, Gender and Sexuality at Harvard University. His Queer History of the United States won the 2011 Lambda Literary Award for Best Non-Fiction as well as the 2011 American Library Association Stonewall Israel Fishman Award for Best Non-Fiction. In 2017 he was awarded the awarded the Bill Whitehead Award for Lifetime Achievement from the Publishing Triangle. Past recipients include Audre Lorde, Adrienne Rich, Martin Duberman, Samuel R. Delany, and Alison Bechdel. His A Queer History of the United States for Young People was published in 2019.   Music featured in this episode includes: Your purchases help support the podcast!  

 THE PEACEMAKER Queen Matilda | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:08

For 1000 years, March 14th has been celebrated as St. Matilda’s Day in Quedlinburg, Germany. She was celebrated as a Peacemaker in her time, and has been a unifying figure ever since. Discover with us the remarkable story of Queen Matilda, who inspires Protestants and Catholics to gather together to celebrate her even today. (Hint: she wielded words to end violence, and once talked a deer into puking up a wine bottle.)

 THE ABSENCE Maria Branwell Brontë | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 46:37

Maria Branwell Brontë most famously exists as an absence — the mother whose biggest, or only, influence resides in her “not being there there” during the lives of her famous daughters Charlotte, Emily and Anne. For 200 years scholars believed there wasn’t enough material for a biography of Maria. But author Sharon Wright believed there had to be more to find, if only she “went looking properly.” And what she found is truly remarkable. Join returning guest Sharon Wright as we meet The Mother of the Brontës. You can find a complete transcript of this episode here.       Sharon Wright is a British journalist, playwright and author of the critically-acclaimed biography Mother of the Brontës: When Maria Met Patrick. She was born in Yorkshire and lives in South West London. She has worked as a writer, editor and columnist for leading magazines, newspapers and websites including the BBC, The Guardian, Daily Express, Disney, Glamour and Red. She is also the author of critically acclaimed plays performed in Yorkshire and London. Her first book Balloonomania Belles: Daredevil Divas Who First Took To The Sky [also published as The Lost History of the Lady Aeronauts] was serialized in the Mail on Sunday and received widespread coverage, including on BBC Woman’s Hour and in the New York Post.   Music featured in this episode included Your purchases help support the podcast!

 THE STORYTELLER Mae Timbimboo Parry | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 45:26

Mae Timbimboo was just eight years old when she entered a US federal boarding school designed to “kill the Indian to save the child.” The government hoped Native children like Mae would “assimilate” into Euro-American culture, but that certainly didn’t work on Mae. Instead, she harnessed her education to give voice to her people’s history. She told the world that they had the 1863 “Battle of Bear River” all wrong: it was a massacre. Our guest Darren Parry, Chairman of the Northwest Shoshone Nation, explores the power of storytelling in the life of his ancestor. Mae Timbimboo Parry’s oral history is here and her obituary can be read here. Better Days 2020 has created a wonderful profile of Mae Timbimboo Parry here. Learn more about the Bear River Massacre.             Darren Parry is the grandson of Mae Timbimboo Parry, and serves as the Councilman of the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation, on the Board of Directors for the American West Heritage Center, The Utah State Museum Board, and the American Indian Services Board. He is the author of The Bear River Massacre; A Shoshone History and teaches Native American History at Utah State University. He is currently running for Congress in Utah. Music featured in this episode included  

 THE ANCESTORS Mother’s Day Special | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:17:28

What’sHerName presents our very first Mother’s Day Special! Come “meet the ancestors” as six What’sHerName listeners introduce some truly remarkable women from their own family history! From Ukraine to Japan, Uzbekistan to Mexico, we’re traveling around the world, and through 275 years, to discover these amazing ancestors in this special double episode. Our guests are What’sHerName listeners Irit Namatinya, Susan Stone, Lisa Williamson, Adrienne, Sachiko Burton, and Michelle Thorley.       Rosalia and her daughter Sophia survived Nazi invasion, a train explosion, a month in a swamp, and famine and disease in a rural Russian village. Sophia’s granddaughter Adrienne, the cohost of the Dear World, Love History podcast, tells their story. All photos by permission of Adrienne. In 18th century colonial Connecticut, Prudence Punderson was ignoring all the “rules” of needlework to create astonishing works of art. Lisa Williamson brings us the story of this truly remarkable “noted needlewoman.” [Correction: The man who brought Punderson’s embroidery to the State Fair after her death was her grandson, not her son-in-law as we mistakenly said.] Young Highland Dancer Margaret Stewart Haldane could never have imagined that her life would lead her from urban Glasgow to a career as the Postmaster of Rattlesnake, Florida, USA. Her granddaughter Susan Stone, producer of the Dead Ladies Show Podcast, brings us her story. All photos courtesy of Susan Stone. Michelle Thorley is an artist and family history researcher. Her instagram is FloraFamiliar. Irit Namatinya is a Bollywood dance teacher in Thailand. She brings us the story of her grandmother’s escape from Uzbekistan to Israel, and the unusual solution she discovered to an unusual and frightening problem. Rebecca Sachiko Burton is a writer in Washington state. She shares with us the ways her grandmother and great-grandmother gave her a legacy of courage and resilience, “even if you have to walk through fire.” All photos courtesy of Sachiko Burton. Music featured in this episode included   Your purchases help support the podcast!

 THE SURGEON James Barry | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 50:47

What would you sacrifice for a chance to chase your dream? 200 years ago Margaret Bulkley shed her identity and took her gigantic secret to her deathbed. Recorded on location at the Old Operating Theater Museum and Herb Garret in London with Dr. Monica Walker.

 THE WOMAN IN RED Anita Garibaldi | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 47:43

Anita Garibaldi is celebrated as a national heroine in three countries and on two continents. Yet the true stories of her remarkable, almost unbelievable life have seldom been told, and her legacy has been claimed, and used, by generations of men since her death in 1849. Hear the astonishing life of the “mother of Italy,” Brazilian gaucho revolutionary Anita Garibaldi. Our guest is Diana Giovinazzo, author of the forthcoming novel The Woman in Red.                     Diana Giovinazzo is the co-creator of Wine, Women and Words, a weekly  literary podcast featuring interviews with authors over a glass of wine. Diana is active within her local literary community as the president of the Los Angeles chapter of the Women’s National Book Association. The Woman in Red is her debut novel.     Music featured in this episode included Your purchases help support the podcast!

 THE VIKING Coppergate Woman | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 43:33

Dive into the stinky filth of everyday Viking life as Katie presents Olivia with a mystery. It’s not so much a Whodunnit as a WhoWASit: the skeleton of a woman found in a shallow grave on the banks of York’s River Foss. What can her bones, and all the other delightfully disgusting bits of evidence from Viking York, tell us about the mysterious Coppergate Woman? Katie is on location at the Jorvik Viking Center in York, England, with guest Dr. Chris Tuckley.         Chris Tuckley received his PhD at the Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds, in 2009. He has worked for York Archaeological Trust since 2004, and is currently YAT’s Head of Interpretation and Engagement, based at the JORVIK Viking Centre. Music featured in this episode included

 THE MOTHER Olympias | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 49:59

If you've heard anything at all about the Ancient Macedonian Queen Olympias, it's probably that she's the mother of Alexander the Great. If you've heard anything else about her, it's probably about her, uh...fondness...for snakes. But there's so much more to this remarkable woman than just sons and snake cults! Join us for the story of Olympias, a woman of remarkable courage, brilliance, loyalty, innovation, and confidence as we travel back in time with guest Kate Armstrong, host of the wonderful women's history podcast The Exploress.

 THE SORCERER Gunnhild | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:22

Long ago, in the far north of Lapland, a young woman learned the secrets of sorcery from two warlocks. At least that’s what the Icelandic sagas say. The woman would become Gunnhild, infamous Viking sorcerer whose dark magic served her lifelong pursuit of vengeance and power. Viking burials have been found that contain all the trappings of magic, so we know that the Vikings believed her immense power was real. But she never got her own saga: she only appears in supporting roles, in sagas about men. What can we extract from the sagas about Gunnhild’s life, and was she really evil?

 THE FREE WOMAN Harriet Jacobs | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:39

When Harriet Jacobs' enslaver threatened to sell her children away to the plantation unless she accepted his sexual abuse, she decided the only way to keep them safe was to run. But with no resources and no way to get north, where could she go instead? The answer is an astonishing one. Jacobs' story is one of the most dramatic and remarkable 'slave narratives' in United States history, yet for over 100 years, everyone believed it was fiction. With our guest Dr. Maria Windell, discover the incredible life and astonishing history of Harriet Jacobs, author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl and a powerful activist, abolitionist and educator in the ninteenth century United States.

 THE ROPEMAKER Mary Pattison Irwin | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 32:44

In the moment when Mary Pattison locked eyes with dashing American solider John Irwin across the ballroom at the St. Patrick's Day Ball in 1784, her destiny was set. Married by the end of the gala and on a ship to the brand new nation of the USA two weeks later, she would set up the first "Rope Walk," rope manufacturer in the small frontier town of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Her foresight, skill and ambition would assure her family's place as one of the "pillars of the city" but history would erase her name and give her husband the credit. But our guest, Gloria Forouzan, is giving it back!

 WHITE HOUSE HOLIDAY Mary Donelson Wilcox: 2019 Christmas Special | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 29:49

Late in life, Mary Donelson Wilcox recalled a magical childhood Christmas she spent at the White House with her elderly uncle, President Andrew Jackson. Her captivating memoirs paint a picture of a surprisingly global White House, with servants from around the world, and a surprisingly warm and playful President Jackson. Mary offers us a rare glimpse at Christmas in the early 19th century--when stockings, Santa Claus, and focusing the holiday on children were all delightfully novel ideas.

 THE WOMAN IN THE CHALK Cranborne Woman | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 40:33

Evidence of human life in the Stone Age is incredibly rare, so when Martin Green uncovered a Neolithic burial site on his Dorset farm, the whole world took notice. The skeletons inside were astonishingly well-preserved: one woman and three children were nestled in together. What can these bones tell us about life in Stone-Age Britain for the mysterious “Cranborne Woman"? Our guest Professor Janet Montgomery has developed lab techniques that reveal surprising biographical details, showing that even 5,000 years ago, this woman’s saga was a familiar human tale.

 THE ACCIDENTAL ACTIVIST Sybil Stockdale | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 39:07

Sybil Stockdale was a mild-mannered Navy wife who would become one of the most important and effective activists in American history. Her organization, The National League of Families, fought for nearly a decade to bring home POWs held by North Vietnam. These remarkable women defied the Government itself to bring their husbands home. Our guest is historian and curator Heath Hardage Lee, author of the new book League of Wives: The Untold Story of the Women Who Took On the U.S. Government to Bring Their Husbands Home.

Comments

Login or signup comment.