Her Story: Mapping Indiana Women’s History
The Ball State University
Libraries’ GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) is creating custom maps about
Indiana’s rich history to commemorate the state’s upcoming bicentennial
celebration. The custom maps are geared
toward the fourth-grade Indiana history curriculum and feature numerous people
and places often neglected in the elementary social studies textbook.
The newest map in the
collection, Her Story: Indiana Women’s History, features prominent women pioneers of the state. Little-known women’s rights advocates like
Helen Gougar of Lafayette, Anna Dunn Noland of Logansport, and Amanda Way of
Winchester are featured on the map. The
map also features pioneers in politics like Virginia Jenckes, the first female
from Indiana in the U.S. House of Representatives, and Katie Hall, the author
of the bill to make Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday a national holiday. Women from sports, the arts, and education
are also included.
Other maps in the series
include a map of Indiana’s music history, a map showing movies that take place
in Indiana, Indiana authors, high school boys’ state basketball champions,
points of interest, Indiana political history, Native Americans of Indiana, Indiana
automobile history, and Indiana sports history.
The maps include
photographs from the Libraries’ Digital Media Repository and from the Indiana
Historical Society. The Indiana history
maps are all available in the Libraries’ Cardinal Scholar repository. The maps may be printed and used in the
classroom or for research and learning projects.
For more information,
please contact the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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