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A Woman's Place: How Women Shaped Pittsburgh

New Exhibit from the Heinz History Center Opening During Women's History Month!

By Heinz History Center March 13, 2024

OPENS MARCH 23, 2024 at the Heinz History Center

From pioneering investigative journalism to leading their country to Olympic gold, Western Pennsylvania women have made an immeasurable impact in America, but too often, their stories have been overlooked.

Pictured in the above image is Anna B. Heldman: referred to as ‘Angel of the Hill’ , a visiting nurse who fought illness in Pittsburgh traveling door-to-door for four decades.

Explore rare artifacts like the small handbag carried around the world in 1889 by legendary journalist Nellie Bly, who traveled the globe in just 72 days, more than a week faster than Jules Verne’s fictional character Phileas Fogg in “Around the World in 80 Days.”

Discover the stories of “real life” Rosie the Riveters, from the Western Pennsylvanians who worked the mills during World War II and helped inspire the iconic Rosie poster, to the modern day “Girls of Steel” – the all-girls robotics team at Carnegie Mellon University.

Exhibit highlights include:

Clothing and textiles from the 1830s through today, including the inauguration dress worn by Sophie Masloff – the first and only female mayor of Pittsburgh – and a costume from the National Negro Opera Company

Original sketches from Peggy Owens Skillen, who helped to create the modern version of the iconic PBS show “Sesame Street”

Protest posters, buttons, and other objects that tell the story of women’s suffrage and how Pittsburghers like Lucy Kennedy Miller and Winifred Meek Morris fought for the right to vote

A special section on women athletes featuring the Olympic jersey of basketball legend and McKeesport native Swin Cash; Suzie McConnell Serio’s WNBA jersey; and a leather baseball glove used by Betsy Jochum of the South Bend (Ind.) Blue Sox of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, on loan from the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History

A Woman’s Place: How Women Shaped Pittsburgh will be on exhibit through Oct. 6, 2024.