Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Journalists

Index Key: Wikidata list (WD) / Crowd-sourced list (CS)

Writers by occupation: Writers (CS) Art critics (WD) Art historians (WD) Authors (WD) Children's writers (WD) Columnists (WD) Critics (WD) Editors (WD) Essayists (WD) French speaking African authors (CS) Historians (WD) Journalists (CS) Journalists (WD) Journalists - US (WD) Novelists (CS) Novelists (WD) Playwrights (CS) Playwrights (WD) Poets (CS) Poets #1 (WD) Poets #2 (WD) Publishers (WD) Screenwriters (WD) Songwriters (WD) Translators (WD) Writers (WD) Youth lit writers (CS)

Writers (WD) by country: Argentina Austria Belgium Brazil British India Canada Czech Republic Finland France Germany India Israel Italy Japan Netherlands Norway Poland Russia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland UK Uruguay


WiR redlist index: Journalists


Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR). Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our scope is women's biographies, women's works, and women's issues, broadly construed.

This list of red links is intended to serve as a basis for creating new articles on the English Wikipedia. Please note however that the red links on this list may well not be suitable as the basis for an article. All new articles must satisfy Wikipedia's notability criteria with reliable independent sources.

Women in Red logo


Australia

edit
Sources

  1. ^ Lofthouse, Andrea (1982). Who's Who of Australian Women 1982. North Ryde, NSW: Methuen Australia. p. 128. ISBN 0-454-00437-0.
  2. ^ "Celebrity Overview: Paula Voce Seven News". Hottest on TV. Retrieved 2007-09-11.

Canada

edit

France

edit

Germany

edit

India

edit

New Zealand

edit
  • add name here

Palestine

edit
  • add name here


Spain

edit
  • Tania Safura Adam Mogne, Journalist, cultural activist and researcher from Mozambique based in Barcelona.
  • Mar Cabra, Spanish investigative journalist and data analysis specialist. She won the Pulitzer Prize for her investigation of the Panama Papers.
  • Lucía Casanueva, Spanish journalist and entrepreneur. Founder of the PROA Comunicación agency and promoter of women in the business world.
  • Desirée de Fez, Spanish writer, journalist, essayist, and film critic.

United Kingdom

edit
  • Liz Smith (fashion journalist) - Has had a long and illustrious career as an editor and journalist since the 1990s. Selected by the Fashion Museum, Bath, to choose the 1992 Dress of the Year. Extremely difficult to research due to many other Liz Smiths (including the other Liz Smith (journalist)) clogging results, but there MUST be sources out there.
  • Donna Wallace - Black British fashion journalist and accessories editor for Vogue UK; selected by the Fashion Museum Bath as the leading fashion journalist to choose the 2019 Dress of the Year
  • Jane Whyatt (started on wikidata [4]) - a veteran journalist and radio producer, produced BBC radio programmes working with Robin Lustig. [5]
  • Esme Wren, just had an interview and discussion of her career in The Guardian

United Arab Emirates

edit

United States

edit

Profiled in Re-evaluating Women's Page Journalism[1]

edit

Presidents of Illinois Woman's Press Association (by term dates)

edit

(Retaining blue links to demonstrate completeness)

1. Mary Allen West, 1886 (January) - 1893 (January)
2. Helen Ekin Starrett, 1893 (January) - 1894 (January)
3. Elizabeth Armstrong Reed, 1894 (January) - 1896 (June)
4. Sallie M. Moses, 1896 (June) - 1898 (June)
5. H. Effa Webster, 1898 (June) - 1900 (June)
6. Amelia Sheckelford Sullivan, 1900 (June) - 1902 (June)
7. Elizabeth Armstrong Reed, 1902 (June) - 1904 (June)
8. Ada Barton Bogg, 1904 (June) - 1907 (June)
9. Mate E. Palmer, 1907 (June) - 1909 (June)
10. Cornelia Templeton Jewett (Hatcher), 1909 (June) - 1910 (June)
11. Mary Eleanor O'Donnell, 1910 (June) - 1913 (June)
12. Ethel M. Colson Brazelton, 1913 (June) - 1917 (June)
13. Mary Delaney Holden, 1917 (June) - 1919 (June)
14. Maude Swalm Evans, 1919 (June) - 1923 (June)
15. Clara Ingram Judson, 1923 (June) - 1925 (June)
16. Mary Dickerson Donahey, 1925 (June) - 1927 (June)
17. Anne Myers Sergel, 1927 (June) - 1927 (December)
18. Josephine Bessoms, 1927 (December) - 1929 (June)
19. Leona Alford Malek, 1929 (June) - 1935 (June)
20. Helen Miller Malloch, 1935 (June) - 1941 (June)
21. Bernadine Bailey, 1941 (June) - 1945 (June)
22. Helen Stevens Fisher, 1945 (June) - 1949 (June)
23. Ruth Rawlings McGlone, 1949 (June) - 1951 (June)
24. Minnie Johnson Schachner, 1951 (June) - 1953 (June)
25. Eunice W. Thompson, 1953 (June) - 1957 (June)
26. Pearl Dieck Serbus, 1957 (June) - 1960 (June)
27. Kathryn Winslow Mecham, 1960 (June) - 1963 (June)
28. Michelle Graf, 1963 (June) - 1963 (July)
29. Virginia Novinger, 1963 (July) - 1964 (June)
30. Eunice W. Thompson, 1964 (June) - 1965 (June)
31. Sallie Whelan, 1965 (June) - 1967 (June)
32. Laura Jackson (writer), 1967 (June) - 1971 (June)
33. Millie Vickery, 1971 (June) - 1973 (June)
34. Lucille Hecht, 1973 (June) - 1975 (June)
35. Gladys Erickson, 1975 (June) - 1977 (June)
36. Victoria Wilson (writer), 1977 (June) - 1979 (June)
37. Margaret Bengtson, 1979 (June) - 1981 (June)
38. Olga Gize Carlile, 1981 (June) - 1983 (June)
39. Frances Altman, 1983 (June) - 1985 (June)
40. Marlene Cook, 1985 (June) - 1989 (June)
41. Phyllis Rohr, 1989 (June) - 1991 (June)
42. Karen Biesboer, 1991 (June) - 1993 (June)
43. Cecilia Green, 1993 (June) - 1996 (June)
44. Peggy Grillet, 1996 (June) - 2001 (June)
45. Marion E. Gold, 2001 (June) - 2003 (June)
46. Val Ensalaco, 2003 (June) - 2005 (June)
47. Suzanne Hanney, 2005 (June) - 2009 (June)
48. Marianne Wolf-Astrauskas, 2009 (June) - 2013 (June)
49. Rebecca Sarwate, 2013 (June) - present

Presidents of New England Woman's Press Association (by term dates)

edit

(Retaining blue links to demonstrate completeness. Missing 1932-1971 and 1975-1982)

1. Sallie Joy White, 1885-1890
2. Estelle M. Hatch, 1891-1893
3. Helen M. Winslow, 1894-1895
4. May Alden Ward, 1896-1897
5. Elizabeth Merritt Gosse, 1898
6. Nella I. Daggett, 1899-1900
7. Annie G. Murray, 1901-1902
8. Emeline Carr Ricker, 1903-1904
9. Allie A. Whitaker, 1905
10. Kate Tannatt Woods, 1906
11. Sallie Joy White, 1907-1908
12. Eleanor W. F. Bates, 1908 (interim)
13. Bessie Brown Cobb, 1908-1910
14. Ida May Pierce, 1911-1912
15. Myra B. Lord, 1913-15
16. M. Agnes Dalrymple Bishop, 1916
17. Grace M. Burt, 1917-1918
18. Rose Moore Strong, 1919-1920
19. Jessie L. Leonard, 1921-1922
20. Annie Judson Hannigan, 1923-1924
21. Norah Johnson Barbour, 1925-1926
22. Helena B. Shipman, 1927-1928
23. Helena C. Mahoney, 1929-1930
24. Mildred Buchanan Flagg, 1931
25. Muriel Knight, 1972-1973
26. Evelena Hudson, 1973-1974

Winners of the NNA's annual Emma C. McKinney award[2]

edit

Talkpage templates for articles

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Voss, Kimberly Wilmot (2018). Re-Evaluating Women's Page Journalism in the Post World War II Era: Celebrating Soft News. Palgrave MacMillan. ISBN 9783319962139. Archived from the original on 7 April 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. ^ "EMMA C. MCKINNEY MEMORIAL AWARD IN ORDER BY YEAR" (PDF). National Newspaper Association. 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 7, 2020. Retrieved July 20, 2020.