Gender, Women Physicians, Women’s Health
- A guid cause: National Library of Scotland – The history of women’s suffrage in Scotland, with photographs, newspaper reports, diary entries, and other sources.
- Archives for Women in Medicine: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School – letters, photographs, research records, and other materials documenting the ongoing evolution of women’s contributions in medicine
- Contemporary Women’s Issues – over 60,000 full-text contributions on a broad range of women’s issues, 1992–present *Accessible through the McMaster Libraries with a valid MacID
- Defining Gender, 1450-1910 – 50,000 images of original manuscript and printed material, including documents from the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford *Accessible through theMcMaster Libraries with a valid MacID
- Dr. June Klinghoffer: Drexel University College of Medicine – Oral history interview with Dr. June Klinghoffer, 1945 graduate of Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania
- Japanese Woodblock Print Collection: UCSF – This collection of Japanese woodblock prints illustrates a wide variety of health-related topics, providing a window into traditional Japanese attitudes toward illness, the human body, women, religion, and the West
- Kinesis: UBC Library Digital Collections – published from 1974 to 2001 by the Vancouver Status of Women (VSW), Kinesis served as a vehicle for social change and women’s liberation
- Sophia Smith Collection: Women’s History Archives at Smith College – Images, oral history transcripts, and audio and video streaming media on topics such as birth control and reproductive rights, women’s rights, suffrage, and the contemporary women’s movement across race, class, and sexual orientation
- Women Physicians 1850s-1970s: Drexel University College of Medicine -correspondence, scrapbooks, clippings, college records, images, diaries, publications and ephemera documenting the history of women physicians beginning with the first medical school for women, Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, founded in 1850
- Women Working: Harvard University Library Open Collections Program – over 650,000 individual pages from more than 3,100 books and trade catalogs, 900 archives and manuscript items, and 1,400 photographs illustrating working conditions, workplace regulations, home life, costs of living, commerce, recreation, health and hygiene, and social issues for working women in the United States from 1800-1930
- Women’s Liberation Movement Print Culture: Digital Collections, Duke University Libraries – Manifestos, speeches, essays, and other materials documenting the Women’s Liberation Movement in the United States, 1960s-1970s