Veteran Feminists of America

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Veteran Feminists of America (VFA) is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization for supporters and veterans of the second-wave feminist movement. Founded by Jacqueline Ceballos in 1992, Veteran Feminists of America regularly hosts reunions for second-wave feminists and events honoring feminist leaders.

VFA's major effort is the Pioneer Histories Project, the personal history of the Second Wave women's movement, one story at a time. Interviews with hundreds of feminist activists are featured on the VFA webpage. Support for the Project is provided by the Sy Syms Foundation.

VFA Mission statement

The purpose of Veteran Feminists of America is to honor, record and preserve the history of the accomplishments of women active in the feminist movement, to educate the public on the importance of the changes brought about by the women's movement, to preserve the movement's history and to inspire future generations.

History

The Veteran Feminists of America was created with the goals of remembering and recording the faces and retrospectives of the hundreds of pioneers who launched the 1960s feminist movement, often called second-wave feminism.

At first, VFA gatherings consisted of a time and place to meet and reminisce, followed by an awards dinner captured for posterity on video. Those videotapes are now archived at the

Radcliffe Institute and the Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture at Duke University. Soon after their first reunion in 1992, Jacqueline Ceballos joined with Dorothy Senerchia and Mary Jean Tully to create the organization. Muriel Fox
joined soon thereafter and has chaired the organization since 1994.

The original idea for a name, Veterans of Feminist Wars, was rejected because its acronym could be confused with that of the Veterans of Foreign Wars organization.[1]

During its first decade, VFA mainly honored individuals and groups for their work in establishing national and local organizations, raising public awareness about feminist issues, and lobbying for women's rights. In time, VFA's events spread geographically and reached into new areas across the country.

In 1998, VFA Board member Barbara Love, with help from VFA members, began compiling a directory of feminists, published in 2006 as Feminists Who Changed America: 1963-1975 (University of Illinois Press). The book is a collection of 2,220 biographies of second-wave feminists who accomplished significant activist work.[2] It is also available as a searchable CD. Feminists Who Changed America—along with the videos from two decades of retrospective events—brings to life the history of feminism's second wave. It is meant to help to ensure that the achievements of the women's movement are not forgotten.[3]

VFA has a new partnership with the New York Historical Society Museum & Library. Its newly created Center for Women's History will be the venue to showcase the artifacts and stories that document modern feminism.

Notable VFA Officers and Board members

Officers

Special Portfolios

Board of Directors

Board Advisor

Founder

  • Jacqui Ceballos

Events

On February 4, 2021, VFA held a Zoom webinar honoring NOW founder Betty Friedan on the 100th anniversary of her birth (and the 15th anniversary of her death). "Betty Friedan's 100 Birthday: Moving the Legacy Forward".

VFA has held a number of events honoring second-wave feminists, including:

See also

  • List of feminists
  • List of women's rights activists
  • List of women's rights organizations
  • Barbara J. Love; Nancy F Cott (17 April 2015). Feminists Who Changed America, 1963-1975. University of Illinois Press. pp. 6–. .

References

  1. ^ Ceballos, Jacqueline. "A brief history by Jacqueline Ceballos, VFA Founder". Veteran Feminists of America website. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  2. OCLC 70174994
    .
  3. ^ DeLu, Ardys (2007). "Review of Feminists Who Changed America". Femspec. 8 (1–2): 122. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  4. ^ "Report on the Feminist Reunion, June 10, 2017" Veteran Feminists of America.

External links