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In early 1825, three architectural drawings of an unbuilt house designed by women were deposited by the Library of Congress in its first collection. The drawings included drawings of an apparently unfinished "house" designed by women and a drawing of a St. Louis market completed by an African American female carpenter in the tradition of the Five Points House - an "exceptionally enlightened" institution designed to serve shoeless, hungry, refugee women and children. The architectural drawings were part of the Library of Congress's first collection and introduced by the Spanish diplomat and famed literary figure, Don José MarÃa de Azara, in his diary entry for January 5, 1825: "Just now was deposited in the Library of Congress a representation of a house designed and built by three ladies in Philadelphia as a donation to the Library. I should like to add something about this, as one of my intentions when I came to pass the winter. If I do not do so soon, your correspondent will see it as a dereliction of duty."
In this lively portrait, Professor Antler combines history and sociology by placing women themselves at the center of a bold and accessible narrative, describing their remarkable—and at times, unexpected—thoughts and actions. And unlike books that focus on the work of women to the exclusion of men, she highlights parallels between women of the past and the women of today and their overlapping and collective struggles against the forces of social, economic, educational, political, religious, and cultural domination and with the goals of gaining power and control over their lives, the world, and the future. She reveals women as architects of reform, suffragists, educators, teachers, social workers, lawyers, politicians, artists, surgeons, and women's health care providers, among many other roles. Instead of presenting a linear narrative of women's history, Women in the Third Millennium returns us to the people and struggles that shaped the lives of these matriarchal foremothers, and reveals the whole world as never before. d2c66b5586