Famalao’an Guåhan: Women In Guam History | |
Country: | Guam |
Language: | English |
Genre: | Women's history |
Publisher: | Guampedia |
Pub Date: | March 2019 |
Pages: | 96 |
Isbn: | 9780984860340 |
Famalao’an Guåhan: Women In Guam History is a 2019 publication highlighting the lives of 28 notable women who contributed to Guam's culture.[1] [2] The book was the second printed publication from Guampedia, a non-profit associated with the University of Guam.[3] [4]
The project "Women in Guam History" started when members of the Guam Humanities Council found that only a handful of the 94 profiles in its encyclopedia were of women.[5] In November 2012, Guampedia presented a poster exhibit called "Women in Guam History" at the Hall of Governors at the Latte of Freedom at Adelup Point.
The 2019 publication was accompanied by a photo exhibit celebrating the 28 women at the Guam Congress Building in Hagåtña.[6]
Fo’na is the lone woman of mythology on the list, and is noted in the culture as the creator of the Chamorro people who are the indigenous people of the Mariana Islands. The sovereign state of Guam is an unincorporated territory of the United States in the Micronesia subregion of the western Pacific Ocean.
Name | Image | Birth–Death < | --Leave parentheses/brackets in place per --> | Area of achievement | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
(1903–1996) | Founder of Ada's Market. She and husband Pedro Ada were Guam's first millionaires. | [7] | |||
(1928–2002) | Six-term Guam senator | [8] | |||
(1934–1986) | Guam senator, advocated World War II reparations for the CHamoru/Chamorro indigenous people. Her efforts produced $37 million in compensations for seized lands. | [9] [10] | |||
(1915–1993) | Guam senator, business woman. | [11] | |||
(1905–2005) | Master weaver and teacher of traditional weaving. | [12] | |||
(1897–1993) | Business woman, civic leader. Her husband became a World War II prisoner of war held by Japan. She collaborated with the Allies of World War II, and was beaten and tortured by the Japanese. She resumed running the family business after WWII and remained active in it until 1982. | [13] [14] | |||
(1929–2010) | President of the University of Guam, who was part of the forced child labor during the Japanese occupation of Guam. | [15] [16] | |||
(1929–1995) | Japanese WWII prisoner of war; survived being buried alive; later testified before the Guam War Reparations Commission in the late 1980s and early 1990s. | [17] | |||
Female mythological creator of the indigenous people of the Mariana Islands. (also spelled Fu’una) | [18] | ||||
CHamoru Educator in Micronesia | [19] [20] | ||||
(1930–2002) | Storyteller, educator, language advocate | [21] | |||
(1893–1982) | Fluent in the language of the Chamorro people, she assisted with translations of stories, songs, cultural lore. The result of her work resides at the Bishop Museum in Honolulu. | [22] | |||
(1892–1977) | Educator who helped establish Guam Liberation Day as a national holiday. | [23] | |||
(1924–2011) | Founding member of the Micronesian Area Research Center. | [24] | |||
(1914–2006) | Educator who was elected representative from Yona to the 9th and 10th Guam Congress. Also Legislative secretary. | [25] | |||
(1935–2012) | Director Guam Department of Education, championed the rights of senior citizens. | [26] | |||
(1937–2012) | University of Guam biology professor who was a driving force behind documenting all flora of Guam. Curator of the university's herbarium. | [27] | |||
(1915–2007) | First woman elected to the Guam Congress. Namesake of the Rosa Aguigui Reyes Memorial Library. | [28] | |||
(1932–2009) | Educator, public servant, founding member of the Women’s Democratic Party of Guam. | [29] | |||
(b. 1880) | Chaperone for the Native Nurses program in Guam from 1914 to 1924. | [30] | |||
(1926–2003) | Business woman who created Sablan Enterprises. | [31] | |||
(1926–1998) | Educator, advocate for the disabled. | [32] | |||
(1906–1982) | Pioneer nurse. | [33] | |||
(1905–2000) | American social anthropologist best known for her studies of CHamoru culture. | [34] [35] | |||
(1911–2001) | Business woman and member of the Legislature of Guam. | [36] [37] | |||
(1933–2007) | Master weaver | [38] | |||
(1898–1968) | Teacher and school administrator. Maria Arceo Ulloa Elementary School named in her honor. | [39] | |||
(1906–1998) | Helped establish the convent of the Sisters of Mercy in Guam. Along with Bishop Apollinaris William Baumgartner, founded the island’s Catholic School System. | [40] [41] | |||
(1911–1997) | Educator and politician, member of the Guam legislature. | [42] | |||