Key Events of United States Feminism During the 1960s
1960
- May 9: The Food and Drug Administration approved the first oral contraceptive, commonly known as "the Pill," for sale as birth control in the United States.
1961
- November 1: Women Strike for Peace, founded by Bella Abzug and Dagmar Wilson, drew 50,000 women nationwide to protest nuclear weapons and U.S. involvement in war in southeast Asia.
- December 14: President John F. Kennedy issued an executive order establishing the President's Commission on the Status of Women. He appointed former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt to chair the commission.
1962
- Sherri Finkbine traveled to Sweden for an abortion after learning that Thalidomide, a tranquilizer drug she had taken, caused extensive deformities to the fetus.
1963
- February 17: The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan was published.
- May 23: Anne Moody, who later wrote Coming of Age in Mississippi, participated in a Woolworth's lunch counter sit-in.
- June 10: The Equal Pay Act of 1963 was signed into law by President John F. Kennedy.
- June 16: Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in outer space, another Soviet first in the U.S.-U.S.S.R. "space race."
1964
- U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, including the Title VII prohibition of discrimination based on sex by private employers including employment agencies and unions.
1965
- In Griswold v. Connecticut, the Supreme Court struck down a law restricting access to contraception for married couples.
- The Newark Museum exhibit "Women Artists of America: 1707-1964" looked at women's art, often neglected in the art world.
- Barbara Castle becomes the first UK female minister of state, appointed to become the Minister of Transport.
- July 2: The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission began operations.
- December: Pauli Murray and Mary Eastwood published "Jane Crow and the Law: Sex Discrimination and Title VII" in the George Washington Law Review.
1966
- The National Organization for Women, known as NOW, was founded.
- NOW set up task forces to work on key women's issues.
- Marlo Thomas began starring in the television sitcom That Girl, about a young, independent, single career woman.
1967
- President Johnson amended Executive Order 11246, which dealt with affirmative action, to include sex discrimination on the list of prohibited employment discrimination.
- The feminist group New York Radical Women formed in New York City.
- June: Naomi Weisstein and Heath Booth held a "free school" at the University of Chicago on women's issues. Jo Freeman was among the attendees and was inspired to organize a woman's session at the National Conference of New Politics. A woman's caucus of NCNP formed, and when that was belittled from the floor, a group of women met at Jo Freeman's apartment a group that evolved into the Chicago Women's Liberation Union.
- Jo Freeman's newsletter "Voice of the women's liberation movement" gave a name to the new movement.
- August: The National Welfare Rights Organization formed in Washington D.C.
1968
- NOW formed a special committee to launch a major campaign for the Equal Rights Amendment.
- Shirley Chisholm became the first African-American woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.
- The Women's Equity Action League broke off from NOW to avoid the "controversial" issues of sexuality, reproductive choice, and the Equal Rights Amendment.
- The National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) was founded.
- The National Welfare Rights Organization was founded, with 22,000 members by the next year.
- Women at the Dagenham (UK) Ford factory stage a strike for equal pay, nearly stopping work at all the UK Ford automobile plants.
- Women for the first Seattle women's liberation group after a male organizer for SDS at a meeting said that "balling a chick together" enhanced the political consciousness of poor white young men. A woman in the audience had called out, "And what did it do for the consciousness of the chick?"
- February 23: The EEOC ruled that being female was not a bona fide occupational qualification of being a flight attendant.
- September 7: The "Miss America Protest" by New York Radical Women at the Miss America pageant brought widespread media attention to women's liberation.
1969
- The Abortion Counseling Service of Women's Liberation began operating in Chicago under the code name "Jane."
- The radical feminist group Redstockings began in New York.
- March 21: Redstockings staged an abortion speakout, insisting that women's voices be heard on the issue instead of only male legislators and nuns.
- May: NOW activists marched in Washington D.C. for Mother's Day, demanding "Rights, Not Roses."