Cannabis Ruderalis

Penny L. Richards, PhD, Research Assistant Professor, Center for Disability Studies at the University at Buffalo (beginning 2015); review board, Disability Studies Quarterly (beginning 2015); research scholar, UCLA Center for the Study of Women (1999-2015); president, Disability History Association (2009-2014); one of the founding editors of H-Education (1999-2017) and H-Disability (2001-2017) on H-Net. My degrees are in Geography (BS, 1988, Penn State, and MS, 1990, Wisconsin) and Social Foundations of Education (PhD, 1996, UNC-Chapel Hill). I also earned a North Carolina teaching certificate, now long expired.

At Wikipedia I was an account coordinator for The Wikipedia Library (WP:TWL), 2015 to 2018, and I take care of the Pinterest boards for WikiProject Women in Red. I've worked on two traditional encyclopedias, most recently on the editorial board of the Encyclopedia of American Disability History (Facts-on-File 2009).

If you invite me to be part of an edit-athon, I'll probably participate virtually, if the subject is even slightly interesting to me. I can't attend too many in-person events, but (when we're not in the middle of a global pandemic) I do try to show up at edit-athons and other Wikipedia events in Los Angeles, especially if they're on weekend afternoons, and especially if I can take the Metro.

Thanks to Shane Landrum for the push to get a real account.

100WikiDays[edit]

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I completed the #100wikidays challenge between 10 August and 17 November 2016. Click through for the details. It was fun, I'd recommend it, and I'll probably do it again someday.

Alphabet Runs 2017–2021[edit]

In May-June 2017, I wrote 26 consecutive articles, one for each letter of the alphabet, all of them biographies of women. Click through here for the list. It was fun!

In November 2017, I did it again. Because it was so much fun the first time.

In January 2018, I did it again, this time as part of an art activity for Fun-a-Day LA.

In March 2018, I did it again. I know I'll run out of notables with Q and X names eventually, but it's fun when I do find them!

In June 2018, I completed my fifth alphabet run. From Anna to Zelma.

In September 2018, I completed my sixth alphabet run. From Alice to Zorka. I might need to be stopped.

In March 2019, I completed my seventh alphabet run. From Alice to Zona Maie. Some emphasis on Francophone women this round.

In December 2019, I completed my eighth alphabet run. From Alma to Zhay, mostly classical musicians.

In September 2020, I completed my ninth alphabet run. From Adele to Zabetta, this time.

In September 2021, I completed my tenth alphabet run. Mostly US writers this time, from Ada to Zula.

Black History Months[edit]

In February 2017, I started 28 articles on African American women for Black History Month. Click through here for details. Some of them were translated for Armenian Wikipedia, and most of them had new images, too.

In February 2018, 20 more: Here's that list.

In February 2019, 24 more: Here's that list.

In February 2020, 19 more: Here's that list.

In February 2021, 30 more: Here's that list.

In February 2022, 24 more: Here's that list.

Awaken the Dragon[edit]

In Spring 2016, I joined "Awaken the Dragon", an editathon focused on Welsh topics. Click through here for a list of the 36 articles I started during that event (I also destubbed a bunch of others).

Britain and Ireland Destubathon[edit]

Table of contributions here.

California Library Hall of Fame, etc.[edit]

Planning to work on the list of women inducted into the California Library Hall of Fame by the California Library Association. And here's a list of Eleanor Clarke Slagle Lectureship recipients. And here's the list of inductees into the Adaptive Sports USA Hall of Fame. And here's a list of Olga Jonasson Distinguished Member Award recipients, from the Association of Women Surgeons.

Photos[edit]

Taking women's history to the streets, literally[edit]

Detail from a chalk art piece I created at Belmont Shore Chalk Art Contest in Long Beach, California, 14 October 2017. I asked passersby, "What's Your Grandmother's Name?" and those names were added to the Alphonse Mucha-inspired piece.

Articles I started, 2022 (1801–)[edit]

  1. Florence Elfelt Bramhall
  2. Cherilla Storrs Lowrey
  3. Catherine T. Montgomery
  4. Ismay Duvivier
  5. Rita W. Harlan
  6. Melinda Micco
  7. Mary Wilburn
  8. Betty Carp
  9. Mercedes Delpino
  10. Cecilia Callejo
  11. Eunice Blake Bohanon
  12. Jessamine Hoagland
  13. Harriet Vittum
  14. Eliza B. K. Dooley
  15. Matilda Allison
  16. Dorothy Carolin Bacon
  17. Rachel Feldhay Brenner
  18. Thelma Babbitt
  19. Anna Parker Fessenden
  20. Dorothy Kurgans Goldberg
  21. Lenore Janis
  22. Elizabeth Ann Brown
  23. Dorothy Douglas Robinson Kidder
  24. Rosalind Goodrich Bates
  25. Rosa Meador Goodrich Boido
  26. Essie Davis Morgan
  27. Ruby Grant Martin
  28. Hazel Hainsworth Young
  29. Helen Hale Tuck
  30. Johney Brooks
  31. Joyce Finley Garrett
  32. Mae C. Hawes
  33. Ruby Greene
  34. Susie Ione Brown Waxwood
  35. Pauline Weeden Maloney
  36. Aldena Windham Davis Smith
  37. Frederica Chase Dodd
  38. Madree Penn White
  39. Mary Jane Watkins (dentist)
  40. Eugenia L. Mobley
  41. Eliza Pearl Shippen
  42. Hattie Mae Whiting White
  43. Sarah Thomas Curwood
  44. Lottie Pearl Mitchell
  45. Elizabeth Schmoke Randolph
  46. Teresa Arkel
  47. Vera Chandler Foster
  48. Jean Martin Pinder
  49. Mary L. Petty
  50. Florence V. Lucas

Articles I started, 2011-2021[edit]

My DYKs[edit]

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