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  1. 1 day ago · Anna Rajam Malhotra. Anna Rajam Malhotra broke the glass ceiling as the first female Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer in 1951. Born on July 17, 1927, in Kerala, she was instrumental in ...

  2. Come celebrate this major discovery of a long lost 1919 silent film – back on the screen after 100 years! Broken Barriers (Khavah) was the first American screen adaptation of the work of Sholem Aleichem, and based on the same stories as Tevye and Fiddler on the Roof.

  3. www.jewishfilm.org › films › Broken-BarriersBroken Barriers (Khavah)

    The film's substantive depiction of Jewish life is a rarity even amongst the precious few surviving early American films with Jewish content. Originally released as Khavah and later renamed Broken Barriers, this 1919 silent film is the first American screen adaptation of the work of Sholem Aleichem.

    • Madam C. J. Walker Becomes A Millionaire
    • Marie Luhring Becomes An Automotive Engineer
    • Bessie Coleman Earns International Pilot's License
    • Rebecca Latimer Felton Appointed Senator
    • Florence King Wins Us Supreme Court Case
    • Nellie Tayloe Ross Elected Governor
    • Miriam "Ma" Ferguson Elected Governor of Texas
    • Gertrude Ederle Swims The English Channel
    • Phoebe Omlie Earns Her Transport Pilot License
    • Amelia Earhart Flies Across The Atlantic

    Madam C. J. Walker, born Sarah Breedlove, was reportedly was the first Black woman to become a millionaire on her own. She started selling hair-straightening products for black women in 1906; by the time she died in 1919, her business was worth at least $1 million. Also in 1919, actress Mary Pickford became the first woman to co-own a production st...

    Marie Luhring in 1920 became the first woman in the United States to become an automotive engineer. She went on to become the first female truck designer. She worked with Mack Truck Co. and established herself as one of the best designers in the business.

    American aviator Bessie Colemanearned her international pilot's license in 1921, the first Black woman to do so. Since U.S. flight schools wouldn't teach women of color—she was also part Native American—Coleman learned French and went to Europe to get her license. Known as "Queen Bessie," she came back to the United States and performed daring stun...

    In 1922, Georgia's Democratic Gov. Thomas Hardwick—who had previously voted against women's suffrage—planned to run for the Senateand wanted to appeal to women voters. He decided to appoint Rebecca Latimer Felton, 87, to a vacant seat. She held the position for only 24 hours before handing it over to the newly elected Walter George. Felton is still...

    Florence King held a lot of firsts: In 1897, she became the first female patent attorney; in 1918, she became the first female vice president of the Women's Bar Association of Chicago; in 1922, she became the first woman to argue a patent case before the U.S. Supreme Court. A year later, she became the first woman to win a case before the high cour...

    On Nov. 4, 1924, Nellie Tayloe Rossbecame the first woman elected governor in the United States when she was elected for the title in Wyoming. She got the most votes one month after her husband died of appendicitis, which left the position vacant. Ross was officially inaugurated in January the next year.

    Nellie Tayloe Ross beat out Miriam "Ma" Fergusonas the country's first woman governor by a couple of weeks. Ferguson was sworn in as the first woman governor of Texas 15 days after Ross took office. Ferguson, a former Texas first lady, ran for the position after her husband was impeached, convicted, and removed from office as governor. Among other ...

    Covered in grease and wearing a two-piece swimsuit, Gertrude Ederle set out to become thefirst woman to swim the 21-mile-long English Channel on Aug. 6, 1926. At the time, people didn't think it was physically possible for a woman to swim that far. Ederle proved them wrong and completed the feat—her second attempt—in 14 hours and 31 minutes, beatin...

    In 1927, Phoebe Omlie, a contemporary of Amelia Earhart, became the first woman to get a transport pilot licenseand an airplane mechanic license. The next year she was the first woman to fly across the Rocky Mountains in a light aircraft.

    An aeronautic superstar, Amelia Earhart on June 17, 1928, became thefirst woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean. Along with two other pilots, Earhart traveled from Canada to England. President Calvin Coolidge nicknamed Earhart "Lady Lindy" after fellow American pilot Charles Lindbergh. Another 1928 first: Genevieve R. Cline was thefirst woman appo...

  4. Broken Barriers, also known as Khava (Yiddish: חוה) is a 1919 American Yiddish silent film, based on author Sholem Aleichem's stock character Tevye the Dairyman.

  5. Broken Barriers. The obstacles confronted in this silent drama, from 1919, are ones of tradition and religious insularity. The movie, directed by Charles E. Davenport, is based on the same...