Well-behaved women never make history.
BPW makes history happen and has been since
1919. Tennessee, your state, was the Perfect 36!
Because we didn’t stay home.
Will Al Gore run for president? Yes, he did.
Did the tornado sirens work in Jackson in 1999?
No, some didn’t. Why not?
What do women want?
Not better pantyhose and lipstick!
What do women
REALLY want?
Better jobs, higher salaries, great day care, more education, affordable healthcare and jobs, jobs, jobs!
BPW/TN works for women everywhere.
Leadership means speaking up. If you don’t, who will?
When she was in the state legislature, she pointed out to the governor that it was a shame they had a House committee on daycare legislation without a single woman
– or mother -- serving on it.
The governor appointed Kim
McMillan who served admirably.
Would she have had that opportunity to work for women and their children if she had not spoken up? Probably not.
• In April 1920 25 women organized the Jackson
Business and Professional
Women, meeting in the
Carnegie Library. Miss Alice
Drake called the meeting and was elected president.
• From July 14-17, 1919 in St.
Louis, the National
Federation of Business and
Professional Women was founded in St. Louis.
• On July 3, 1920, the
Tennessee Federation was organized in Chattanooga, with seven local organizations represented.
The Elks were getting ready for their state convention. But so were the members of the
Tennessee
Federation of
Business Women.
After the war, the men came home, and the women were expected to give up their jobs.
The establishment of
"Status of Women" commissions in the U.S. in
1963 was due largely to
BPW efforts.
President John F. Kennedy recognized BPW's leading role in securing passage of the Equal Pay Act by giving
BPW's National President the first pen he used when signing the Act into law.
He signed this act on June
10, 1963 in the Oval Office of the White House,
Washington, D.C.
But we are still waiting.
Meet Navy Reserve Cmdr.
Cathy Lovelace, who has served in Afghanistan and
Germany, a decorated combat nurse, who will be speaking at our BPW/TN state convention
June 13 in Jackson. Cathy recovered from a broken jaw after an attack by a Taliban fighter.
We will offer:
Education tracks
Business training sessions
Mentoring
Kellum Everett, a Dean’s List
Scholar at Middle Tennessee
State University and president of Women in Science and
Engineering.
Keesha Klinck won a scholarship as well as a Jackson State Community
College student; she is now attending University of Memphis.
• PREAMBLE
The Equal Rights Amendment, as authored by Alice Paul, shall stand first, foremost, and above all other items which may appear on the platform of this Federation until equal, legal rights for women and men become guaranteed in the United States Constitution, because all statutory law derives there from.
THE EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT
Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.
• Alice Stokes Paul was an American suffragist and activist. Along with Lucy Burns and others, she led a successful campaign for women's suffrage that resulted in the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1920.
• PLATFORM
Economic Equity Health Civil Rights Dependent Care Victim Rights Policy Items
The organization supports issues of importance, which promote the goals, objectives, and mission statement of the Business and Professional Women of Tennessee, Inc. (BPW/TN). The placement of the Platform items in no way indicates importance or priority of one item above another.
Speaking at the
Tennessee
Economic Council on Women.
Sharing knowledge in career fields at
University of
Memphis-
Lambuth.
• Business training
• Lead your community’s economic growth with entrepreneurship
• Government contracts
• Board service
• Government service/politics
Ret. Navy Cmdr. Debbie
O’Bryant serves as our
BPW/TN state veterans mentor chair
1. Interviewing
2. Salary negotiation
3. Networking
4. Dressing for
Success
5. Social Media
6. Mentorship
7. Marketing Yourself
8. Resume Writing
9. Multigenerational management
10.Fundraising
Can you become a multimillion dollar business owner at home?
Yes, you can. It takes knowledge, skill, talent and belief in yourself.
If you are determined and smart about the way you do business, you can do this.
HOUSTON–U.S. Army veteran Nicole Baldwin, 28, was 4 years old when she was severely burned. Her nurse grandmother used home remedies to help Baldwin’s scars to heal. In 2010, Baldwin launched BIOA Beauty Skincare –
Beauty Inside and Out, using her grandmother’s formulas.
BIAO Beauty Skincare line now has three products including, a rejuvenating cleanser, a moisturizer and a facial mask which she sells online at www.biaoskincare.com
Pin-Ups for Vets: Women veterans as pin-up models having fashion shows for veterans, bake sales, whatever is needed to help a veteran. A nonprofit venture.
Kristine Guerrera creates power bars for dogs who like to hike with their families.
• Currently two female veterans ,
Reps. Tammy
Duckworth (D-
Ill.) and Tulsi
Gabbard (D-
Hawaii), are members of the
House.
Gabbard served as a company commander with the Hawaii Army National
Guard with whom she deployed in 2004 as a medical operations specialist for a year-long combat tour near Baghdad.
Duckworth lost both her legs in 2004 after being hit by a grenade while co-piloting a
Black Hawk helicopter in Iraq. She lobbied for better care of veterans as an assistant secretary at the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Fun trip on Thursday,
June 12, 2014.
Discovery Park of
America,
Union City.
Check our website at bpwtn.org for details on all the fun!
BPW/TN Officers, 2013-2014. Come join us!