$ 27.00
Calamity Jane (May 1, 1852 – August 1, 1903) was a frontier woman renowned for her sharp-shooting, whiskey-swilling and cross-dressing ways and one of the more colorful characters of the West. Few substantiated facts are known about Calamity Jane’s life, but much is known about the legend.
Calamity Jane (born Martha Jane Canary) had a reputation for being able to handle a horse better than most men and shoot like a cowboy. She once described herself as the most reckless and daring rider and one of the best shots in the West. Further, she scoffed at the narrow limits placed on women in her era. Buffalo Bill Cody once said she had "very positive opinions of the things that a girl could enjoy."
A truly independent woman full of adventure, Calamity Jane did many things that women of her day could only dream of. She was a woman who held her own among the roughest characters of the Wild West.
This super soft t-shirt is made from 100% combed and ring-spun cotton.
FITS SIZES | |
SMALL | 6-8 |
MEDIUM | 10-12 |
LARGE | 14-16 |
$ 27.00
The United States presidential election on November 2, 1920 was the first election in which American women had the right to vote since the ratification of the 19th amendment on August 18, 1920. Achieving this milestone was a long and arduous struggle.Beginning in the 1800s, women organized,...
$ 27.00
From 1872 to 1883, Emily Warren Roebling oversaw one of the greatest engineering triumphs in history - the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge. In 1869, Emily’s father-in-law, John A. Roebling, took on the immense task of constructing a bridge that would connect Brooklyn to New...
$ 27.00
Alice Coachman (November 9, 1923 – July 14, 2014), a track and field star, made history at the 1948 Olympic Games in London becoming the first black woman to win an Olympic medal.Coachman was born and raised in the heart of the segregated south in Albany,...