Wednesday, September 18, 2019

This FilAm History Month, Celebrate Filipina American women






The vital but underreported role of Filipinas in Filipino American history is the theme for this year's Filipino American History Month this October.

“Pinay Visionaries: Celebrating Filipina American Women” and their contributions to history and the Filipina/o American community nationwide has been adopted by the Filipino American National Historical Society (FANHS).

Throughout history, Pinay — Filipina American women — leaders, laborers, scholars, scientists, and activists have been the backbone of the Filipina/o American community. These Filipina Americans have overcome racial and gender discrimination, and have persevered to contribute to their respective fields. 

This year, Filipino American communities and organizations are encouraged to celebrate Filipina American women across the United States, including:

  • Dr. Dorothy Laigo Cordova – Founder and Executive Director of the Filipino American National Historical Society. She began organizing and advocating for the Filipino American community since the 1950s. Her vision has paved the way for FANHS, Filipino American History Month, and Filipino American Studies.
  • Victoria “Vicki” Manalo Draves – the first Asian American Olympic gold medalist. She won two gold medals in platform and springboard diving in 1948.
  • Dr. Felicisima “Ping” Serafica – the first Filipina American professor of psychology to receive tenure in the US. She helped establish one of the Philippines’ first hospitals for children with mental disabilities and the country’s first interdisciplinary mental health clinic.
  • Thelma Buchholdt – the first Filipina American elected to a legislature in the United States in 1974 and the first Asian American elected to serve as President of the National Order of Women Legislators.
  • Dr. Dawn Bohulano Mabalon – the first Filipina/o to receive a Ph.D. in History from Stanford University. She was a professor, a historic preservationist, and the author of Little Manila is in the Heart and Journey for Justice: The Life of Larry Itliong.


This year also marks the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment. Passed by Congress on June 4, 1919 (and later ratified in 1920), the 19th Amendment gave women in the United States the right to vote. Although Filipina Americans (and other women of color) could not vote until much later) the 19th Amendment was a measure that dramatically altered the political and social landscape of the US. 

FANHS encourages organizations and communities across the United States to incorporate this theme of celebrating Filipina American Women in their Filipino American History Month events. 

FANHS encourages everyone to share their stories of Pinay Visionaries in their life and communities at #FAHM2019 on social media, including Instagram, Twitter (@fanhs_national) and it's Facebook page @FANHSnatl.

The celebration of Filipino American History Month in October commemorates the first recorded presence of Filipinos in the continental US, which occurred on October 18, 1587, when “Luzones Indios” came ashore from the Spanish galleon Nuestra Senora de Esperanza and landed at what is now Morro Bay, California. 

In 2009, Congress recognized October as Filipino American History Month in the US. Various states, counties and cities in the US have established proclamations and resolutions declaring observance of Filipino American History Month.

The year 2019 also marks the 37th anniversary of the Filipino American National Historical Society. Across the nation, the 37 FANHS chapters, colleges, universities, museums, and community groups, will be commemorating Filipino American History Month with various activities and events to bring awareness of the significant role Filipinos have played in American history.

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