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‘Feminist Streets’ effort to honor trailblazing women

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Biddy Mason and Dolores Huerta are considered trailblazers, and the Women’s March Foundation announced an effort to rename L.A. streets in their honor, along with re-dubbing other roadways nationwide to honor women who paved the way for equality and recognition.

The Feminist Street Initiative aims to rename streets across the country after historic women. The effort follows the fifth anniversary of the nationwide Women’s March, and comes days before the start of Women’s History Month in March.

The foundation is campaigning for streets across the country to be named after Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Gloria Steinem and Maya Angelou, among others. The effort will look to rename Los Angeles-area streets for Mason and Huerta.

Mason was one of the founders of the First African Methodist Episcopal (FAME) Church in Los Angeles and was instrumental in establishing the first elementary school for Black children in Los Angeles. Biddy Mason Park in downtown Los Angeles is named after her.

Huerta is a labor leader and civil rights activist, who, with Cesar Chavez, was the co-founder of the National Farmworkers Association, which later became the United Farm Workers.

According to the Women’s March Foundation, there are 240 million streets in the United States, and 5,000 of them are named after George Washington. More than three-quarters of the streets are named after men. The initiative aims to make visible the names of women in art, labor, and social justice organizers to focus on uplifting women who have contributed to community building and formation.

“Covid forced us off the streets, but this initiative will help secure our legacy for time immemorial,” Women’s March Foundation Founder and Executive Director Emiliana Guereca said in a statement. “Women have contributed significantly to history, but we’ve been rendered invisible at every turn. The Feminist Street Initiative aims to change that and make sure the women who have shaped the world we live in most get the recognition they deserve.”

The Feminist Street Initiative plans in the coming weeks and months to submit formal street renaming requests in the various cities. More information about the initiative is at womensmarchfoundation.org/feminist-street-initiative.

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