Women's History Month in America according to Kerber, et al (1995) was developed and established by members of the National Women's History Alliance which included Molly Murphy MacGregor, Mary Ruthsdotter, Maria Cuevas, Paula Hammett and Bette Morgan in 1987. President Reagan wrote the first public proclamation, insisting that March was a time to recognise and salute women for their contribution to the American family and society (Leonard and Baradar, 1989). This is a statement that ignores the professional contributions to history women have made and enforced the idea that it was okay to continue to ignore women's history and furthermore legitimised misogyny in fields such as science, medicine, politics, the arts as well as continuing to contribute to gender inequalities in education. Therefore it is no surprise that a large amount of women have and still are ignored from history details Hughes (2016). Statistically, The World Bank (2018) describes how women make up rough...