Renewed Cambridge Women’s Heritage Project Brings Women’s Contributions Into Focus


3/3/20262 days ago

Photo of a group of women at the swearing in ceremony of the first Women's Commission in the late 1970s.

Every March, Women’s History Month offers an opportunity to pause and look at the people that built our communities. Some of the stories are well known—names etched into monuments or printed in textbooks. But many others, often those of women, live quietly in the margins: teachers who shaped generations, activists who pushed for justice, artists who reimagined the world, caregivers who held neighborhoods together. These women influenced Cambridge in a myriad of ways, yet for centuries their contributions were scattered, forgotten, or never recorded at all.

The Cambridge Women’s Heritage Project (CWHP) was created to change that. A joint project of the Cambridge Commission on the Status of Women and the Cambridge Historical Commission, the initiative highlights some of the women and woman-focused organizations that built and strengthened our community.

Information is featured on the revamped Cambridge Women’s Heritage Project database -- https://cwhp.cambridgema.gov/. Community members are also encouraged to follow the Cambridge Historical Commission on Instagram and their blog throughout March.

“At its heart, this is a restoration project—not of buildings, but of remembrance,” said Sarah Burks, Preservation Planner, Cambridge Historical Commission. “This effort seeks to bring women’s contributions into focus, ensuring that they are included in City’s rich history.”

History of Project

The project began in 1996, sparked by a community effort to honor writer May Sarton with a memorial at the Cambridge Public Library. What started as a single tribute, quickly revealed a larger truth: Cambridge history was rich with women whose stories deserved recognition. That realization grew into a City-supported initiative to document women’s lives from Cambridge’s founding in 1630 to the present day. The mission is both simple and profound: to celebrate the women of Cambridge, to preserve their stories, and to ensure that future generations can see themselves reflected in the City’s past.

Today, the CWHP is a living, evolving archive. Volunteers, historians, and community members work together to research and write biographies of Cambridge women and women’s organizations. Some entries are detailed portraits; others are fragments waiting to be expanded. To date, more than 900 women and groups have been nominated, and the project continues to grow as new stories surface.