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Greensboro History Museum Celebrates 'Women's History Month' With Costumed Interpreters

The program featured costumed interpreters who portrayed historic Greensboro women who made a huge impact on the city.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — In honor of March being Women's History Month, the Greensboro History Museum celebrated women who have helped shape the city.

The program featured costumed interpreters who portrayed historic Greensboro women.

The special event helped attendees learn about those impacts, historical contributions and learn other fun facts. 

Some of the women who were celebrated were Josephine Boyd, the first African American student at Greensboro Senior High School; Nancy Mangum, who wrote to the governor about food shortages during the Civil War and Frances Bonner, a basketball player who helped organize a movie theater boycott in 1937. 

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