Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Clubwomen

Australia

 * Eunice Minnie Stelzer (1880–1962) — Founder of the Happiness Club on 2GB Australian Dictionary of Biography: Stelzer, Eunice Minnie (1880–1962) The Happiness Club turns 80
 * Country Women's Association of Western Australia's historic clubs:
 * Bunbury Women's Club, on the State Register of Heritage Places
 * Country Women's Association, Mullewa
 * Country Women's Association Rest Rooms, Denmark
 * Kojonup Road Board Office (The Women's Club)
 * Northcliffe CWA Hall
 * Pemberton Country Womens Association Hall


 * Elliston Country Women's Association Rest Rooms, South Australia historic site
 * Bunbury Women's Club, a Western Australia historic site on its State Register
 * Country Women's Association, Mullewa, a Western Australia historic site
 * Country Women's Association Rest Rooms, Denmark, Western Australia
 * Kojonup Road Board Office (The Women's Club), Western Australia
 * Northcliffe CWA Hall, Western Australia
 * Pemberton Country Womens Association Hall, Western Australia

Belgium

 * Circle of Farmers, Cercles de Fermières (founded in 1906, spread to Quebec 1914) ,,

Bulgaria

 * Club of Bulgarian Women Writers, founded 1930.

Canada

 * Union of Catholic Rural Women (L'Union catholique des femmes rurales (founded in 1957)
 * Women's Association for Education and Social Action (L'Association féminine d'éducation et d'action sociale (AFÉAS)) (Founded in 1966)

Netherlands

 * Social Democratic Women's Clubs

South Korea

 * Korean Federation of Housewives' Clubs, (KFHC)

United Kingdom

 * Grosvenor Crescent Club, London, which split off from the Pioneer Club (women's club), London, UK

United States
Numerous women's clubs are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and all of these are deemed wiki-notable. Articles about them can/should cover the club's founding and activities, as well as their building(s) which are listed. Other sources may be available, too, but NRHP nomination documents are available online for most and often include coverage about individual women leaders involved. Commons photos are available already for many, and often may be found by clicking on the redlink, then "what links here" to navigate to the corresponding NRHP county-level list-article. See wp:NRHPHELP about how to get the NRHP documents and about formatting references to them, and feel free to post at wt:NRHP for help of any kind (e.g. perhaps to get others to create NRHP infoboxes for them). Please see List of women's club buildings to see examples.
 * African Benevolent Society
 * Emma Archer, the first home demonstration agent in Arkansas, who organized a canning club for girls in Mabelvale, Arkansas in 1912. She was appointed a state agent in 1916, and supervised experts and district supervisors in a growing system. The system was not racially integrated; black women agents worked with black women in counties having a large black population, and white women agents served black clubs elsewhere.
 * Chicago Political League, Chicago, IL, which was pressed by the Frederick Douglass Woman's Club into extending its membership to African-American women.
 * Colorado Federation of Women's Clubs
 * Davie Woman's Club, Davie, FL, NRHP-listed
 * Isma Dooley, Georgia clubwoman and contributor to the Atlanta city constitution
 * Dundee Woman's Club Hall, Dundee, OR, NRHP-listed
 * Helene Dawson Edkins, Native American founder of Glacier Park Women's Club, info here and here
 * El Paso Federation of Colored Women's Clubs
 * Everglades Women's Club, Everglades City, FL, in 1965 took home in NRHP-listed Everglades Laundry
 * Florida Federation of Women's Clubs
 * Fort Lauderdale Woman's Club, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, NRHP-listed
 * Glacier Park Women's Club, West Glacier, MT, NRHP-listed
 * Guam Women’s Club (founded 1952), asserted to be the first women’s organization on Guam.[21]
 * General Federation of Women's Clubs of Alaska
 * Indian Women's Club of Tulsa
 * International Women's Club of Guam (founded 1973)[22][23]
 * Kirkland Woman's Club, Kirkland, WA, NRHP-listed
 * Longview Women's Clubhouse, Longview, WA, NRHP-listed
 * Mansfield Woman's Club, Mansfield, OH, NRHP-listed
 * Mesa Woman's Club, Mesa, AZ, NRHP-listed
 * Montebello Woman's Club, Montebello, CA, NRHP-listed
 * National Baptist Woman's Convention
 * National Conference of Puerto Rican Women (founded in 1972 in Washington, D.C.)[24]
 * National League of Colored Women, of Washington, D.C.
 * New Era Club (NY)
 * Mary L. Ray, who served as the Negro District home demonstration agent in Arkansas from c.1918 until her death in 1934 (while another longtime leader, Connie J. Bonslagel, served as Arkansas' state-level agent from 1917 until her death in 1950).
 * Soroptimist International of Kona, HI (1971)[11]
 * Tempe Woman's Club, Tempe, AZ, NRHP-listed
 * Women's Athletic Club of Los Angeles (1924)
 * Woman's Athletic Club of San Francisco (1914), 640 Sutter St., SF, CA, NRHP-listed
 * Women's Campus Club, HI, established in 1920, grew from 1908-founded "Women's Club of the College of Hawaii"
 * Women's City Club of Oakland (1927-1928), 1428 Alice Street
 * Women's Civic Club of Palm Beach,
 * Woman's Club of Bala Cynwyd
 * Woman's Club (Safford, Arizona), Safford, AZ, NRHP-listed
 * Woman's Club of Waco
 * Woman's Club of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, NRHP-listed

Who's who Among the Women of California (1922)

 * Tomato club movement or Tomato clubs which were women-empowering and interesting predecessors to Home Demonstration Clubs. See sources Tomato clubs at NCpedia and other sources at archived discussion User talk:WomenArtistUpdates/Archive 2019

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