Henrica Iliohan
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May 3, 1850
Henrica Iliohan | |
|---|---|
Henrica Iliohan, a "Woman of the Century" | |
| Born | Henrica Weenink May 3, 1850 Gelderland, Netherlands |
| Died | July 1, 1921 (aged 71) Oakland, California |
| Occupation | Suffragist |
Henrica Iliohan (3 May 1850 – 1 July 1921) was a Dutch-born American woman suffragist and translator.
Henrica Weenink was born in Vorden, Province of Gelderland, Kingdom of the Netherlands, 3 May 1850. Her father was a successful architect and builder. When but a child, she became cognizant of the different education offered to boys and girls. She showed an aptitude for the carpenter's trade, being fascinated by her father's workshop. When she was eight years of age, she could plane a board as well as an older brother. The workmen would often send her home crying by saying she was a girl and therefore could never be a carpenter. She remembers that this happened when she was so young that to her consciousness the only difference lay in dress, and she would earnestly beg her mother to dress her in her brother's clothes, so that she might become a carpenter. The disability of sex became of more and more importance as she thought and studied upon it. She was eighteen years of age when her mother died.[1][2]