Laura X is the founder and was the director of the Women's History Research Center, in
Berkeley, California, which was the first historical archive connected to the
women's liberation movement. Laura X founded the Women's History Research Center in 1968. She organized a march in Berkeley, California, on
International Women’s Day in 1969; International Women's Day had been largely forgotten in the United States before then. The march led to the creation of The Women’s History Research Center, a central archive of the women’s movement from 1968 to 1974. Laura X also thought it unfair for half the human race to have only one day a year and called for National
Women's History Month to be built around International Women’s Day. The Women’s History Research Center collected nearly one million documents on microfilm, and provided resources and records of the women’s liberation movement that are now available through the National Women’s History Alliance, which carried on their ideas, including successfully petitioning Congress to declare March as Women’s History Month. By 1970 the Women's History Research Center was widely listed in early feminist publications. The Center put many of the early feminist writings on microfilm, making them available in libraries across the country. The Women's History Research Center eventually closed, and its collections are now held in the women's history archive at the
Schlesinger Library, which is part of Harvard University's
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, and at other institutions. The microfilm copies have been distributed through
Primary Source Media/
Cengage Learning to some 450 libraries in fourteen countries. ==Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press==