In December 1969, a group of women historians associated with the
American Historical Association formed an independent association, the
Coordinating Committee on Women in the Historical Profession. At a November 1970 meeting of the
Southern Historical Association, several women who had attended that previous meeting formed the Southern Association of Women Historians in Louisville, Kentucky. In 1983, it was renamed to the Southern Association for Women Historians (SAWH). The organization's first conference was in June 1988 in
Spartanburg, South Carolina. The conference has been held every three years since then, except in 2021, when the conference was delayed to 2022 due to precautions against
COVID-19. The talks at these conferences have been well received. Several volumes of original scholarship have resulted from the conference papers, including: • ''Sisterly Networks: Fifty Years of Southern Women's Histories'' (2020) •
Entering the Fray: Gender, Politics, and Culture in the New South (2009) •
Women Shaping the South: Creating and Confronting Change (2006) •
Clio’s Southern Sisters: Interviews with Leaders of the Southern Association for Women Historians (2004) •
Searching for Their Places: Women in the South Across Four Centuries (2003) •
Negotiating Boundaries of Southern Womanhood: Dealing with the Powers that Be (2000) •
Beyond Image and Convention: Explorations in Southern Women’s History (1998) •
Taking Off the White Gloves: Southern Women and Women Historians (1998) •
Hidden Histories of Women in the New South (1994) •
Southern Women: Histories and Identities (1988) == Prizes and fellowships ==