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Pride Month Spotlight - Edith Windsor (USRSE#1737)
* Pride Month Spotlight - Edith Windsor * Fixed typos and quote-style * Fixed linkback url * Fixed dobule space --------- Co-authored-by: Chad Dougherty <[email protected]>
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_posts/2025-06-13-pride-month.md

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@@ -33,7 +33,8 @@ We’ll be publishing these posts during the month of June to highlight such
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people, where we talk about the person and tie their work and life to the RSE
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movement.
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<!-- List of posts here -->
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* [Edith Windsor]({% post_url 2025-06-16-edith-windsor %}) -
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June 16, 2025
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In conjunction with these blog posts, we ask the community to think about how
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they will celebrate and reflect on pride this month. This will likely come in

_posts/2025-06-16-edith-windsor.md

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---
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layout: post
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title: "US-RSE Pride Month Spotlight - Edith Windsor"
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tags: [dei, pride-month]
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---
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US-RSE's [DEI working group (DEI-WG)](https://us-rse.org/wg/dei/) is proud to
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help US-RSE celebrate and participate in Pride Month. Throughout June, the
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US-RSE will spotlight LGBTQ+ individuals who have been involved in computing,
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science, engineering, and/or math, and have inspired our members through their
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accomplishments in their careers and their personal stories.
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## This week's Pride Month spotlight features Edith Windsor
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{% include image.html
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url="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4f/Edie_Windsor_DC_Pride_2017.jpg"
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description="Edie Windsor at DC Pride, 2017, Photo by Rex Block, CC0
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<https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons"
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style="float:right; padding:1em; max-width:350px;" %}
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Did you know that the lead plaintiff in the US Supreme Court case that
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overturned Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) in 2013, leading to
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marriage being expanded to include same-sex couples, was a systems programmer
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at IBM and then a software development consultant in her own company?
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Edith (Edie) Schlain was born in 1929 in Philadelphia. She graduated from
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Temple in 1950, where she met her future husband, Saul Windsor, who she married
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in 1951 and divorced in 1952. She later earned a master's in math from NYU in 1957.
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She then joined IBM, where she worked for 16 years in senior technical
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and management positions related to systems architecture and implementation of
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operating systems and language processors. As AnitaB.org
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[describes](https://anitab.org/profile/remembering-edith-windsor-tech-pioneer-equality-advocate/),
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she started as a mainframe programmer and later rose to "the company's highest
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technical rank, Senior Systems Programmer, on the strength of her top-notch
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debugging skills. 'They couldn't fix the code because they couldn't read it,'
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Edith told a journalist. 'But I could read code until it wrapped around the
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room and back again. A guy I was working with said, 'give this woman a roll of
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toilet paper, she can do anything.'" During this time, in 1963, she met and
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began dating Thea Spyer, who asked Edith to marry her in 1967, and they began
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living together six months later.
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In her professional life, as AnitaB.org [continues to
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describe](https://anitab.org/profile/remembering-edith-windsor-tech-pioneer-equality-advocate/),
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"Edith left IBM in 1975, becoming the founding president of PC Classics, a
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consulting firm specializing in major software development projects. During
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this time, Edith also helped countless LGBTQ groups become tech literate. 'I
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computerized everybody,' she quipped. 'I got calls from gay organizations that
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wanted to computerize their mail systems. All of my IBM experience continues
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throughout my life.' Her love of computing was personal, too — she was the
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owner of the very first IBM-PC delivered in New York City." In 1993, when New
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York City first began registering domestic partnerships between same-sex
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couples, they registered. Because the US did not allow same-sex marriage, they
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traveled to Toronto in 2007 where they were married. Two years later, Thea
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died, and left her estate to Edie, but because the US did not recognize their
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marriage, Edie had to pay taxes on the estate. This was the cause of her
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lawsuit that led to Section 3 of DOMA being ruled unconstitutional, enabling
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same sex marriage to become legal, after which the US government refunded the
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estate tax.
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Again
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[quoting](https://anitab.org/profile/remembering-edith-windsor-tech-pioneer-equality-advocate/)
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AnitaB.org, "Edith was recognized by the National Computing Conference as an
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operating systems pioneer. In 2013, she was the Grand Marshal of the New York
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City LGBT Pride March and a runner-up for Time's Person of the Year." She died
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in 2017, and was eulogized by Hillary Clinton. Barack Obama said about her,
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"America's long journey towards equality has been guided by countless small
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acts of persistence, and fueled by the stubborn willingness of quiet heroes to
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speak out for what's right. Few were as small in stature as Edith Windsor — and
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few made as big a difference to America."
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[Read more about US-RSE's planned Pride Month
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activities]({% post_url 2025-06-13-pride-month %}).

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