[4] Over the last three decades, the NWHP has hosted countless events and historic projects to celebrate women's history.
They successfully lobbied Congress to pass a joint resolution recognizing women's history month in 1987.
It first started at K-12, we had no idea how much effect it would have on the community and government.”[7] In her 1999 article, "Living the Legacy of the Women's Rights Movement" published in The Public Historian, she wrote extensively about the widespread interest the NWHP has seen from students and teachers.
[8] MacGregor has noted the National Park Service has done extensive work to promote the history of the women's rights movement.
In 2005 served in a keynote session titled “Democracy and Women’s Equal Rights - Mutually Exclusive” which celebrated the 85th anniversary of the 19th amendment at the National Constitution Center.
Committee members of the NWHA recently visited Cypress Lawn Cemetery in San Bruno, California where Phoebe Hearst and Gertrude Atherton are buried to put markers on their grave sites noting their work as suffragists.