38 years ago today in 1983, Greenham Women went to court for the 'Blackbird' trial. On the 25th July, seven Greenham Women had cut a hole in the fence around the air base, and painted women's peace symbols on a US 'Blackbird' 'reconnaissance aircraft' - a spy plane. The MoD withdrew the charges. One woman| Greenham Women Everywhere
We are delighted to announce that we have received £24,870 in funding from Arts Council England for our new project 'Keskesow'! Keskesow, which means 'conversations' in Cornish, is a Cornish-Language Community Exhibition which runs from July – December 2025. We'll be translating a successful multimedia exhibition about the Greenham Women’s Peace Camp into the Cornish| Greenham Women Everywhere
Nukewatch has reported that US nuclear bombs were delivered to RAF Lakenheath in West Suffolk on Thursday 17th July. No official confirmation of this has been given but Nukewatch (link below) builds a compelling case, with photos of activity and a detailed report of a timeline of events around the arrival of a C-17 Globemaster transport| Greenham Women Everywhere
Have you heard of Women In Prison? We've been following them for a while and would love to introduce them to you. Women in Prison is a national charity that supports women affected by the criminal justice system and campaigns to end the harm caused to women, their families and our communities by imprisonment. Their| Greenham Women Everywhere
Peggy Seeger, musician and Greenham Woman, has released her final album 'Teleology'. The final album from Peggy is a fitting tribute to over 70 years as a working musician, feminist and activist. This is no apologetic or quiet farewell – as we might expect, she’s going out with a thoughtful, philosophical and very satisfying BANG.| Greenham Women Everywhere
From the 12th September 2022 until 31st June 2024, we worked with our sister project, Scary Little Girls on a project designed to explore the lasting legacies of key Greenham Women campaigns 40 years on, creating a heritage narrative that did not exist and would otherwise be lost. Originally called 'Carry Embrace The Base Home',| Greenham Women Everywhere
We were deeply saddened to hear that Rosy Bremer, an extraordinary Greenham Woman, died on March 27th 2025. Rosy Bremer was a woman of immense passion and conviction who spent 35 years standing and fighting for what she believed in. Rosy first came to the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp in 1989, at the age| Greenham Women Everywhere
First observed by the United Nations (UN) in 2001), January 27th is Holocaust Memorial Day. In 2025, it is also the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz- Birkenau. Today we, and Greenham Women, remember the millions of people whose lives were taken by the Nazis. Greenham Women were - and still are - a hugely diverse| Greenham Women Everywhere
Through 2024, evidence has been mounting that US nuclear weapons will return to UK soil. And just as happened in the 1980s at Greenham, ordinary people are saying no. Here's an overview of what's happening, including how YOU can get involved. In January, the BBC reported that 'plans to deploy American nuclear weapons to an| Greenham Women Everywhere
Every November, World Vegan Month, which was established by the Vegan Society, is celebrated worldwide as a time to shine a light on the vegan movement. At the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp, most women were vegetarian and Turquoise Gate was a fully vegan gate. Listen to this episode of our podcast 'Greenham Uncommon'| Greenham Women Everywhere
From 1981 for almost 20 years, Greenham Common became home to thousands of women acting in political resistance to the nuclear arms race, to patriarchy and violence in all its forms and to the claiming of British common land to store| Greenham Women Everywhere
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License| Greenham Women Everywhere
From September 1981, for almost 20 years, women from around the UK and beyond descended on Berkshire in beautiful indignation against the storage of American nuclear missiles on UK common land. The first women arrived on the 3rd September, 36 having had marched all the way from Cardiff. Others joined them on the way,| Greenham Women Everywhere