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SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returnedFORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRECKINRIDGE, MARY
Mary Breckinridge was the nation’s foremost pioneer in the development of American midwifery and the provision of care to the nation’s rural areas as founder of the Frontier Nursing Service. Breckinridge, descendant of a distinguished family that included a U.S. vice president and a Congressman and diplomat, lost her first husband and two children toWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, KELLY, LEONTINE T.C. Bishop Leontine T.C. Kelly, pioneer religious leader, came from a family of Methodist ministers. Her life as high school social studies teacher, mother of four and wife of a Methodist minister was like that of many other women until her husband’s death in 1969. Kelly then received her own “call” to PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returnedFORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRECKINRIDGE, MARY
Mary Breckinridge was the nation’s foremost pioneer in the development of American midwifery and the provision of care to the nation’s rural areas as founder of the Frontier Nursing Service. Breckinridge, descendant of a distinguished family that included a U.S. vice president and a Congressman and diplomat, lost her first husband and two children toWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, KELLY, LEONTINE T.C. Bishop Leontine T.C. Kelly, pioneer religious leader, came from a family of Methodist ministers. Her life as high school social studies teacher, mother of four and wife of a Methodist minister was like that of many other women until her husband’s death in 1969. Kelly then received her own “call” to PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with. WAUNEKA, ANNIE DODGE Annie Dodge Wauneka, tribal leader of the Navajo Nation and public health activist, worked tirelessly to improve the health and welfare of the Navajo Tribe and reduce the incidence of tuberculosis nationwide. Born in 1910 in a traditional Navajo hogan, Wauneka was raised by her father, one of the wealthiest men of the Navajo Tribe.WATTLETON, FAYE
As a nurse, Faye Wattleton saw suffering and the consequences of poor health care – and to help change this, she became one of the nation’s most effective advocates as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Wattleton became president of Planned Parenthood in 1978, a position she held until 1992. As thefirst
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRECKINRIDGE, MARY
Mary Breckinridge was the nation’s foremost pioneer in the development of American midwifery and the provision of care to the nation’s rural areas as founder of the Frontier Nursing Service. Breckinridge, descendant of a distinguished family that included a U.S. vice president and a Congressman and diplomat, lost her first husband and two children toWILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldHOLT, BERTHA
Bertha Holt was a pioneer in international adoption who became known to thousands of internationally adopted children as “Grandma Holt”. She and her husband Harry, already the parents of six children, adopted eight Korean children in 1955, after seeing a documentary film about the wretched conditions of orphaned Amerasian children in Korea. An Act ofBARTON, CLARA
Clara Barton taught school and worked as a clerk in the U.S. Patent Office. When she 40 years old, the outbreak of the Civil War launched her on her life’s work. She began to assemble and distribute supplies to the Union soliders. Knowing that nurses were urgentlyneeded at
MULLANY, KATE
Kate Mullany, a leading female labor organizer in the nineteenth century, worked for justice and opportunities for women in newly emerging industries after the Civil War. Immigrating to Troy, New York, from Ireland with her family, Mullany had to go to work inEASTMAN, CRYSTAL
Crystal Eastman, co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, struggled throughout her life for equal rights and civil liberties for all. Acquiring her law degree from New York University in 1907, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century. Her HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returnedFORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRECKINRIDGE, MARY
Mary Breckinridge was the nation’s foremost pioneer in the development of American midwifery and the provision of care to the nation’s rural areas as founder of the Frontier Nursing Service. Breckinridge, descendant of a distinguished family that included a U.S. vice president and a Congressman and diplomat, lost her first husband and two children toWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, KELLY, LEONTINE T.C. Bishop Leontine T.C. Kelly, pioneer religious leader, came from a family of Methodist ministers. Her life as high school social studies teacher, mother of four and wife of a Methodist minister was like that of many other women until her husband’s death in 1969. Kelly then received her own “call” to PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returnedFORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRECKINRIDGE, MARY
Mary Breckinridge was the nation’s foremost pioneer in the development of American midwifery and the provision of care to the nation’s rural areas as founder of the Frontier Nursing Service. Breckinridge, descendant of a distinguished family that included a U.S. vice president and a Congressman and diplomat, lost her first husband and two children toWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, KELLY, LEONTINE T.C. Bishop Leontine T.C. Kelly, pioneer religious leader, came from a family of Methodist ministers. Her life as high school social studies teacher, mother of four and wife of a Methodist minister was like that of many other women until her husband’s death in 1969. Kelly then received her own “call” to PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with. WAUNEKA, ANNIE DODGE Annie Dodge Wauneka, tribal leader of the Navajo Nation and public health activist, worked tirelessly to improve the health and welfare of the Navajo Tribe and reduce the incidence of tuberculosis nationwide. Born in 1910 in a traditional Navajo hogan, Wauneka was raised by her father, one of the wealthiest men of the Navajo Tribe.WATTLETON, FAYE
As a nurse, Faye Wattleton saw suffering and the consequences of poor health care – and to help change this, she became one of the nation’s most effective advocates as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Wattleton became president of Planned Parenthood in 1978, a position she held until 1992. As thefirst
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRECKINRIDGE, MARY
Mary Breckinridge was the nation’s foremost pioneer in the development of American midwifery and the provision of care to the nation’s rural areas as founder of the Frontier Nursing Service. Breckinridge, descendant of a distinguished family that included a U.S. vice president and a Congressman and diplomat, lost her first husband and two children toWILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldHOLT, BERTHA
Bertha Holt was a pioneer in international adoption who became known to thousands of internationally adopted children as “Grandma Holt”. She and her husband Harry, already the parents of six children, adopted eight Korean children in 1955, after seeing a documentary film about the wretched conditions of orphaned Amerasian children in Korea. An Act ofBARTON, CLARA
Clara Barton taught school and worked as a clerk in the U.S. Patent Office. When she 40 years old, the outbreak of the Civil War launched her on her life’s work. She began to assemble and distribute supplies to the Union soliders. Knowing that nurses were urgentlyneeded at
MULLANY, KATE
Kate Mullany, a leading female labor organizer in the nineteenth century, worked for justice and opportunities for women in newly emerging industries after the Civil War. Immigrating to Troy, New York, from Ireland with her family, Mullany had to go to work inEASTMAN, CRYSTAL
Crystal Eastman, co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, struggled throughout her life for equal rights and civil liberties for all. Acquiring her law degree from New York University in 1907, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century. Her HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
MILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGN The National Women’s Hall of Fame is expanding in every way – in size, reach and influence – and looking for new ways to tell the inspiring stories of America’s great women. We hope our visitors will come away with questions, conversations, inspiration, and ideas. The Hall of Fame’s new location in the rehabilitated 1844FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returned WAUNEKA, ANNIE DODGE Annie Dodge Wauneka, tribal leader of the Navajo Nation and public health activist, worked tirelessly to improve the health and welfare of the Navajo Tribe and reduce the incidence of tuberculosis nationwide. Born in 1910 in a traditional Navajo hogan, Wauneka was raised by her father, one of the wealthiest men of the Navajo Tribe.GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
CATHER, WILLA
As an adolescent, Willa Cather defied the norms for girls: she cut her hair short, wore trousers, and openly rebelled against the roles girls were supposed to play. At the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, she edited the school magazine and published articles and play reviews in local papers. After graduating, she languished awhile in HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
MILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGN The National Women’s Hall of Fame is expanding in every way – in size, reach and influence – and looking for new ways to tell the inspiring stories of America’s great women. We hope our visitors will come away with questions, conversations, inspiration, and ideas. The Hall of Fame’s new location in the rehabilitated 1844FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returned WAUNEKA, ANNIE DODGE Annie Dodge Wauneka, tribal leader of the Navajo Nation and public health activist, worked tirelessly to improve the health and welfare of the Navajo Tribe and reduce the incidence of tuberculosis nationwide. Born in 1910 in a traditional Navajo hogan, Wauneka was raised by her father, one of the wealthiest men of the Navajo Tribe.GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
CATHER, WILLA
As an adolescent, Willa Cather defied the norms for girls: she cut her hair short, wore trousers, and openly rebelled against the roles girls were supposed to play. At the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, she edited the school magazine and published articles and play reviews in local papers. After graduating, she languished awhile in MILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGN The National Women’s Hall of Fame is expanding in every way – in size, reach and influence – and looking for new ways to tell the inspiring stories of America’s great women. We hope our visitors will come away with questions, conversations, inspiration, and ideas. The Hall of Fame’s new location in the rehabilitated 1844 ROGERS, MM, MOTHER MARY JOSEPH A woman of extraordinary vision and drive, Mother Mary Joseph Rogers, MM, founded the Maryknoll Sisters, the first U.S.-based Catholic congregation of religious women dedicated to a global mission. While studying zoology at Smith, Rogers became inspired by graduating Protestant students who were soon leaving for missionary work in China. Following her graduation, she workedPELOSI, NANCY
Nancy Pelosi served as the first woman Speaker of the United States House of Representatives and the first woman in American history to lead a major political party in Congress. Pelosi was born in Baltimore, Maryland, with a strong family tradition of public service. Her late father, Thomas D’Alesandro Jr., served as Mayor ofBaltimore
GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorWATTLETON, FAYE
As a nurse, Faye Wattleton saw suffering and the consequences of poor health care – and to help change this, she became one of the nation’s most effective advocates as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Wattleton became president of Planned Parenthood in 1978, a position she held until 1992. As thefirst
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theMULLANY, KATE
Kate Mullany, a leading female labor organizer in the nineteenth century, worked for justice and opportunities for women in newly emerging industries after the Civil War. Immigrating to Troy, New York, from Ireland with her family, Mullany had to go to work inEASTMAN, CRYSTAL
Crystal Eastman, co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, struggled throughout her life for equal rights and civil liberties for all. Acquiring her law degree from New York University in 1907, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century. HerBARTON, CLARA
Clara Barton taught school and worked as a clerk in the U.S. Patent Office. When she 40 years old, the outbreak of the Civil War launched her on her life’s work. She began to assemble and distribute supplies to the Union soliders. Knowing that nurses were urgentlyneeded at
HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
MILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGN The National Women’s Hall of Fame is expanding in every way – in size, reach and influence – and looking for new ways to tell the inspiring stories of America’s great women. We hope our visitors will come away with questions, conversations, inspiration, and ideas. The Hall of Fame’s new location in the rehabilitated 1844FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returned WAUNEKA, ANNIE DODGE Annie Dodge Wauneka, tribal leader of the Navajo Nation and public health activist, worked tirelessly to improve the health and welfare of the Navajo Tribe and reduce the incidence of tuberculosis nationwide. Born in 1910 in a traditional Navajo hogan, Wauneka was raised by her father, one of the wealthiest men of the Navajo Tribe.GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
CATHER, WILLA
As an adolescent, Willa Cather defied the norms for girls: she cut her hair short, wore trousers, and openly rebelled against the roles girls were supposed to play. At the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, she edited the school magazine and published articles and play reviews in local papers. After graduating, she languished awhile in HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
MILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGN The National Women’s Hall of Fame is expanding in every way – in size, reach and influence – and looking for new ways to tell the inspiring stories of America’s great women. We hope our visitors will come away with questions, conversations, inspiration, and ideas. The Hall of Fame’s new location in the rehabilitated 1844FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
DICKINSON, EMILY
Emily Dickinson’s father, Edward Dickinson, a pillar of the community in Amherst, Massachusetts exerted great influence over his middle child, Emily. She spent a year at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. There her stubborn resistance to conversion during a religious revival marked her as one who did not fear to tread a lonely path. Dickinson returned WAUNEKA, ANNIE DODGE Annie Dodge Wauneka, tribal leader of the Navajo Nation and public health activist, worked tirelessly to improve the health and welfare of the Navajo Tribe and reduce the incidence of tuberculosis nationwide. Born in 1910 in a traditional Navajo hogan, Wauneka was raised by her father, one of the wealthiest men of the Navajo Tribe.GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
CATHER, WILLA
As an adolescent, Willa Cather defied the norms for girls: she cut her hair short, wore trousers, and openly rebelled against the roles girls were supposed to play. At the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, she edited the school magazine and published articles and play reviews in local papers. After graduating, she languished awhile in MILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGN The National Women’s Hall of Fame is expanding in every way – in size, reach and influence – and looking for new ways to tell the inspiring stories of America’s great women. We hope our visitors will come away with questions, conversations, inspiration, and ideas. The Hall of Fame’s new location in the rehabilitated 1844 ROGERS, MM, MOTHER MARY JOSEPH A woman of extraordinary vision and drive, Mother Mary Joseph Rogers, MM, founded the Maryknoll Sisters, the first U.S.-based Catholic congregation of religious women dedicated to a global mission. While studying zoology at Smith, Rogers became inspired by graduating Protestant students who were soon leaving for missionary work in China. Following her graduation, she workedPELOSI, NANCY
Nancy Pelosi served as the first woman Speaker of the United States House of Representatives and the first woman in American history to lead a major political party in Congress. Pelosi was born in Baltimore, Maryland, with a strong family tradition of public service. Her late father, Thomas D’Alesandro Jr., served as Mayor ofBaltimore
GRAHAM, MARTHA
Recognized as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century, Martha Graham created a movement language based upon the expressive capacity of the human body. Her creativity crossed artistic boundaries and embraced every artistic genre. She collaborated with and commissioned work from the leading visual artists, musicians, and designers of her day, including sculptorWATTLETON, FAYE
As a nurse, Faye Wattleton saw suffering and the consequences of poor health care – and to help change this, she became one of the nation’s most effective advocates as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Wattleton became president of Planned Parenthood in 1978, a position she held until 1992. As thefirst
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldMULLANY, KATE
Kate Mullany, a leading female labor organizer in the nineteenth century, worked for justice and opportunities for women in newly emerging industries after the Civil War. Immigrating to Troy, New York, from Ireland with her family, Mullany had to go to work inWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theEASTMAN, CRYSTAL
Crystal Eastman, co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, struggled throughout her life for equal rights and civil liberties for all. Acquiring her law degree from New York University in 1907, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century. HerBARTON, CLARA
Clara Barton taught school and worked as a clerk in the U.S. Patent Office. When she 40 years old, the outbreak of the Civil War launched her on her life’s work. She began to assemble and distribute supplies to the Union soliders. Knowing that nurses were urgentlyneeded at
HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldRICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterRANKIN, JEANNETTE
Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress, serving two separate terms representing Montana. She injected the first woman’s voice into national political debates. A committed pacifist, Rankin was the only member of Congress to oppose entry of the United States into both World Wars. Rankin was active in the womansuffrage
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, HARRIS, PATRICIA ROBERTS Patricia Roberts Harris was dedicated to public service, civil rights and the promotion of social justice. A woman of many firsts, she was the first African American woman to serve the nation as Ambassador, the first African American woman to become dean of a law school, and the first African-American woman to serve in a Presidential cabinet. HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldRICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterRANKIN, JEANNETTE
Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress, serving two separate terms representing Montana. She injected the first woman’s voice into national political debates. A committed pacifist, Rankin was the only member of Congress to oppose entry of the United States into both World Wars. Rankin was active in the womansuffrage
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, HARRIS, PATRICIA ROBERTS Patricia Roberts Harris was dedicated to public service, civil rights and the promotion of social justice. A woman of many firsts, she was the first African American woman to serve the nation as Ambassador, the first African American woman to become dean of a law school, and the first African-American woman to serve in a Presidential cabinet. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.RICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterANDERSON, MARIAN
The great conductor Toscanini told her, “Yours is a voice such as one hears once in a hundred years.” This brilliant contralto struggled out of a childhood of poverty in South Philadelphia, where she scrubbed steps and ran errands to earn a few pennies to help her mother. She sang joyfully in the church choirHOLT, BERTHA
Bertha Holt was a pioneer in international adoption who became known to thousands of internationally adopted children as “Grandma Holt”. She and her husband Harry, already the parents of six children, adopted eight Korean children in 1955, after seeing a documentary film about the wretched conditions of orphaned Amerasian children in Korea. An Act ofEASTMAN, CRYSTAL
Crystal Eastman, co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, struggled throughout her life for equal rights and civil liberties for all. Acquiring her law degree from New York University in 1907, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century. Her BOURKE-WHITE, MARGARET In the era before television and instant communication, the photographs of Margaret Bourke-White showed the American people the world – the despair and depression of the dustbowl, London during the Blitz, Stalin and the Kremlin, battles of World War II, the liberation of concentration camps, India and Ghandi, South Africa, the Korean War. The firstWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBARTON, CLARA
Clara Barton taught school and worked as a clerk in the U.S. Patent Office. When she 40 years old, the outbreak of the Civil War launched her on her life’s work. She began to assemble and distribute supplies to the Union soliders. Knowing that nurses were urgentlyneeded at
WATTLETON, FAYE
As a nurse, Faye Wattleton saw suffering and the consequences of poor health care – and to help change this, she became one of the nation’s most effective advocates as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Wattleton became president of Planned Parenthood in 1978, a position she held until 1992. As thefirst
PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldRICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterRANKIN, JEANNETTE
Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress, serving two separate terms representing Montana. She injected the first woman’s voice into national political debates. A committed pacifist, Rankin was the only member of Congress to oppose entry of the United States into both World Wars. Rankin was active in the womansuffrage
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, HARRIS, PATRICIA ROBERTS Patricia Roberts Harris was dedicated to public service, civil rights and the promotion of social justice. A woman of many firsts, she was the first African American woman to serve the nation as Ambassador, the first African American woman to become dean of a law school, and the first African-American woman to serve in a Presidential cabinet. HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldRICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterRANKIN, JEANNETTE
Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress, serving two separate terms representing Montana. She injected the first woman’s voice into national political debates. A committed pacifist, Rankin was the only member of Congress to oppose entry of the United States into both World Wars. Rankin was active in the womansuffrage
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, HARRIS, PATRICIA ROBERTS Patricia Roberts Harris was dedicated to public service, civil rights and the promotion of social justice. A woman of many firsts, she was the first African American woman to serve the nation as Ambassador, the first African American woman to become dean of a law school, and the first African-American woman to serve in a Presidential cabinet. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.RICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterANDERSON, MARIAN
The great conductor Toscanini told her, “Yours is a voice such as one hears once in a hundred years.” This brilliant contralto struggled out of a childhood of poverty in South Philadelphia, where she scrubbed steps and ran errands to earn a few pennies to help her mother. She sang joyfully in the church choirHOLT, BERTHA
Bertha Holt was a pioneer in international adoption who became known to thousands of internationally adopted children as “Grandma Holt”. She and her husband Harry, already the parents of six children, adopted eight Korean children in 1955, after seeing a documentary film about the wretched conditions of orphaned Amerasian children in Korea. An Act ofEASTMAN, CRYSTAL
Crystal Eastman, co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, struggled throughout her life for equal rights and civil liberties for all. Acquiring her law degree from New York University in 1907, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century. Her BOURKE-WHITE, MARGARET In the era before television and instant communication, the photographs of Margaret Bourke-White showed the American people the world – the despair and depression of the dustbowl, London during the Blitz, Stalin and the Kremlin, battles of World War II, the liberation of concentration camps, India and Ghandi, South Africa, the Korean War. The firstWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBARTON, CLARA
Clara Barton taught school and worked as a clerk in the U.S. Patent Office. When she 40 years old, the outbreak of the Civil War launched her on her life’s work. She began to assemble and distribute supplies to the Union soliders. Knowing that nurses were urgentlyneeded at
WATTLETON, FAYE
As a nurse, Faye Wattleton saw suffering and the consequences of poor health care – and to help change this, she became one of the nation’s most effective advocates as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Wattleton became president of Planned Parenthood in 1978, a position she held until 1992. As thefirst
PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldRICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterRANKIN, JEANNETTE
Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress, serving two separate terms representing Montana. She injected the first woman’s voice into national political debates. A committed pacifist, Rankin was the only member of Congress to oppose entry of the United States into both World Wars. Rankin was active in the womansuffrage
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, HARRIS, PATRICIA ROBERTS Patricia Roberts Harris was dedicated to public service, civil rights and the promotion of social justice. A woman of many firsts, she was the first African American woman to serve the nation as Ambassador, the first African American woman to become dean of a law school, and the first African-American woman to serve in a Presidential cabinet. HOME - NATIONAL WOMEN’S HALL OF FAMEABOUT THE HALLWOMEN OF THE HALLMILL PROJECT & CAMPAIGNWAYS TO GIVEBOOK OF LIVES & LEGACIES Home - National Women’s Hall of Fame. Showcasing Great Women Inspiring All! Read their bios Meet our 2021 Inductee Class Michelle Obama, Mia Hamm, Katherine Johnson, Octavia Butler, Indra Nooyi, Joy Harjo, Judy Chicago, Rebecca Halstead, and Emily Howland. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.SMEAL, ELEANOR
As one of the co-founders of The Feminist Majority Foundation, a former president of the National Organization for Women, and publisher of Ms. Magazine, Eleanor Smeal’s life and work has been dedicated to the achievement of women’s equality and human rights. Known as a political analyst, strategist, and grassroots organizer, Ms. Smeal hasplayed a
FORD, LORETTA C.
An internationally renowned nursing leader, Dr. Loretta C. Ford has transformed the profession of nursing and made health care more accessible to the general public. In the early 1960s, Dr. Ford discovered that, because of a shortage of primary care physicians in the community, health care for children and families was severelylacking. In 1965,
WILLARD, EMMA HART
A pioneer in women’s education, Emma Hart Willard founded Troy Female Seminary, the first school for young women in the United States. Emma Hart was the sixteenth of seventeen children, born in Berlin, Connecticut, to a family that valued education. Her mother was literate at a time when very few women in New England couldRICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterRANKIN, JEANNETTE
Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress, serving two separate terms representing Montana. She injected the first woman’s voice into national political debates. A committed pacifist, Rankin was the only member of Congress to oppose entry of the United States into both World Wars. Rankin was active in the womansuffrage
WATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBRADLEY, LYDIA MOSS
Born in Indiana, Lydia Moss Bradley grew up on the frontier, educated in a log home before becoming a wealthy businesswoman, an entrepreneur and the founder of what eventually would become Bradley University. As a pioneer in so many fields, Bradley experienced both success and tragedy. She and her husband, Tobias Bradley, had six children, HARRIS, PATRICIA ROBERTS Patricia Roberts Harris was dedicated to public service, civil rights and the promotion of social justice. A woman of many firsts, she was the first African American woman to serve the nation as Ambassador, the first African American woman to become dean of a law school, and the first African-American woman to serve in a Presidential cabinet. DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL Discover the Women of the Hall. These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country. View by last name starting with.RICHARDS, LINDA
The recipient of the first diploma awarded by the nation’s first school of nursing, Linda Richards recognized the nation’s need for professionally-trained nurses and dedicated her life’s work toward the creation of training institutions to meet that need, in hospitals, homes and communities. Richards’ mission began when she struggled to find competent nurses’ training; afterANDERSON, MARIAN
The great conductor Toscanini told her, “Yours is a voice such as one hears once in a hundred years.” This brilliant contralto struggled out of a childhood of poverty in South Philadelphia, where she scrubbed steps and ran errands to earn a few pennies to help her mother. She sang joyfully in the church choirHOLT, BERTHA
Bertha Holt was a pioneer in international adoption who became known to thousands of internationally adopted children as “Grandma Holt”. She and her husband Harry, already the parents of six children, adopted eight Korean children in 1955, after seeing a documentary film about the wretched conditions of orphaned Amerasian children in Korea. An Act ofEASTMAN, CRYSTAL
Crystal Eastman, co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union, struggled throughout her life for equal rights and civil liberties for all. Acquiring her law degree from New York University in 1907, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century. Her BOURKE-WHITE, MARGARET In the era before television and instant communication, the photographs of Margaret Bourke-White showed the American people the world – the despair and depression of the dustbowl, London during the Blitz, Stalin and the Kremlin, battles of World War II, the liberation of concentration camps, India and Ghandi, South Africa, the Korean War. The firstWATERS, ALICE
Alice Waters is a chef, author and food activist, and the founder and owner of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, California. Often called the “Mother of American Food,” Ms. Waters has been a champion of local sustainable agriculture for over four decades, and is credited with popularizing the organic food movement. In 1995 she founded theBARTON, CLARA
Clara Barton taught school and worked as a clerk in the U.S. Patent Office. When she 40 years old, the outbreak of the Civil War launched her on her life’s work. She began to assemble and distribute supplies to the Union soliders. Knowing that nurses were urgentlyneeded at
WATTLETON, FAYE
As a nurse, Faye Wattleton saw suffering and the consequences of poor health care – and to help change this, she became one of the nation’s most effective advocates as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Wattleton became president of Planned Parenthood in 1978, a position she held until 1992. As thefirst
PENNINGTON, MARY ENGLE Dr. Pennington was a trailblazer in implementation of the Act, overseeing the handling, transportation and storage of perishables. She became a leading expert in the evolution of safe and sanitary methods for processing, storing and shipping milk, poultry, eggs, and fish. Denied a bachelor’s degree in 1892 because of her sex, MaryEngle
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THANK YOU FOR AN INCREDIBLE 2019 INDUCTION WEEKEND DISCOVER THE WOMEN OF THE HALL VIEW ALL INDUCTEES Frances Oldham Kelsey(Born 1914)
Achievements: Science 2000 Inductee | Learn more Diane von Furstenberg(Born 1946)
Achievements: Arts, Business 2019 Inductee | Learn more Gerty Theresa Radnitz Cori(Born 1896)
Achievements: Science 1998 Inductee | Learn moreSusan Kelly-Dreiss
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