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Black American Women Heroes

Women's History Month

Science

Aileen Cole Stewart: Called to Serve

By: Maria Smilios
Aileen Cole Stewart made history as one of 18 African American nurses to serve in the Army Nurse Corp during WWI.

Black and Essential

By: Gigi Wilborn

Mamie Phipps Clark- Self Esteem and Segregation

By: Carlie Reilly

Mary Seacole by Albert Charles Challen

By: Albert Charles Challen, 1869
She was a nurse, hotelier, boarding house keeper, author, world traveller, offering assistance to sick and wounded military personnel during Crimean War

Dr. Patricia Bath

By: Kamya Mahendru

Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler

By: Demiana Hanna

Katherine Johnson

By: Xenia Shin
Learn about the important work of African-American mathematician Katherine Johnson, with this multimedia showcase celebrating her birthday on August 26.

Mary Jackson

By: Diana from San Diego
Mathematician Mary Jackson was one of the "human computers" who worked at NASA as an aeronautical engineer, performing calculations.

Marie M. Daly

By: Staff
Marie Maynard Daly was the first Black American woman to earn a PhD. in chemistry

Mae Jemison

By: Allison Podzunas
Mae Jemison is an American astronaut, a crew member of the Space Shuttle Endeavor, and was the first black woman to travel to space.

Arts

What Woman Means to Me

By: Shonibare Olatunbosun

UNLADYLIKE2020: Bessie Coleman

Bessie Coleman wanted to become an aviator. Rejected from every U.S. aviation school for being a woman and black, she refused to take no for an answer.

Misty Copeland

By: Kyley Brandt

Misty Copeland is the first African American to become a principal ballerina of American Ballet Theatre.

Lena Horne

By: Shannon Luders-Manuel
Lena Horne, a singer, dancer, and actress, was one of the top African American performers of her time.

Gabrielle Gorman

By: Xenia Shin
Watch a film by Gabrielle Gorman and you will be struck by her powerful and poetic use of imagery, even as she explores charged subjects such as racism, police brutality, and identity.

Effa Manley

By: Diane from New Haven
The remarkable Effa Manley was a civil rights activist who broke down baseball's racial barriers as co-owner of the Newark Eagles in the Negro National League.

Beyonce

By: Akela Butler - Fisher

Beyonce is a bestselling recording artist who has been nominated for the most EMMY awards of any female singer.

Phillis Wheatley

By: Jessica from New York
PHILLIS WHEATLEY: First African-American writer

Alicia Keys

By: Alexandra from San Diego

Aretha Franklin

By: Saint George Thompson

Billie Holiday

By: Leroux from Villeurbanne
"No two people on earth are alike, and it's got to be that way in music or it isn't music." Billie Holiday

Nina Simone

By: Jillian Murphy

Edmonia Lewis

By: Jerrilyn & Madeline Jacobs
Edmonia Lewis was the first woman of African-American and Native American heritage to achieve international recognition as a sculptor.

Harriet Powers

By: Lindsay from Wallingford

Marian Anderson Portrait

By: St George Thompson

Literature

East St. Louis has had it tough. But here’s how one woman celebrates the good.

By: Clara Germani - CSM Correspondent

Mattiebelle Woods

By: Estelle Bacik, Emily Rasmussen

Amanda Gorman: The Poet Who Healed a Nation

By: Shannon Luders-Manuel
Amanda Gorman, America's first Youth Poet Laureate, recited the original poem "The Hill We Climb" at the inauguration of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.

Margot Lee Shetterly: Shining a Light on Hidden Figures

By: Shannon Luders-Manuel
Margot Lee Shetterly is the author of "Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race."

Alice Walker

By: Adrienne from Ohio
Alice Walker is a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and best known for "The Color Purple." She is also a political activist.

Toni Morrison

By: Demeshia from St. Louis
Toni Morrison was an award-winning novelist whose stories helped people of all races understand the black experience, including Beloved and Song of Solmon.

Maya Angelou

By: Xenia Shin
American poet, author, and civil rights activist

Still I Rise

Gabriel Diamond, Patrick Barnes, Phil Collis
A visual and musical interpretation of American poet and civil rights activist Maya Angelou’s electrifying poem "Still I Rise."

Sports

Gabby Douglas

By: Zoey

Florence Griffith Joyner

By: Miracl from San Diego
Florence Griffith Joyner (Flo-Jo) was one of the greatest women atheletes of all time.

Jackie Joyner-Kersee

By: Jamie from San Diego
Jackie Joyner-Kersee is the women's world record holder of the heptathalon, and a philanthropist.

Simone Biles

By: Maisy Latus

Dominique Dawes

By: Claudia Hudson
Olympics Hero: "The love for what I was doing...passion for gymnastics, competing and pleasing the crowd. Able to last 18 years in the sport because I loved what i was doing." -- Dominique Dawes on what kept her motivated.

C. Vivian Stringer

By: Kathy Crockett <br>The My Hero Project
C. Vivian Stringer despite great challenges, pursued her passion for basketball and is known for turning women into champions.

My Mom, Thelma Stoner

By: Vivian Stringer

Michaela DePrince

By: Kyra Lesson

Florence Griffith Joyner

By: Miracl from San Diego
Florence Griffith Joyner (Flo-Jo) was one of the greatest women atheletes of all time.

Venus Williams

By: Amani Shah
Venus Williams is considered one of the all-time greatest tennis players.

Serena Williams

By: Kimiya Tabrizi

Wilma Rudolph

By: Nancy Nickerson
As a child, Wilma Rudolph had polio. Through her perseverance, she became a world-record-holding Olympic athlete and won three Olympic gold medals in one year.

Leaders

Black Girlhood: Access & Assets

Produced by:The Community Endowment Fund in CACF
UVA doctoral student Abigail Akosua Kayser collaborated with the girls in City of Promise's Sisters of Nia Young Women's Support Group and Lead Facilitator, Latara Ragland.

Interview with Myisha T Hill (Check Your Privilege)

Kitty Richardson

One woman’s journey from CEO to minister to puppeteer

By: Lottie Hood - Encore.org

Black history in plain sight: One woman’s quest to topple stereotypes

By: Stacy Teicher Khadaroo - CSM Staff writer
Meghan Markle
By: Rachel Withers

Michelle Obama

By: Princess Quinones
Michelle Obama was the first African American First Lady of the United States.

Ruth Simmons

Ruth Simmons was the 18th president of Brown University and the first black president of an Ivy League Institution.

Marian Wright Edelman

By: Xenia Shin
Marian Wright Edelman is a children's rights advocate and is founder and president emerita of the Children's Defense Fund.

Ella J. Baker

By: Rebecca from Boca Raton
Ella J. Baker was an early and life-long civil rights activist who taught Rosa Parks to stand up for her rights.

Sojourner Truth

By: Tom Block

Shirley Chisholm by Robert Shetterly, AWTT.org

By: Robert Shetterly
"Prejudice and hatred built the nation’s slums, maintains them and profits by them…. we are exposed as hypocrites when we talk about making people free."

Viola Desmond

By: Julia Sawyshyn

Maxine Waters

By: Michelle from Hidden Hills
Maxine Waters is a Congresswoman who works fervently for her community.

Claudette Colvin

By: Amelia Lebron
As a high school student, Claudette Colvin refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger in Montgomery, Alamaba, about nine months before Rosa Parks did the same.

Oprah Winfrey

By: Emma Parker

Ruby Nell Bridges

By: Madison
One of the most important heroes in the fight against segregation in America was a six-year-old girl, Ruby Nell Bridges.

Fannie Lou Hamer

By: Nina Mariotti
Fannie Lou Hamer was a civil rights leader and voting rights advocate.

Rosa Parks

By: MY HERO Staff
Rosa Parks was born February 4, 1913, in Tuskagee, Alabama. On December 5, 1955, she refused to give up her seat to a white passenger. This act of defiance led to her arrest and inspired the Montgomery Bus Boycott, led by the NAACP. The boycott lasted 381 days, until the Supreme Court ruled bus segregation unconstitutional.

Madam C.J. Walker

By: Alexandra from St. Paul
Madam C.J. Walker used her haircare business success to fight discrimination and open doors for others.

Harriet Tubman

By: Nancy Nickerson
Harriet Tubman organized the Underground Railroad and helped lead slaves to freedom.

Angela Davis

By: Alexia from Madison
Angela Davis is a leader, author, and professor who has fought for decades for human rights.

Sojourner Truth

By: Robert Shetterly

Family

My Hero - My Grandmother

By: Lashae Evans

Organizer created on 2/19/2021 3:03:24 PM by Xenia Shin

Last edited 2/27/2021 6:12:27 PM by Jeanne Meyers

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