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Michigan Women's Hall of Fame

Coordinates:42°43′31″N84°33′17″W / 42.72518°N 84.55478°W /42.72518; -84.55478
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Museum of notable women from Michigan, US

Betty Ford,First Lady of the United States and Michigan Women's Hall of Fame inductee

TheMichigan Women's Hall of Fame (MWHOF) honors distinguished women, both historical and contemporary, who have been associated with theU.S. state ofMichigan. Thehall of fame was founded in 1983 by Gladys Beckwith and is sponsored by the Michigan Women's Studies Association.[1] The formation of the Association and the Hall was prompted by five professors fromMichigan State University, who were teaching a Women in American Society course.[2]

Nominations to the hall of fame are accepted from the public and are open to women who rose to prominence in or were born in Michigan, as well as those who have lived in the state for an extended period. A screening committee ranks the nominations by merit and a second committee makes the final determination, generally selecting eight to ten women annually for induction. Inductees are honored at a ceremony and dinner in October and are presented with a bronze Lifetime Achievement Award.[3] As of 2021, the Hall of Fame contains over 340 inductees.[4][5]

The MWHOF was housed in the Cooley-Haze House, built in 1903 and located at 213 W. Malcolm X St. (formerly W. Main Street), directly south of downtownLansing, Michigan. It contained a resource library, as well as exhibit galleries dedicated to preserving and presenting Michigan women's history and art. The house was opened to the public on June 10, 1987. The center also contained the Belen Gallery, which featured art from Michigan women.[1]

Michigan Women's Historical Center and Hall of Fame moved to its current location in Meridian Mall, 110 W. Allegan St., Suite 10 in 2017.

Hall of Fame honorees

[edit]
Michigan Women's Hall of Fame
NameImageBirth–deathYearArea of achievementRef(s)
Gretchen Whitmer(b. 1971)2023Governor of Michigan[6]
Denise Langford-Morris(b. 1983)2023Oakland County Circuit Court Judge[6][7]
Kelly Rossman-McKinney(1954–2021)2023Public relations pioneer and political activist[6]
Traverse City Ladies Association2023Group which planned, started, and ran theTraverse Township Library[6]
Esther Gordy Edwards(1920–2011)2022Founder ofMotown Historical Museum; first woman to serve on the 40-person board of the Central Business District Association[8]
Carol Sue Hutchins(b. 1957)2022Head coach of Michigan Wolverines softball; winningest coach in NCAA softball history[9]
Mary Kramer(b. 1953)2022Publisher[10]
Mary Locke Petermann(1908–1975)2022Cellular biochemist[11]
Danielle Camille Woods(b. 1981)2022LGBTQ Liaison for the Detroit Police Department[12]
Rosalind Brewer(b. 1962)2021CEO ofWalgreens Boots Alliance[13]
Debra White-Hunt(b. 1951)2021Co-founder and artistic director of The Detroit-Windsor Dance Academy[14]
Lila Neuenfelt(1902–1981)2021First woman circuit court judge in Michigan[15]
Fannie B. Peck(1880–1971)2021National Housewives League, founded Detroit Housewives League. Created Fannie B. Peck Credit Union. Created the first cemetery for African Americans in Detroit[16]
Sarah Elizabeth Ray(1917–2006)2021Won 1945 racial discriminatinn class action lawsuit against Bob-Lo Excursion Company[17]
Diana Sieger(b. 1951)2021President of the Grand Rapids Community Foundation[18]
Najah Bazzy(b. 1960)2020Detroit activist created Zaman International nonprofit to combat poverty[19][20]
Elizabeth Jackson(1918–2020)2020Co-founder of Trade Union Leadership Council[20]
Glenda Price(b. 1939)2020First African American president of Marygrove College[20]
Martha Teichner(b. 1948)2020CBS Sunday Morning news correspondent[20]
Atlas Ruth Westbrook(1941–2017)2020NASA's Apollo 11 project; one of the "Human Math Computers" depicted in the movieHidden Figures[20]
Dorothy Zehnder(1921–2023)2020Bavarian Inn Co-founder[20]
Margaret Kirchner Stevenson(1920–1998)2019Female pilot, one of the first women to fly aBoeing B-17 Flying Fortress[21]
Lucile A. Watts(1920–2018)2019First woman to serve on theMichigan Circuit Court[21]
Martha Baldwin(1840–1913)2019American educator and activist[21]
Gilda Z. Jacobs(b. 1949)2019Politician and president of the Michigan League for Public Policy[21]
Vernice Davis Anthony(b. 1945)2019Health expert[21]
Terry Blackhawk(b. 1945)2019Educator[21]
Agatha Biddle(c. 1797–1873)2018Odawa fur trader[22]
Mona Hanna-Attisha(b. 1976)2018Pediatrician whose research exposed the dangerous levels of lead in the water ofFlint, Michigan.[23]
Clara Stanton Jones(1913–2012)2018First African-American president of theAmerican Library Association[24]
Angela K. Wilson(b. 1967)2018Chemistry Division Director of theNational Science Foundation[25]
Kym L. Worthy(b. 1956)2018Civil rights, law enforcement[26]
American Legion NUWARINE Post 5352017Michigan's last remaining all-female American Legion post[27]
Ella Mae Backus(1863–1938)2017First woman in Michigan to become an Assistant U.S. Attorney[28]
Clara Bryant Ford(1866–1950)2017Wife ofHenry Ford, created and funded programs benefiting women[29]
Lisette Denison Forth(c. 1786–1866)2017Philanthropist, former slave[30]
Mary Kay Henry(b. 1958)2017President of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU)[31]
Verna Grahek Mize(1913–2013)2017Environmentalist whose legal battles ended dumping of mining waste intoLake Superior[32]
Bernice Morton(1923–2018)2017Developed Affirmative Action program atWayne State University; helped develop the first Model Cities Comprehensive Health Care Center in the U.S.[33]
Rosie the Riveter2017WWII cultural icon who appeared on numerous posters showing women at work in the war service industries[34]
Rosemary C. Sarri(1926–2022)2017Social worker who was instrumental in the passage of theJuvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act[35]
Elizabeth Wetzel(b. 1964)2017First female design director for General Motors[36]
Elizabeth Sparks Adams(1911–2007)2016Government, history, women's rights[37]
Anan Ameri(b. 1944)2016Art, history, community service, writing[38]
Daisy Elliott(1917–2015)2016Government, Civil Rights[39]
Faith Fowler(b. 1959)2016Religion, women's rights, community service, civil rights[40]
Evelyn Golden(1913–2005)2016Medicine, community service[41]
Olivia Letts(1928–2021)2016Education, civil rights, community service[42]
Mary Free Bed Guild2016Charity organization begun by women in 1891 to provide medical care to those who cannot otherwise afford it[43]
Diana Ross(b. 1944)2016Music[44]
Lou Anna Kimsey Simon(b. 1947)2016Education, women's rights[45]
Charlotte Wilson(1854–1914)2016Art, civil rights, education, suffrage, women's rights[46]
Jocelyn Benson(b. 1977)2015Dean of theWayne State University Law School[47]
Maxine Berman(1946–2018)2015Member of Michigan House of Representatives; political consultant[48]
Sue Carter(b. 1950)2015Episcopalian minister, television and radio journalist[49]
Janet C. Cooper(1931–2002)2015Civil rights, education, government, law[50]
Mabel White Holmes(1890–1977)2015InventedJiffy mix[51]
Candice Miller(b. 1954)2015United States House of Representatives[52]
Esther K. Shapiro(1917–2016)2015First director of Detroit's Consumer Affairs Department[53]
Maggie Walz(1861–1927)2015Finnish immigrant who used her subsequent education and business expertise to establish a Finnish colony inDrummond Township[54]
Myra Wolfgang(1914–1976)2015Labor leader, women's rights activist[55]
Linda M. Woods(b. 1943)2015Native AmericanGrand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, United States Air Force veteran of the Vietnam War, social worker[56]
Elizabeth Lehman Belen(1886–1975)2014Politics; second woman elected to the Michigan House of Representatives; first woman and Democrat elected from Lansing[57]
MaryLee Davis(b. 1943)2014Michigan State University administrator and professor[58]
Jeanne Findlater(b. 1928)2014General manager of WXYZ-TV/Detroit and vice president of ABC Television[59]
Dorothy A. Johnson(b. 1940)2014President Emeritus of the Council of Michigan Foundations; Johnson Center for Philanthropy[60]
Julie Krone(b. 1963)2014Thoroughbred jockey Julie Krone is the only woman to ride the winner of a Triple Crown event (the 1993 Belmont Stakes), the first woman to win a Breeders’ Cup event (2003 Juvenile Fillies), and the first woman to win a million-dollar event (2003 Pacific Classic).[61]
Mary Carmelita Manning(1888–1962)2014Sister of Mercy order; opened the first Central School of Nursing in Michigan (the second in the country)[62]
Barbara Roberts Mason(b. 1940)2014Politics; State Board of Education; seconded the nomination of vice presidential candidateGeraldine Ferraro[63]
Marylou Olivarez Mason(1936–2019)2014Hispanic rights; first Hispanic woman on the Lansing Community College Board of Trustees[64]
Andra M. Rush(b. 1960)2014Business; former chairwoman and CEO of the Rush Group Family of Companies; founded the largest Native American-owned business in the United States.[65]
Mary Ellen Sheets(b. 1940)2014Founder ofTwo Men and a Truck moving company[66]
Lucille Farrier Stickel(1915–2007)2014Environmentalist; first woman to direct a major Federal laboratory[67]
Elizabeth W. Bauer(b. 1937)2013Advocate for the rights of people with disabilities[68]
Judith Levin Cantor(1928–2022)2013Jewish historian, author, archivist, and exhibit curator[69]
Con-Con Eleven2013The 11 women delegates at the 1961–1962 Michigan Constitutional Convention: Vera Andrus, Ruth Gibson Butler, Anne M. Conklin, Katherine Moore Cushman, Ann Elizabeth Donnelly, Daisy Elizabeth Elliott, Adelaide Julia Hart, Lillian Hatcher, Dorothy Leonard Judd, Ella Demmink Koeze, and Marjorie Frances McGowan[70]
Paula Cunningham(b. 1949)2013First female president ofLansing Community College[71]
Elizabeth Eaglesfield(1853–1940)2013Businesswoman and one of the first female steamship captains on Lake Michigan[72]
Joan Jackson Johnson(1948–2022)2013Advocate for the poor, homeless, and mentally ill[73]
Gladys McKenney(1928–2023)2013Educator and advocate for women's rights[74]
Harriet Quimby(1875–1912)2013Early American aviator and movie screenwriter[75]
Marina von Neumann Whitman(b. 1935)2013Vice president of Public Affairs at General Motors[76]
L. Anna Ballard(1848–1934)2012Medicine; Lansing's first female medical doctor.[77]
Gladys Beckwith(1929–2020)2012Women's studies[78]
Patricia Caruso(b. 1954)2012First woman director of theMichigan Department of Corrections[79]
Mary Jane Dockeray(1927–2020)2012Environment[80]
Eva McCall Hamilton(1871–1948)2012First woman elected to the Michigan Legislature in 1920[81]
Judith Karandjeff(b. 1944)2012Women's rights[82]
Les Meres et Debutantes Club of Greater Lansing2012Formed in 1962 by African American mothers, to mentor and fund young African American women debutantes[83]
Mary E. McCoy(1846–1923)2012Women's rights and African-American rights[84]
Serena Williams(b. 1981)2012Tennis[85]
Lois A. Bader(1933–2022)2011Education[86]
Jumana Judeh(b. 1959)2011First vice chair of the Arab American Chamber of Commerce[87]
Marilyn Kelly(b. 1938)201167th Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court[88]
Valeria Lipczynski(1846–1930)2011Community service[89]
Edelmira Lopez(1922–2017)2011First female president of the Lansing Mexican Patriotic Committee, and president of the Hispanic Cultural Center[90]
Kary Moss(b. 1958)2011Civil rights, law, women's rights[91]
Rose Mary Robinson(b. 1939)2011Law, politics[92]
Tricia Saunders(b. 1966)2011USA Wrestling Women's Wrestler of the Year twice and the U.S. Olympic Committee Women's Wrestler of the Year three times.[93]
Mary Aikey(1928–2013)2010Community service, education, women's rights[94]
Laura Carter Callow(b. 1927)2010Women's rights[95]
Augusta Jane Chapin(1836–1905)2010American Universalist minister, educator and activist for women's rights.[96]
Sandra Laser Draggoo(b. 1940)2010Executive director of Capitol Area Transport Authority[97]
Annie Etheridge(1840–1913)2010Civil War nurse[98]
Sherrill Freeborough(b. 1947)2010Business[99]
Dorean Marguerite Hurley Koenig(1934–2021)2010Education, law[100]
Terry McMillan(b. 1951)2010Writer[101]
Edith Munger(1865–1945)2010Environment, bird conservationist[102]
Cynthia J. Pasky(b. 1959)2010Strategic Staffing Solutions[103]
Grace Lee Boggs(1915–2015)2009Civil rights[104]
Margaret Bailey Chandler(1929–1997)2009Native American rights[105]
Ruth Ellis(1899–2000)2009Business, gay rights[106]
Edna Ferber(1885–1968)2009Pulitzer Prize winning author whose works were adapted to movies and stage productions[107]
Glenda Lappan(b. 1939)2009Education[108]
Kay Givens McGowan(1942–2022)2009Native American rights, women's rights[109]
Elizabeth Phillips(b. 1937)2009Education[110]
Jessica Rickert(b. 1950)2009Dentistry, Native American rights[111]
Betty Tableman(1922–2021)2009Mental health[112]
Marlo Thomas(b. 1937)2009Community service, entertainment, women's rights[113]
Carol Atkins(1923–2013)2008Women's rights, writing[114]
Patricia Cuza(b. 1936)2008First executive director chosen by the Michigan Women's Commission[115]
Carol King(b. 1948)2008Film maker. Served as an aide toMaryann Mahaffey and to US CongressmanJohn Conyers[116]
Vicki Neiberg(b. 1940)2008Founding member of Michigan Women's Political Caucus[117]
Jane Johnston Schoolcraft(1800–1842)2008First known Native American writer, granddaughter of Ojibwe chief Waubojeeg[118]
Leta Snow(1880–1980)2008Founded the Kalamazoo Symphony Orchestra, president of the Kalamazoo Musical Society[119]
Sister Mary Francilene Van de Vyver(1941–2001)2008President Madonna University[120]
Mary Brown(1935–2021)2007Michigan State House of Representatives[121]
Gertrude Buck(1871–1922)2007Education[122]
Emma Cole(1845–1910)2007Environmentalist[123]
Haifa Fakhouri(b. 1945)2007Founder, president, and CEO of the Arab American and Chaldean Council[124]
Carolyn Geisel(1862–1932)2007Health care, lecturer for theBattle Creek Sanitarium[125]
Jane Briggs Hart(1922–2015)2007Aviator, women's rights. Tested for fitness to enter NASA's astronaut training program, submitting to the same physical and psychological tests administered to the Mercury 7 astronauts.[126]
Abigail Rogers(1818–1869)2007Education, women's rights[127]
Kathleen Wilbur(1953–2023)2007Michigan State University trustee, president Central Michigan University[128]
Woman's Hospital Association (Charter Members)2007114 women who signed a charter in 1896 to establish the Woman's Hospital Association[129]
Martha Strickland Clark(1853–1935)2006First woman to argue a case before the Michigan Supreme Court. Orator on women's suffrage, temperance, and finance[130]
Mary Esther Daddazio(1924–2015)2006Women's rights[131]
Margery Feliksa(1925–2001)2006Community service[132]
Nancy Hammond(b. 1937)2006Government, women's rights[133]
Viola Liuzzo(1925–1965)2006Civil Rights Activist[134]
Marge Piercy(b. 1936)2006Essayist, novelist, poet[135]
Dora Hall Stockman(1872–1948)2006Michigan House of Representatives[136]
Helen Hornbeck Tanner(1916–2011)2006History, Native American rights, senior research fellow at the Newberry Library in Chicago[137]
Margaret Chiara(b. 1943)2005United States Attorney – Western District of Michigan[138]
Eva Lois Evans(1935–2020)2005President of the Lansing Community College Foundation[139]
Georgia Lewis Johnson(1930–2023)2005Medicine, health care[140]
Lida Holmes Mattman(1912–2008)2005Math, science, medicine, health care
Olivia Maynard(b. 1936)2005First woman to chair the Michigan Democratic Party[141]
Debbie Stabenow(b. 1950)2005United States Senator[142]
Caroline Thrun(1897–1983)2005Assistant Attorney General for Michigan; drafted the 1979 Michigan School Code[143]
Margaret Sellers Walker(1935–2020)2005First African American to head a division of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources[144]
Elizabeth Weaver(1941–2015)200598th Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court in 1995, named Chief Justice of the Court in 1999[145]
Cynthia Yao(b. 1940)2005Executive director of Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum[146]
Geraldine Bledsoe Ford(1926–2003)2004First black woman in the United States to be elected to a judgeship[147]
Jennifer Mulhern Granholm(b. 1959)200447th Governor of Michigan[148]
Lystra Gretter(1858–1951)2004Director of the Detroit Visiting Nurses Association[149]
Florine Mark(1933–2023)2004President and chief executive officer of The WW Group, Inc.[150]
Cathy McClelland(b. 1954)2004Founder, president, and CEO of the Detroit Entrepreneurship Institute[151]
Constance Mayfield Rourke(1885–1941)2004Author specializing in notable American figures and American history[152]
Mary Agnes Blair(1909–1982)2003Advocate for deaf and hearing-impaired children, and special education programs[153]
Verne Burbridge(1896–2005)2003Community service[154]
Nellie Cuellar(1899–1987)2003Participant in theSelma to Montgomery marches; co-chair of the southwest Detroit United Citizens[155]
Alice Scanlan Kocel(1920–2017)2003Michigan Department of Civil Rights, Liaison to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission[156]
Joyce Lewis Kornbluh(b. 1928)2003Educator, activist, and advocate for improving lives of working-class individuals[157]
Eliza Seaman Leggett(1815–1900)2003Abolition, suffrage, women's rights[158]
Ida Lippman(1893–1980)2003Law enforcement[159]
Marion Weyant Ruth(1918–2004)2003Pioneering aviator[160]
Bernice Steadman(1925–2015)2003Mercury 13 astronaut[161]
Pamela Withrow(b. 1948)2003Law enforcement, first woman warden of a male correctional institution in Michigan.[162]
Ruth Zweifler(b. 1929)2003Founder of the Student Advocacy Center of Michigan[163]
Hortense Canady(1927–2010)2002Governor's Committee on the Status of Women, Michigan Women's Commission[164]
Julia Wheelock Freeman(1833–1900)2002Civil War nurse with the Michigan Soldiers Relief Association[165]
Lillian Mellen Genser(1920–2006)2002Peace movement, conflict resolution[166]
May Stocking Knaggs(1847–1917)2002Suffrage[167]
Naomi Long Madgett(1923–2020)2002Poet and English professor emeritus of English at Eastern Michigan University[168]
Lucille H. McCollough(1905–1996)2002Politics[169]
Lana Pollack(b. 1942)2002Politics[170]
Martha Louise Rayne(1836–1911)2002Journalism[171]
Muriel Dorothy Ross(b. 1927)2002Math, science[172]
Cora Reynolds Anderson(1882–1950)2001The first woman, and the first Native American, to serve in the Michigan House of Representatives[173]
Lucile Belen(1912–2010)2001Politics[174]
Theresa Maxis Duchemin(1810–1892)2001Missionary[175]
Aretha Franklin(1942–2018)2001Entertainment[176]
Francie Kraker Goodridge(b. 1947)2001Track and field athletic coach[177]
Marian Bayoff Ilitch(b. 1933)2001Co-founder ofLittle Caesars Pizza, owner ofDetroit Red Wings,MotorCity Casino Hotel[178]
Mary Ellen Riordan(1920–2010)2001President Emerita of the Detroit Federation of Teachers, Local 231, AFL-CIO,[179]
Josephine Stern Weiner(1912–2000)2001Community service[180]
Loney Gordon(1915–1999)2000Helped develop the vaccine againstWhooping Cough[181]
Katherine G. Heideman(1910–2003)2000Education[182]
Dauris Gwendolyn Jackson(1933–1979)2000Civil rights, education[183]
Cornelia Groefsema Kennedy(1923–2014)2000Judge, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan and U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit[184]
Marjorie J. Lansing(1916–1998)2000Education, women's rights[185]
Chuan-Pu Lee(1931–2016)2000Math, science[186]
Marilyn Fisher Lundy(1925–2014)2000Education[187]
Katharine Dexter McCormick(1875–1967)2000Philanthropist, women's rights[188]
Kathleen N. Straus(b. 1923)2000Civil rights[189]
Clarissa M. Young(1922–1979)2000Law enforcement[190]
Patricia Beeman(1925–1996)1999Civil rights[191]
Olympia Brown(1835–1926)1999Religion, suffrage[192]
Doris DeDeckere(1926–2010)1999Philanthropist, labor volunteerism[193]
Margaret Drake Elliott(1904–1999)1999Environment[194]
Elizabeth Homer(b. 1943)1999Women's rights[195]
Eleonore Hutzel(1885–1979)1999Medicine, health care[196]
Ella Eaton Kellogg(1853–1920)1999Philanthropist, nutrition, pioneer ofdietetics[197]
Emily Burton Ketcham(1838–1907)1999Suffrage[198]
Ardeth Platte(1936–2020)1999Peace movement, conflict resolution[199]
Connie Binsfeld(1924–2014)199860th Lieutenant Governor of Michigan[200]
Hilda Patricia Curran(b. 1938)1998Director of Office of Women and Work, founding member of Women in State Government, a founding trustee of the Michigan Women's Foundation[201]
Marie Dye(1891–1974)1998Michigan State University professor who instituted many programs focused on home, the environment and nutrition[202]
Eleanor M. Josaitis(1931–2011)1998Co-founder of Focus: HOPE[203]
Dorrie Ellen Rosenblatt(b. 1948)1998Gerontology[204]
Ella Merriman Sharp(1857–1912)1998Chair Michigan Federation's Forestry Committee. Chair of the Civic Improvement Committee of the Federation of Women's Clubs.[205]
Martha Jean Steinberg(1927–2000)1998Black Radio Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, R&B disc jockey, station owner. Ordained minister who founded the Home of Love church.[206]
Ruth Thompson(1887–1970)1998United States House of Representatives[207]
Lily Tomlin(b. 1939)1998Entertainment[208]
Ellen Burstyn(b. 1932)1997Entertainment[209]
Marion Corwell-Shertzer(1931–2016)1997President of American Women in Radio and Television, Inc.; founded the Metropolitan Detroit Chapter, National School Public Relations Association[210]
Four Sisters of Charity1997Social work[211]
Della McGraw Goodwin(1931–2022)1997Founding chairperson of the National Center for the Advancement of Blacks in the Health Professions (NCABHP)[212]
Alice Hamilton(1869–1970)1997Physician, research scientist, and author[213]
Nancy Harkness Love(1914–1976)1997Director of the WW II Women's Auxiliary Ferry Squadron[214]
Maryann Mahaffey(1925–2006)1997President of Detroit City Council 1990–1998, champion of human rights[215]
Sharon E. Sutton(b. 1941)1997Architect, Professor Emeritus at College of Built Environments[216]
Matilda Dodge Wilson(1883–1967)199743rd Lieutenant Governors of Michigan, philanthropist[217]
Anna Clemenc(1888–1956)1996Labor activist[218]
Waunetta McClellan Dominic(1921–1981)1996Odawa rights activist who spent her career advocating for the United States government to adhere to its treaty obligations toNative Americans.[219]
Margaret Muth Laurence(1916–1996)1996Trademark and copyright attorney[220]
Claudia House Morcom(1932–2014)1996Founding director of Wayne County Neighborhood Legal Services[221]
Betsy Graves Reyneau(1888–1964)1996Portrait artist, focusing on African Americans[222]
Carrie Frazier Rogers-Brown(b. 1948)1996Medicine, health care[223]
Shirley E. Schwartz(1935–2016)1996Chemist and senior staff research scientist at General Motors Corporation[224]
Joan Luedders Wolfe(1929–2021)1996Founder of the West Michigan Environmental Action Council. Member of the Michigan Natural Resources Commission, and the Governor's Advisory Committee on Electric Energy Alternatives and the first Natural Resources Trust Fund Board.[225]
Yolanda Alvarado-Ortega(b. 1943)1995Hispanic civil rights. Editor ofEl Renacimiento. Reporter for theLansing State Journal.[226]
Irene Auberlin(1896–1999)1995Founder ofWorld Medical Relief[227]
Hilda R. Gage(1939–2010)1995First female Chief Judge of Michigan's Oakland County Circuit Court[228]
Lucia Voorhees Grimes(1877–1978)1995Founded the Wayne County Republican Women's Club, and devoted her life's work to women's suffrage[229]
R. Louise Grooms(1902–1984)1995Founder of the Detroit Institute of Commerce with her own money, to train African American youiths with skills to enter the workplace[230]
Odessa Komer(1925–2004)1995Labor leader, Vice President of theUnited Automobile Workers (UAW) International Executive Board 1974–1992[231]
Laura Freele Osborn(1866–1955)1995The first woman to hold elective office in Detroit when elected to the school board in 1917[232]
Jacquelin E. Washington(1931–2019)1995First African American woman to serve as executive director of the Planned Parenthood League of Southwest Michigan. Co-founder of the Sojourner Foundation[233]
Marie-Therese Guyon Cadillac(1671–1746)1994Business, physician; the first white woman to cross the Iroquois Territory[234]
Ruth Carlton(1911–2001)1994The Detroit News columnist whose work focused on adoption of hard-to-place children, resulting in government regulations.[235]
Flossie Cohen(1925–2004)1994Professor Emeritus at Wayne State University, founded the pediatric HIV Clinic at Children's Hospital[236]
Bertha A. Daubendiek(1916–2005)1994Environment, advocate of natural sanctuaries. Founder of the Michigan Nature Association.[237]
Genora Johnson Dollinger(1913–1995)1994Labor leader who organized the Women's Auxiliary and the Women's Emergency Brigade sit-down strike against General Motors. Memorialized in the documentaryWith Babies and Banners: Story of the Women's Emergency Brigade.[238]
Flora Hommel(1928–2015)1994Founder of Childbirth Without Pain Education Association, peace activist, advocate of universal single-payer health care[239]
Sarah Van Hoosen Jones(1892–1972)1994First woman in the United States to earn a Doctorate in Animal Genetics. Trustee of Michigan State University. Founding member of the Oakland University Board of Trustees[240]
Aleda E. Lutz(1915–1944)1994W W II U. S. Army flight nurse, died in a plane crash inLyon, France. Posthumously awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. Aleda E. Lutz VA Medical Center in Saganaw honors her service.[241]
Helen Walker McAndrew(1826–1906)1994Washtenaw County's first woman physician[242]
Edith Vosburgh Alvord(1875–1962)1993Volunteerism, women's suffrage[243]
Catherine Carter Blackwell(1919–2014)1993Pioneered African-American studies in Detroit schools[244]
Jean W. Campbell(1918–2016)1993Helped found the Center for Education of Women at the University of Michigan[245]
Katherine Hill Campbell(1868–1942)1993Activist for prison reform[246]
Lenna F. Cooper(1875–1961)1993Co-founder of the American Dietetic Association (ADA) in 1917; first dietician in the United States Army[247]
Roberta A. Griffith(1870–1941)1993Helped to establish American Association of Workers for the Blind, and created a 6-volumeBraille dictionary[248]
Bina West Miller(1867–1954)1993Founder of Women's Benefit Association, a nonprofit, dues-paying organization exclusively for women, pioneering life insurance for women[249]
Jeanne Omelenchuk(1931–2008)1993Olympic speed skater[250]
Sippie Wallace(1898–1986)1993Musical entertainer[251]
Edna Noble White(1879–1954)1993Founding director of the Merrill-Palmer Institute, childhood development advisor to theFranklin D. Roosevelt administration and to theRockefeller Institute for Medical Research[252]
Irene Clark Woodman(1905–1994)1993Military[253]
Cora Mae Brown(1914–1972)1992Legislative work, criminal law, and women's rights[254]
Mary Lou Butcher(b. 1943)1992Journalism[255]
Sarah Emma Edmonds(1841–1898)1992Served with the Union troops during the Civil War, passing herself off as a man[256]
Violet Temple Lewis(1899–1968)1992Improving the status of women through education and job skills[257]
Luise Ruth Leismer Mahon(1926–1975)1992Journalism[258]
Gilda Radner(1946–1989)1992Entertainer[259]
Martha Romayne Seger(1932–2021)1992Financial Economist and Former Governor of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C.[260]
Ann M. Shafer(1916–1991)1992Became a union leader while working atKellogg's in Battle Creek. Co-founder of the Coalition of Labor Union Women. Founded the Kalamazoo and Battle Creek chapters of the National Organization for Women[261]
Sylvia M. Stoesser(1901–1991)1992Chemist, Dow Chemical Company's first female research scientist.[262]
Lucy Thurman(1849–1918)1992Devoted 37 years to theWoman's Christian Temperance Union, helping them establish a National Department of Colored work[263]
Charleszetta Waddles(1912–2001)1992Social work, African-American activist, Pentecostal church minister, and founder of Mother Waddles Perpetual Mission[264]
Rachel Andresen(1907–1988)1991FoundedYouth For Understanding[265]
Mary V. Beck(1908–2005)1991First woman elected to the Detroit City Council, member of Wayne County Board of Supervisors[266]
Jan BenDor(b. 1946)1991Founder of Women's Crisis Center in Ann Arbor. Organized a boycott against Domino's Pizza for its anti-woman policies. Propelled the rape crisis center movement in Michigan.[267]
Janet K. Good(1923–1997)1991Helped establish the Older Women's League (OWL) in Michigan. Actin director of theEqual Employment Opportunity Commission for the Michigan Employment Security Commission. Co-chair the Governor's task force on sexual harassment, leading to theElliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act.[268]
Jo Jacobs(1933–2015)1991Organized the committee to Study Sex Discrimination in the Kalamazoo Public Schools.[269]
Virginia Cecile Blomer Nordby(b. 1929)1991Helped draft the Michigan Criminal Sexual Conduct Act[270]
Dorothy Comstock Riley(1924–2004)1991Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court 1987–1991[271]
Edith Mays Swanson(1934–1989)1991Civil rights, education, Edith Swanson Leadership Award established in her honor[272]
Emily Helen Butterfield(1884–1958)1990Artist, and first licensed female architect in Michigan[273]
Erma Henderson(1917–2009)1990First African American woman elected to the Detroit City Council[274]
Dorothy Leonard Judd(1898–1989)1990In conjunction with the League of Women Voters, spent her life rooting out corruption andcronyism in government.[275]
Elba Lila Morse(1882–1975)1990Superintendent of Northern Michigan Children's Clinic. Helped found the Bay Cliff Health Camp. Worked with theAmerican Red Cross to recruit and train workers for disaster recovery.[276]
Fannie M. Richards(1840–1922)1990Founded a private elementary school for black children. Pushed for school desegregation, resulting in the Michigan Supreme Court's 1871 ruling ordering desegregation.[277]
Emelia Christine Schaub(1891–1995)1990First female practicing prosecuting attorney in Michigan.[278]
Mary P. Sinclair(1918–2011)1990Authority on nuclear energy and its impact on the environment[279]
Merze Tate(1905–1996)1990Political science scholar, author, professor at Harvard University[280]
Delia Villegas Vorhauer(1940–1992)1990Hispanic civil rights[281]
Clara Arthur(1858–1929)1989Co-founder of the Detroit Equal Suffrage Association in 1886[282]
Anna Sutherland Bissell(1846–1934)1989Philanthropist and CEO of Bissell Company in 1889. First woman chief executive officer in the United States.[283]
Alexa Canady(b. 1950)1989First African American woman in the United States to become a neurosurgeon[284]
Anne R. Davidow(1898–1991)1989Attorney who argued for the plaintiff inGoesaert v. Cleary before theUnited States Supreme Court, in which the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the appellees and upheld the State of Michigan's discriminatory laws regarding hiring practices of women barkeepers. US CongresswomanMartha Griffiths' support of the USEqual Rights Amendment was based on this case.[285]
Bernadine Newsom Denning(1930–2011)1989Human rights activist[286]
Isabella Karle(1921–2017)1989Chemist who developed the Symbolic Addition Procedure for deriving molecular structures directly from x-ray diffraction experiments on crystals.[287]
Jean Ledwith King(1924–2021)1989Advocate for gender equality[288]
Olga Madar(1915–1996)1989First woman elected to the executive board of theUnited Auto Workers. Under her influence, the UAW in 1970 became the first national union to endorse constitutional ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA).[289]
Mary Anne Bryant(1845–1903)1989Born in a log cabin, she worked through theNational Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry to improve the lives and educations of Michigan women.[290]
Louise Brown(1917–2011)1988Social worker, educator[291]
Ethelene Crockett(1914–1978)1988Michigan's first African-American female board-certified OB/GYN[292]
Marcia J. Federbush(1934–2007)1988Championed gender-equal academic and sports regulations in Michigan[293]
Fran Harris(1909–1998)1988First woman to broadcast news in Michigan[294]
Agnes Mary Mansour(1931–2004)1988Roman Catholic nun, president of Mercy College of Detroit, 1982 candidate for Congress[295]
Helen Martin(1889–1973)1988Michigan state geologist, prolific author[296]
M. Jane Kay Nugent(1925–2021)1988Former Vice President of Administration at Detroit Edison[297]
Sarah Goddard Power(1935–1987)1988Former Deputy Assistant Secretary in the State Department[298]
Marion Isabel Barnhart(1921–1985)1987Medical researcher and first woman professor at Wayne State University (WSU); first recipient of the university's Distinguished Graduate Faculty Award[299]
Patricia Hill Burnett(1920–2014)1987Arts, women's rights; co-founded the Michigan chapter of the National Organization for Women[300]
Ethel Calhoun(1898–1989)1987Physician who helped pioneer theSister Kenny method of treatingPoliomyelitis[301]
Georgia Emery(1867–1913)1987Founder of Merrill Palmer School for Motherhood and Home Training, first director of the Women's Department of the Massachusetts Life Insurance Company[302]
Betty Ford(1918–2011)1987First Lady of the United States[303]
Rosa Slade Gragg(1904–1989)1987Civil rights advocate appointed in the 1940s to a national advisory post by PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt[304]
Clara Raven(1909–1994)1987First woman commissioned as American military Colonel, World War II Army Medical Corps, Deputy Chief Medical Examiner of Wayne County, 20 years research intoSudden infant death syndrome[305]
Patricia Boyle(1937–2014)1986Judge, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan[306]
Elizabeth C. Crosby(1888–1983)1986Comparative and human neuroanatomy. 1979 recipient of the President's National Medal of Science fromJimmy Carter[307]
Gwen Frostic(1906–2001)1986Artists, illustrator[308]
Elmina R. Lucke(1889–1987)1986International social worker[309]
Marjorie Swank Matthews(1916–1986)1986First woman elected as bishop to the Methodist Church[310]
Marjorie Peebles-Meyers(1915–2001)1986First African-American woman to graduate from the Medical School of Wayne State University, the first to be accepted as an intern at Detroit Receiving Hospital.

and the first to become Chief Resident of a major Detroit hospital.

[311]
Mary Chase Perry Stratton(1867–1961)1986Ceramic artist and co-founder of renowned Detroit studioPewabic Pottery[312]
Helen Thomas(1920–2013)1986Journalism,White House press corps[313]
Helen J. Claytor(1907–2005)1984Civil rights, national president of the YWCA 1967–1973[314]
Caroline Bartlett Crane(1858–1935)1984Unitarian minister, suffragist, civic reformer, educator and journalist[315]
Virginia Allan(1916–1999)1984Chair President Nixon's Task Force on Women's Rights and Responsibilities. 1972 Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs[316]
Marguerite Lofft De Angeli(1889–1987)1984Newbery Medal for children's literature[317]
Emma Genevieve Gillette(1898–1986)1984Conservationist[318]
Icie Macy Hoobler(1892–1984)1984Biochemist. First woman chair of a local section of the American Chemical Society. Won 22 awards and honors for her laboratory's research.[319]
Madeline La Framboise(1779–1846)1984Early 19th century fur trader[320]
Martha Longstreet(1870–1953)1984Physician, community activist[321]
Elly M. Peterson(1914–2008)1984Republican National Committee co-chairman during the 1960s and 1970s[322]
Jessie Pharr Slaton(1908–1983)1984African-American attorney[323]
Mary C. Spencer
(1842–1923)1984Michigan State Librarian 1893–1923[324]
Bertha Van Hoosen(1863–1952)1984Medicine, health care, founder of theAmerican Medical Women's Association in 1915, and the first woman to be head of a medical division at a coeducational university.[325]
Harriette Simpson Arnow(1907–1986)1983Novelist[326]
N. Lorraine Beebe(1910–2005)1983Michigan state senator[327]
Mamie Geraldine Neale Bledsoe(1900–1991)1983Civil rights, politics, advocate for special education needs of children[328]
Elizabeth Margaret Chandler(1807–1834)1983Quaker writer who incorporated abolitionism into her themes[329]
Mary Stallings Coleman(1914–2001)1983First woman to be elected Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court .[330]
Wilma T. Donahue(1900–1993)1983Medicine, health care, author, and authority onGerontology, founded International Center for Social Gerontology (ICSG) in Washington, D.C.[331]
Grace Eldering(1900–1988)1983Math, science, medicine, health care, along with Pearl Kendrick developed the vaccine for whooping cough[332]
Josephine Gomon(1892–1975)1983Medicine, health care, civil activist[333]
Martha Griffiths(1912–2003)1983United States House of Representatives 1955–1974, guided the Equal Rights Amendment through both houses of Congress in 1972. Lt. Governor of Michigan 1983–1991[334]
Dorothy Haener(1917–2000)1983International Representative with the United Auto Workers International Union's Women's Department[335]
Laura Smith Haviland(1808–1897)1983Quaker abolitionist who helped slaves escape, founded an orphanage, nursed wounded Civil War soldiers, and was active in women's suffrage.[336]
Mildred Jeffrey(1910–2004)1983Labor and civil rights activist[337]
Pearl Kendrick(1890–1980)1983Math, science, medicine, health care. Along with Grace Eldering, developed the vaccine for Whooping Cough[338]
Helen Milliken(1922–2012)1983First Lady of Michigan, philanthropist, women's rights[339]
Rosa Parks(1913–2005)1983Pivotal African American figure in the Civil Rights Movement[340]
Anna Howard Shaw(1847–1919)1983Suffrage, religion, medicine, health care[341]
Lucinda Hinsdale Stone(1814–1900)1983Women's rights[342]
Sojourner Truth(1797–1883)1983Abolition[343]

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Further reading

[edit]
  • Arrow, Harriette Simpson (2005).The Collected Short Stories of Harriette Simpson Arnow. Michigan State University Press.ISBN 978-0-87013-756-3.

External links

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