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Historical Figures
denotes
Ohio figure
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- Abigail
Smith Adams
(1744-1818) - Wife of John Adams, 2nd President of the United States
and mother of John Quincy Adams, 6th President. Known for her letters
and opinions on society.
- Jane
Addams (1860-1935) - Social Activist, founder of Hull House, charter
member of the NAACP, Nobel Peace Prize winner and labor union organizer.
- Louisa
May Alcott (1832-1888) - Seamstress, servant, teacher, Civil War
nurse, and finally, author and novelist.
- Marian
Anderson (1902-1995) - First African American to sing leading role
with Metropolitan Opera, delegate to U.N.
- Susan
Brownell Anthony (1820-1906) - Napoleon of the women's suffrage
movement, mother of the 19th Amendment, abolitionist.
- Josephine
Baker (1906-1975) - African-American international star, civil rights
activist, World War II heroine.
- Ida
B. Wells Barnett (1862-1931) - African-American educator, newspaperwoman,
anti-lynching campaigner, founder NAACP.
- Clara
Barton (1821-1912) - Civil War nurse, founder of the American Red
Cross.
- Mary
McLeod Bethune (1875-1955) African-American educator, founder of
Bethune-Cookman College, Daytona Beach, Florida, Presidential advisor,
recipient of Spingarn Medal.
- Sarah
Bolton (1841-1916) - Noted Cleveland author of biographies, poetry
and a temperance novel.

- Margaret
Bourke-White (1904-1971) - Groundbreaking photo-journalist and author
- Mary
Elizabeth Bowser ( 1839-?) - African-American Union spy in the Confederate
White House.
- Belle
Boyd (1844-1900) - Confederate spy during the Civil War.
- Margaret
"Molly" Tobin Brown (1867-1932) - Titanic survivor and
a woman who was determined to break the rules of "high society."
- Eliza
Bryant (1827-1907) - African-American founder of the The Cleveland
Home for Aged Colored People.

- Abbie
Burgess (Grant) (1839-1892) - Lighthouse keeper at Matinicus Rock
and Whitehead Light Stations in Maine, commissioned by U.S. Coast Guard.
- Martha
Jane "Calamity Jane" Cannary (1852-1903) - A lone woman in the wilds
of the Rocky Mountain west
- Rachel
Carson (1907-1964) - Marine biologist, science writer, and environmentalist.
- Rebecca
Carter (1766-1827) - Pioneer woman of Cleveland.

- Mary
Ann Shadd Cary (1823-1893) African-American born pioneer journalist
and lecturer.
- Carrie
Chapman Catt (1859-1947) - Suffragette, founder of the League of
Women Voters.
- Cassie
L. Chadwick (1857-1907) - Most infamous Cleveland financial con-artist.
- Bessie
Coleman (1893-1926) - First African-American woman to get pilot's
license.
- Dorothy
Dandridge (1923-1965) - Actress, singer and dancer. Star of Carmen
Jones and Porgy and Bess.

- Isadora
Duncan (1875-1929) - Mother of modern dance.
- Amelia
Earhart (1897-1937) - Aviatrix.
- Mary
Fields (1832?-1914) - African-American entrepreneur, stagecoach
driver, pioneer.

- Diana
Fletcher (circa 1830's) - Daughter of a former slave father and
Kiowa mother, activist, taught in black Cherokee school.
- Dorothy
Fuldheim (1893-1989) - Jewish-American news journalist and television
broadcaster; developed format for television news programming.

- Lucretia
Rudolph Garfield (1832-1918) - Wife of James Garfield, 20th President
of the United States was First Lady for six months when her husband
was assassinated. "Crete" returned home to Lawnfield in Mentor
where her life continued in a non-traditional way.

- Zelma
Watson George (1903-1994) - African-American delegate to the U.N.,
opera singer, speaker and educator.

- Emma
Goldman (1869-1940) - Vilified in her day as the "most dangerous
woman in America," this Russian emigrant earned her title, “Queen
of the Anarchists” as labor leader, lecturer, writer, women’s
rights activist and free love advocate.
- Julia
Boggs Dent Grant (1826-1902) - Wife of Ulysses S. Grant, 18th President
of the United States, was a determined woman who despite family objections
married the man she loved. Outspoken, she also created her own plans
for ending the Civil War and holding a secret Presidential Inauguration.

- Charlotte
Forten Grimke (1837-1890) - African-American writer, abolitionist
and educator.
- Fannie
Lou Hamer (1917-1977) - African-American sharecropper turned civil
rights worker and founder of the MS Freedom Democratic Party.
- Florence
Harding (1860-1924) - Wife of Warren Harding, 29th President of
the United States, the first presidential wife able to vote for her
husband. Scandal plagued this First Lady throughout her life.

- Caroline
Lavinia Scott Harrison (1832-1892) - Wife of Benjamin Harrison,
23rd President of the United States, was the first president-general
of the newly formed DAR. An accomplished watercolorist, she designed
and painted the Harrison state china and organized the White House china
collection.

- Lucy
Ware Webb Hayes (1831-1889) - Wife of Rutherford B. Hayes, 19th
President of the United States, was the first presidential wife to have
a college degree. She originated the annual Easter Egg Roll on the White
House lawn.

- Sally
Hemings (1773-1835) - African American who sacrificed her freedom
from slavery for the love of President Thomas Jefferson.
- Rear
Admiral Grace Hopper, USNR (1906-1992) - Computer pioneer and the
oldest officer in active duty when she retired in 1986.
- Hedda
Hopper (1890-1966) - In the golden age of Hollywood, Hedda could
make or break careers. Gossip was her business and J. Edgar Hoover was
her penpal.
- Adella
Prentiss Hughes (1869-1950) - Founder of the Cleveland Orchestra
and Cleveland Music Settlement House.

- Jane
Edna Hunter (1882-1971) - African-American social worker, attorney,
founder of Phyllis Wheatley Association of Cleveland.

- Zora
Neale Hurston (1903-1960) - African-American writer from The Harlem
Group, influenced Toni Morrison and Alice Walker.
- Anne
Hutchinson (1591-1643) – A Puritan woman who defied the male-dominated
Massachusetts Bay Colony and after banishment helped settle Rhode Island
and New York.
- Mahalia
Jackson (1912-1972) - Extraordinary gospel singer and the first
African-American woman to gain national acclaim for gospel music.
- Rebecca
Jackson ( 1795-1871) - African-American eldress of the Shaker sect.
- Harriet
Jacobs (1813-1897) - African-American escaped slave, author and
abolitionist.
- “Mother”
Mary Harris Jones (1837-1930) - Irish immigrant who lost her family
to yellow fever and became the self-proclaimed mother and “hell-raiser”
for the downtrodden American laborer, especially children.
- Sissieretta
Jones (1869-1933) - African-American international vocal prima donna
of late 19th century, favorite of George Bernard Shaw and several presidents.
- Barbara
Jordan (1936-1996) - African-American orator and Congresswoman.
- Elizabeth
Keckley (1820-?) Personal maid, best friend and confidant to Mary
Todd Lincoln. Wrote tell-all book after leaving Mrs. Lincoln's employ.
- Marie
LaVeau (1796?-1863?) - African-American Voodoo Queen of New Orleans
and famous herbalist.
- Edmonia
Lewis ( 1843-?) - First successful African-American sculptor.

- Ida
Lewis (1842-1913) - Heroic lighthouse keeper of Rhode Island, commissioned
by U.S. Coast Guard.
- Mary
Todd Lincoln (1818-1882) - Wife of President Abraham Lincoln, misrepresented
by popular history and maligned by her peers.
- Jenny
Lind (1820-1887) - Swedish international opera star, brought to
U.S. by P.T. Barnum in the 1850s.
- Juliette
Gordon Low (1860-1927) - Founder of the American Girl Scouts.
- Clare
Boothe Luce (1903-1987) - Playwright, U.S. Congresswoman and ambassador
to Italy.
- Barbara
Mabrity (1782-1867) - Lighthouse keeper in Key West, Florida, commissioned
by U.S. Coast Guard.
- Dolley
Madison (1768-1849) - First Lady and doyen of Washington society
- Biddy
Mason (1818-1891) - Entrepreneur, one of first African-American
women to own land in California.
- Rachel
Agnes Mason (1867-1903) An Irish immigrant whose family came to America
in 1788 because of religious conflict.
- Flora
Stone Mather (1852-1910) - Cleveland philanthropist, founder of
Flora Stone Mather college at Western Reserve University for women.
Sponsored Goodrich House for urban children.

- Ida
Saxton McKinley (1847-1907) - Wife of William McKinley, 25th President
of the United States, developed a unique way of coping with her epileptic
seizures during her public appearances as First Lady.

- Maria
Mitchell (1818-1889) - Astronomer and professor at Vassar College.
First female member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
- Louise
Nevelson (1899-1988) - Russian born New York sculptor famous for her
shadow box, wall sculptures and her flamboyant personality.
- Annie
Oakley (1860-1926) - World famous markswoman from Ohio.

- Georgia
O'Keeffe (1887-1986) - Famed American artist who defied convention
in both her art and her private life.
- Louella
Parsons (1893-1965) - Hollywood gossip columnist, who dominated Hollywood's
Golden Era. Louella's relationship with William Randoph Hearst and her
own three marriages made her life as stormy as any Hollywood movie.
- Alice
Paul (1885-1977) - The woman who rescued the woman suffrage movement
(1910) and made sure women got the vote.
- Mrs.
George (Hannah?) Peake (1755-18??) - First African-American settler
of Cleveland.

- Molly
Pitcher (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) (1754-1832) - Born Mary Ludwig,
this revolutionary heroine followed the Continental Army for more than
3 years, doing what was needed to free the colonies from the tyranny
of England.
- Eleanor
Anna Roosevelt (1884-1962) - Wife of President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
first activist First Lady
- Rebecca
Rouse (1799-1887) - Cleveland humanitarian, temperance advocate,
abolitionist, founder of Beech Brook.

- Wilma
Rudolph (1940-1994) - African-American Olympic Gold Medalist.
- Rose
Bianco Salvatore (1900-1993) - Italian immigrant during the "Great
Wave" coming to America.

- Belle
Sherwin (1868-1955) - Cleveland suffragist, President of League
of Women Voters, social reformer.

- Margaret
Skapes (1892-1968) - Immigrant from Greece, suffragette.

- Bessie
Smith (1894-1937) - African-American blues singer.
- Valaida
Snow (190?-1956) - African-American band leader and trumpet player.
- Elizabeth
Cady Stanton (1815-1902) First president of the National Woman's
Suffrage Association.
- Belle
Starr (1848-1889) - Confederate sympathizer and western frontierswoman
and outlaw.
- Susan
McKinney Steward (1848-1918) - First female African-American doctor
in New York State.
- Harriet
Beecher Stowe (1811-1896) - Author of Uncle Tom's Cabin.

- Annie
Sullivan (1866-1936) - Helen Keller's teacher.
- Helen
Herron Taft (1861-1943) - Wife of William H. Taft, 27th President
of the United States, always longed to live in the White House. Known
for planting Washington D.C.’s legendary cherry trees.

- Susie
King Taylor (1848-1912) - First African-American U.S. Army nurse
during the Civil War.
- Mary
Church Terrell (1863-1954) - African-American lecturer, suffragette,
civil rights leader.
- Sojourner
Truth (Isabella Baumfree) (1797-1883) - African-American abolitionist,
Civil War nurse, suffragette.
- Harriet
Tubman (1820?-1913) - Underground Railroad conductor, Army scout,
African-American suffragette.
- Elizabeth
Van Lew (1818-1900) - Crazy Bet, an abolitionist in the South during
the Civil War, who feigned insanity to help free slaves and help the
Union Army.
- Rosetta
Wakeman (1843-1864) - Posed as a male to serve in Union Army during
Civil War.
- Madame
C.J. Walker (1867-1919) - African-American entrepreneur, millionaire
and philanthropist.
- Hazel
Mountain Walker (1900-1980) - African-American attorney, school
principal, actress at Karamu
- Katherine
Walker (1846-1931) - Lighthouse keeper at Robin's Reef, New York,
commissioned by U.S. Coast Guard.
- Mary
Edwards Walker (1832-1919) - Prisoner of war during the Civil War,
writer, doctor, fashion trend-setter and the only female to receive
the Medal of Honor.
- Mae
West (1892-1980) First to earn a million dollars in the movie business.
- Phillis
Wheatley (175?-1784) - First noted African-American woman poet.
- Laura
Ingalls Wilder (1867-1957) - Famed children’s author and “storyteller
of the prairie.”
- Victoria
Woodhull (1838-1927) - First woman to run for President, center
of a scandal that rocked the nation.

    
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