Overlooked (obituary feature) New York Times recurring series
Overlooked No More is a recurring feature in the obituary section of The New York Times , which honors "remarkable people" whose deaths had been overlooked by editors of that section since its creation in 1851. The feature was introduced on March 8, 2018, for International Women's Day , when the Times published fifteen obituaries of such "overlooked" women, and has since become a weekly feature in the paper.
The project was created by Amisha Padnani , the digital editor of the obituaries desk,[ 1] and Jessica Bennett , the paper's gender editor. In its introduction, it was admitted that the paper's obituaries had been "dominated by white men", and that the project was intended to help "address these inequities of our time".[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5]
In May 2018, it was reported that the Times had partnered with Anonymous Content and Paramount Television to develop a drama anthology franchise based on the feature, with each season chronicling a notable woman.[ 6]
List of honorees
International Women's Day (March 8, 2018)
Ida B. Wells , (1862–1931), "took on racism in the deep south with powerful reporting on lynchings "[ 7]
Qiu Jin , (1875–1907), "beheaded by imperial forces, was 'China's Joan of Arc '"[ 8]
Mary Ewing Outerbridge , (1852–1886), "helped bring tennis to the United States"[ 9]
Diane Arbus , (1923–1971), "a photographer, whose portraits have compelled or repelled generations of viewers"[ 10]
Marsha P. Johnson , (1945–2002), "a transgender pioneer and activist"
Sylvia Plath , (1932–1963), "a postwar poet unafraid to confront her despair"
Henrietta Lacks , (1920–1951), "whose cells lead to a medical revolution"
Madhubala , (1933–1969), "a Bollywood legend whose tragic life mirrored Marilyn Monroe 's"
Emily Warren Roebling , (1843–1903), "the woman behind the man who built the Brooklyn Bridge "
Nella Larsen , (1891–1964), "wrestled with race and sexuality in the Harlem renaissance "
Ada Lovelace , (1815–1852), "mathematician who wrote the first computer program"
Margaret Abbott , (1878–1955), "an unwitting olympic trailblazer"
Belkis Ayón , (1967–1999), "a Cuban printmaker inspired by a secret male society"
Charlotte Brontë , (1816–1855), "Novelist known for Jane Eyre "
Lillias Campbell Davidson , (1853–1934), "an early advocate for women's cycling"
Black History Month (February 2019)
During February 2019, in honor of Black History Month , the paper published obituaries for "a prominent group of black men and women" who were not examined at the time of their deaths.[ 11] Padnani wrote that readers' suggestions of whom to write about "have yielded some of the most-read obituaries".[ 12]
Gladys Bentley , (1907–1960), "a gender bending blues performer who became 1920s Harlem royalty".
Scott Joplin , (1867–1917), "a pianist and ragtime master who wrote 'The Entertainer ' and the groundbreaking opera 'Treemonisha '.
Margaret Garner , (1833–1858), "who killed her own daughter rather than return her to the horrors of slavery".
Major Taylor , (1878–1932), "a world champion bicycle racer whose fame was undermined by prejudice".
Zelda Wynn Valdes , (1905–2001), "a fashion designer who outfitted the glittery stars of screen and stage".
Alfred Hair , (1941–1970), "a charismatic businessman who created a movement for Florida's black artists".
Nina Mae McKinney , (1912–1957), "an actress who defied the barrier of race to find stardom in Europe".
Granville T. Woods , (1856–1910), "an inventor known as the 'Black Edison '".
Oscar Micheaux , (1884–1951), "a pioneering filmmaker prefiguring independent directors like Spike Lee and Tyler Perry ".
Mary Ellen Pleasant , (1814–1907), "born into slavery, she became a Gold Rush-era millionaire and a powerful abolitionist".
Elizabeth Jennings Graham , (1827–1901), "Life experiences primed her to fight for racial equality. Her moment came on a streetcar ride to church."
Philip A. Payton Jr. , (1876–1917), "a real estate magnate who turned Harlem into a black mecca".
Moses Fleetwood Walker , (1857–1924), "the first black baseball player in the big leagues, even before Jackie Robinson ".
Other honorees
Annie Easley , "who helped take spaceflight to new heights", published February 1, 2025
Karen Wynn Fonstad , "who mapped Tolkien 's Middle-earth ", published January 13, 2025
Fidelia Bridges , "artist who captured the natural world", published December 12, 2024
Margaret Getchell , "visionary force at Macy's ", published November 27, 2024
Gowongo Mohawk , "trailblazing Indigenous actress", published November 9, 2024
Margaret E. Knight , "innovator of the flat-bottomed paper bag ", published October 25, 2024
Mariama Bâ , "voice of African feminism ", published October 11, 2024
Ellen Armstrong , "'marvelous, mystifying' magician of mirth", published September 20, 2024
Gwendolyn B. Bennett , "Harlem renaissance star plagued by misfortune", published September 6, 2024
Mabel Addis , "who pioneered storytelling in video games", published August 24, 2024
Renee Carroll , "world's most famous hatcheck girl", published August 9, 2024
Willy De Bruyn , "cycling champion who broke gender boundaries", published July 25, 2024
Ursula Parrott , "best-selling author and voice for the modern woman", published July 10, 2024
Otto Lucas , "God in the hat world", published June 28, 2024
Lorenza Böttner , "transgender artist who found beauty in disability", published June 15, 2024
Hansa Jivraj Mehta , "who fought for women's equality in India and beyond", published May 31, 2024
Bill Hosokawa , "journalist who chronicled Japanese American history", published May 16, 2024
Min Matheson , "labor leader who faced down mobsters", published May 3, 2024
Lizzie Magie , "the unknown inventor behind Monopoly ", published April 12, 2024
Henrietta Swan Leavitt , "who unraveled mysteries of the stars", published March 27, 2024
Yvonne Barr , "who helped discover a cancer-causing virus ", published March 21, 2024
Miriam Solovieff , "lauded violinist who suffered tragedy", published March 15, 2024
Betty Fiechter , "pioneer in the world of watches", published March 1, 2024
Pierre Toussaint , "philanthropist and candidate for sainthood", published February 18, 2024
Henry Heard , "tap dancer and advocate for people with disabilities", published February 2, 2024
Beatrix Potter , "author of The Tale of Peter Rabbit ", published January 19, 2024
Cordell Jackson , "elder stateswoman of rock 'n' roll ", published January 6, 2024
Ethel Lindgren , "anthropologist of reindeer herding cultures", published December 22, 2023
Ada Blackjack , "survivor of a harrowing expedition", published December 9, 2023
Elena Zelayeta , "emissary for Mexican cooking", published November 22, 2023
Ángela Ruiz Robles , "inventor of an early e-reader ", published November 10, 2023[ 13]
Adefunmi , "who introduced African Americans to Yoruba ", published October 27, 2023
Omero C. Catan , "who gained fame as 'Mr. First'", published October 12, 2023
Alice Anderson , "who ran Australia's first all-woman garage", published September 26, 2023
Margaret Chung , "doctor who was 'different from others'", published September 18, 2023
Molly Nelson , "steward of Penobscot culture", published September 14, 2023
Chick Strand , "pioneering experimental filmmaker", published August 31, 2023
Lily Parr , "dominant British soccer player", published July 21, 2023
Hannie Schaft , "resistance fighter during World War II", published July 7, 2023
Dolores Alexander , "feminist journalist and activist", published June 25, 2023
Lou Sullivan , "author and transgender activist", published June 9, 2023
Sultan Khan , "untrained chess player who became a champion", published May 27, 2023
James Sakoda , "whose wartime internment inspired a social science tool", published May 8, 2023
Elizabeth Wagner Reed , "who resurrected legacies of women in science", published April 22, 2023[ 14]
Alice Ball , "chemist who created a treatment for leprosy ", published April 8, 2023
Lilian Lindsay , "Britain's first female dentist", published March 21, 2023[ 15]
Dilys Winn , "who brought murder and mystery to Manhattan ", published March 10, 2023
Clara Driscoll , "designer of vision in glass for Tiffany ", published February 23, 2023
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper , "poet and suffragist", published February 7, 2023
Mary Barr , "who fought wildfires from aloft", published January 28, 2023
Tove Ditlevsen , "Danish writer of confessional autofiction ", published January 7, 2023
Audrey Munson , "forgotten but, living on in sculptures, not gone", published December 15, 2022
Ann Davison , "who crossed the Atlantic alone", published December 3, 2022
Cléoma Falcon , "Queen of Cajun music ", published November 11, 2022
Dorothy Spencer , "film editor sought out by big directors", published October 29, 2022
Katharine Cook Briggs and Isabel Briggs Myers , "creators of a personality test ", published October 14, 2022
María Orosa , "inventor of banana ketchup ", published September 29, 2022[ 16]
Sylvia Rexach , "Puerto Rican singer and composer", published September 16, 2022
Vera Menchik , "first women's chess champion", published September 2, 2022[ 17]
Regina Jonas , "on whose shoulders 'all female rabbis stand'", published August 19, 2022[ 18]
Alda Merini , "poet who wrote of life's joys and struggles", published August 5, 2022
Lottie Brunn , "the 'Queen of jugglers '", published July 21, 2022
Klaus Nomi , "singer with an otherworldly persona", published June 30, 2022
William B. Gould , "escaped slave and Civil War diarist", published June 17, 2022
Maureen Colquhoun , "pathbreaking politician waylaid by bias", published June 3, 2022
Junichi Arai , "innovative textile designer", published May 13, 2022
Ady Fidelin , "Black model 'hidden in plain sight'", published April 29, 2022
Jacqueline Kahanoff , "writer of Levantine identity", published April 16, 2022
Elizabeth Hayes , "coal town doctor who fought for miners", published April 1, 2022
Louise Little , "activist and mother of Malcolm X ", published March 19, 2022
Barbara Shermund , "flapper -era cartoonist", published March 4, 2022
Mary Eliza Mahoney , "who opened doors in nursing", published February 19, 2022
Ora Washington , "star of tennis and baseball", published February 4, 2022
Lee Godie , "eccentric Chicago street artist", published January 21, 2022
Theresa Hak Kyung Cha , "artist and author who explored identity", published January 7, 2022
Frances Benjamin Johnston , "photographer who defied genteel norms", published December 15, 2021
Julia Tuttle , "the 'mother of Miami '", published December 3, 2021
Ruth Polsky , "who shaped New York's music scene", published November 18, 2021
Louise Blanchard Bethune , "who changed the face of Buffalo ", published November 4, 2021
Kim Hak-sun , "who broke the silence for 'comfort women '", published October 21, 2021
Violet Piercy , "pioneering marathoner", published October 8, 2021
Remedios Varo , "Spanish painter of magic, mysticism and science", published September 24, 2021
Sinn Sisamouth , "'King' of Cambodian pop music", published September 9, 2021
Randy Snow , "Paralympic champion of wheelchair tennis ", published August 27, 2021
Hettie Anderson , "sculptors' model who evaded fame", published August 12, 2021
Rebecca Lee Crumpler , "who battled prejudice in medicine", published July 16, 2021
Eve Adams , "writer who gave lesbians a voice", published July 2, 2021
Jobriath , "openly gay glam rocker in the '70s", published June 11, 2021
Si-Lan Chen , "whose dances encompassed worlds", published May 27, 2021
Usha Mehta , "freedom fighter against British rule in India ", published May 13, 2021
Inji Efflatoun , "Egyptian artist of the people", published April 29, 2021
Bhanu Athaiya , "who won India its first Oscar ", published April 22, 2021
Granville Redmond , "painter, actor, friend", published April 8, 2021
Kitty Cone , "trailblazer of the disability rights movement", published March 26, 2021
Aminah Robinson , "whose art chronicled Black life", published February 26, 2021
Jimmie McDaniel , "tennis player who broke barriers", published February 11, 2021
Jay Jaxon , "pioneering designer of French couture", published January 28, 2021
Clarice Lispector , "novelist who captivated Brazil", published December 18, 2020
Barbara Waxman Fiduccia , "reproductive rights advocate", published December 4, 2020
Anya Phillips , "fashion influencer in New York's punk scene", published November 12, 2020
Rosa May Billinghurst , "militant suffragette", published October 30, 2020
Eleanor Flexner , "pioneering feminist in an anti-feminist age", published October 16, 2020
Lucy Diggs Slowe , "scholar who persisted against racism and sexism", published October 1, 2020
Mabel Ping-Hua Lee , "suffragist with a distinction", published September 19, 2020
Charlotta Bass , "[who came] before Kamala Harris ", published September 4, 2020
Leonora O'Reilly , "who fought for working women", published August 21, 2020
Jovita Idar , "who promoted rights of Mexican-Americans and women", published August 7, 2020
Roland Johnson , "who fought to shut down institutions for the disabled", published July 31, 2020
Cheryl Marie Wade , "a performer who refused to hide", published July 23, 2020
Nancy Green , "the 'real Aunt Jemima '", published July 17, 2020
Brad Lomax , "a bridge between civil rights movements", published July 8, 2020[ 19]
Karl Heinrich Ulrichs , "pioneering gay activist", published July 1, 2020
Valerie Solanas , "radical feminist who shot Andy Warhol ", published June 26, 2020
Roberta Cowell , "trans trailblazer, pilot and auto racer", published June 5, 2020
Hazel Ying Lee and Maggie Gee , "[who] soared the skies", published May 21, 2020
June Almeida , "scientist who discovered the first coronavirus ", published May 8, 2020
Eunice Newton Foote , "climate scientist lost to history", published April 21, 2020
F.N. Souza , "India's anti-establishment artist", published April 9, 2020
Kate Worley , "a pioneer writer of erotic comics ", published March 27, 2020
Raka Rasmi , "Balinese dancer", published March 13, 2020
Audrey Sutherland , "paddler of her own canoe", published March 6, 2020
Valaida Snow , "charismatic 'Queen of the trumpet'", published February 22, 2020
Andrée Blouin , "voice for independence in Africa", published February 14, 2020
Joseph Bartholomew , "golf course architect", published February 5, 2020
Homer Plessy , "who sat on a train and stood up for civil rights", published January 31, 2020
Judee Sill , "singer whose life was cut short", published January 23, 2020
Ana Orantes , "whose gruesome murder brought changes to Spain", published January 15, 2020
Margaret McFarland , "mentor to Mr. Rogers ", published January 8, 2020
Earl Tucker , "a dancer known as 'Snakehips'", published December 18, 2019
Bessie Coleman , "pioneering African-American aviatrix", published December 11, 2019[ 20]
Rose Mackenberg , "Houdini 's secret 'ghost-buster'", published December 6, 2019
Lillian Harris Dean , "culinary entrepreneur known as 'Pig Foot Mary'", published November 27, 2019
Pauline Boty , "rebellious Pop artist", published November 20, 2019[ 21]
Annie Londonderry , "who traveled the world by bicycle", published November 11, 2019[ 22]
Olive Morris , "[who] fought for Black women's rights in Britain," published October 30, 2019
Sanmao , "'wandering writer' who found her voice in the desert", published October 23, 2019[ 23]
Lotte Reiniger , "animator who created magic with scissors and paper", published October 16, 2019
Mitsuye Endo , "a name linked to justice for Japanese-Americans", published October 9, 2019
Robert Johnson , "bluesman whose life was a riddle", published September 25, 2019
Elizabeth A. Gloucester , "'richest' black woman and ally of John Brown ", published September 18, 2019
Mihri Rassim , "feminist artist in the Ottoman Empire ", published September 12, 2019
Alice Guy Blaché , "the world's first female filmmaker", published September 6, 2019[ 24]
Elizabeth Rona , "pioneering scientist amid dangers of war", published August 28, 2019
Lau Sing Kee , "war hero jailed for helping immigrants", published August 21, 2019
Rani of Jhansi , "India's warrior queen who fought the British", published August 14, 2019
William Byron Rumford , "a civil rights champion in California", published August 7, 2019
Georgia Gilmore , "who fed and funded the Montgomery bus boycott ", published July 31, 2019
Gertrude Benham , "who climbed the world one mountain at a time", published July 24, 2019
Florence Merriam Bailey , "who defined modern bird-watching ", published July 17, 2019
Else Ury , "[whose] stories survived World War II. She did not", published July 10, 2019
Ralph Lazo , "who voluntarily lived in an internment camp", published July 3, 2019
Bill Larson , "who became a symbol of gay loss in New Orleans ", published June 26, 2019
Claude Cahun , "whose photographs explored gender and sexuality", published June 19, 2019
Ma Rainey , "the 'Mother of the Blues '", published June 12, 2019
Alan Turing , "condemned code breaker and computer visionary", published June 5, 2019[ 25]
Emma Stebbins , "who sculpted an angel of New York ", published May 29, 2019
Debra Hill , "producer who parlayed Halloween into a cult classic", published May 22, 2019
Grace Banker , "whose 'Hello Girls ' decoded calls in World War I", published May 15, 2019
Barbara Rose Johns , "who defied segregation in schools", published May 8, 2019
Annie Edson Taylor , "who tumbled down Niagara Falls into fame", published May 1, 2019
Martin Sostre , "who reformed America's prisons from his cell", published April 24, 2019
Aloha Wanderwell , "explorer and filmmaker," published April 17, 2019
Rose Morgan , "a pioneer in hairdressing and Harlem ", published April 10, 2019
S.N. Goenka , "who brought mindfulness to the West", published April 3, 2019
Bessie Blount , "nurse, wartime inventor and handwriting expert", published March 27, 2019
Elizabeth Peratrovich , "rights advocate for Alaska Natives ", published March 20, 2019
Isabella Goodwin , "New York City's first female police detective", published March 13, 2019
Julia Morgan , "pioneering female architect", published March 6, 2019
Dondi , "[and his] underground graffiti adventures", published February 27, 2019
Dorothy Lee Bolden , "who started a movement for domestic workers", published February 20, 2019[ 26]
Dudley Randall , "whose broadside press gave a voice to black poets," published February 13, 2019[ 27]
Mabel Grammer , "whose brown baby plan found homes for hundreds", published February 6, 2019[ 28]
Forough Farrokhzad , "Iranian poet, who broke barriers of sex and society", published January 30, 2019[ 29]
Mabel Stark , "fearless tiger trainer", published January 23, 2019[ 30]
Isabelle Kelley , "who developed a food stamp program to feed millions", published January 16, 2019[ 31]
Laura de Force Gordon , "suffragist, journalist and lawyer", published January 9, 2019[ 32]
Karen Spärck Jones , "who established the basis for search engines", published January 2, 2019[ 33]
Gertrude Beasley , "who wrote an uncompromising memoir, then vanished", published December 19, 2018
Elizabeth Keckley , "dressmaker and confidante to Mary Todd Lincoln ", published December 12, 2018
Charley Parkhurst , "gold rush legend with a hidden identity", published December 5, 2018[ 34]
Noor Inayat Khan , "Indian princess and British spy", published November 28, 2018
Lilian Jeannette Rice , "architect who lifted a style in California", published November 21, 2018
Pandita Ramabai , "Indian scholar, feminist and educator", published November 14, 2018
Jackie Mitchell , "who fanned two of the baseball's greats", published November 7, 2018
Miki Gorman , "the unlikely marathon winner", published October 31, 2018
Rose Zar , "a Holocaust survivor who hid in plain sight", published October 24, 2018
Kin Yamei , "the Chinese doctor who introduced tofu to the West", published October 17, 2018
Annemarie Schwarzenbach , "author, photographer, and 'ravaged angel'", published October 10, 2018
Minnie Mae Freeman Penney , "Nebraska's 'fearless maid'", published October 3, 2018
Voltairine de Cleyre , "America's 'greatest woman anarchist'", published September 26, 2018
Ana Mendieta , "a Cuban artist who pushed boundaries", published September 19, 2018
Marthe McKenna , "nurse who spied for the British in World War I", published September 12, 2018
Melitta Bentz , "who invented the coffee filter ", published September 5, 2018
Ruby Payne-Scott , "who explored space with radio waves", published August 29, 2018
Doria Shafik , "who led Egypt's women liberation movement", published August 22, 2018
Sissieretta Jones , "a soprano that shattered racial barriers", published August 15, 2018
Julia Sand , "whose letters inspired a president ", published August 8, 2018
Clara Lemlich , "crusading leader of labor rights", published August 1, 2018
Edmonia Lewis , "sculptor of worldwide acclaim", published July 25, 2018
Beatrice Tinsley , "astronomer who saw the course of the universe", published July 18, 2018
Bette Nesmith Graham , "who invented liquid paper ", published July 11, 2018
Emma Gatewood , "first woman to conquer the Appalachian trail alone", published June 27, 2018
Amrita Sher-Gil , "a pioneer of Indian art", published June 21, 2018
Fannie Farmer , "modern cookery's pioneer", published June 14, 2018
Mary Ann Shadd , "[who] shook up the abolitionist movement", published June 7, 2018
Sophia Perovskaya , "the Russian icon who was hanged for killing a czar", published May 31, 2018
Esther Hobart Morris , "she followed a trail to Wyoming. Then she blazed one.", published May 24, 2018
Margarita Xirgu , "theater radical who staged Lorca's plays", published May 17, 2018
Leticia Ramos-Shahani , "a Philippine women's rights pioneer", published May 10, 2018
Julia de Burgos , "a poet who helped shape Puerto Rico's identity", published May 3, 2018
Maria Bochkareva , "who led women into battle in WWI", published April 26, 2018
Harriot Daley , "the Capitol's first telephone operator", published April 17, 2018
Lin Huiyin and Liang Sicheng , "chroniclers of Chinese architecture", published April 11, 2018
Bessie Stringfield , "the motorcycle queen of Miami ", published April 4, 2018
Yu Gwan-Sun , "a Korean independence activist who defied Japanese rule", published March 29, 2018
Ruth Wakefield , "who invented the chocolate chip cookie ", published March 22, 2018
Alison Hargreaves , "who conquered Everest solo and without bottled oxygen", published March 15, 2018
Series
In April 2019, Netflix and Higher Ground Productions (the production company founded by Barack Obama and Michelle Obama ) announced that they would be adapting Overlooked into a scripted anthology series. The series would be produced by Liza Chasin of 3dot Productions and Joy Gorman Wettels of Anonymous Content.[ 35]
Musical
In May 2019, The Waa-Mu Show at Northwestern University presented a new, student-written musical based on Amisha Padnani and the Overlooked series, entitled For the Record .[ 36]
References
^ Padnani, Amisha (2018-03-08). "How an Obits Project on Overlooked Women Was Born" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-03 .
^ "Jessica Bennett, Our New Gender Editor, Answers Your Questions" . The New York Times . 2017-12-13. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-03 .
^ "The New York Times Is Writing Obituaries for the Historical Women They Ignored" . InStyle.com . Retrieved 2019-01-03 .
^ Stevens, Heidi (8 March 2018). "NYT runs obits for 'overlooked' women on International Women's Day" . Chicago Tribune . Retrieved 2019-01-03 .
^ " "We want to address these inequities of our time": NYT starts new series featuring overlooked obituaries" . www.cbsnews.com . 8 March 2018. Retrieved 2019-01-03 .
^ Andreeva, Nellie; Petski, Denise (2018-05-21). " 'Overlooked' Female Anthology Series Based On NY Times Obituaries Feature Set At Anonymous Content & Paramount TV" . Deadline . Retrieved 2019-01-17 .
^ Dickerson, Caitlin (2018-03-08). "Ida B. Wells, Who Took on Racism in the Deep South With Powerful Reporting on Lynchings" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-11 .
^ Qin, Amy (2018-03-08). "Qiu Jin, Beheaded by Imperial Forces, Was 'China's Joan of Arc' " . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-11 .
^ Padnani, Amisha (2018-03-08). "Mary Ewing Outerbridge, Who Helped Bring Tennis to the United States" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-17 .
^ Estrin, James (2018-03-08). "Diane Arbus Called Her Portraits 'A Secret About a Secret' " . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-17 .
^ Padnani, Amisha; Chambers, Veronica (2019-01-31). "For Black History Month, Remarkable Women and Men We Overlooked Since 1851" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-02-17 .
^ Padnani, Amisha (2019-01-31). "A Year Into the Overlooked Project, Widening the Lens" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-02-17 .
^ Shmerler, Cindy (10 November 2023). "Overlooked No More: Ángela Ruiz Robles, Inventor of an Early E-Reader" . The New York Times . (subscription required)
^ May, Rachel (April 22, 2023). "Elizabeth Wagner Reed: Who Resurrected Legacies of Women in Science" . New York Times . New York, New York. Archived from the original on April 24, 2023. Retrieved April 24, 2023 .
^ Mydans, Seth (21 March 2023). "Overlooked No More: Lilian Lindsay, Britain's First Female Dentist" . The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
^ Mydans, Seth (29 September 2022). "Overlooked No More: Maria Orosa, Inventor of Banana Ketchup" . The New York Times . (subscription required)
^ Edwards, Gavin (2 September 2022). "Overlooked No More: Vera Menchik, First Women's Chess Champion" . The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
^ Popkin, Gabriel (August 19, 2022). "Overlooked No More: Regina Jonas, Upon Whose Shoulders 'All Female Rabbis Stand' " . The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
^ Connelly, Eileen AJ (2020-07-20). "Overlooked No More: Brad Lomax, a Bridge Between Civil Rights Movements" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2020-10-23 .
^ Slotnik, Daniel E (11 December 2019). "Overlooked No More: Bessie Coleman, Pioneering African-American Aviatrix". New York Times .
^ Rosenberg, Karen (20 November 2019). "Overlooked No More: Pauline Boty, Rebellious Pop Artist". New York Times .
^ Weber, Bruce (2019-11-06). "Overlooked No More: Annie Londonderry, Who Traveled the World by Bicycle" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-11-14 .
^ Ives, Mike; Li, Katherine (2019-10-23). "Overlooked No More: Sanmao, 'Wandering Writer' Who Found Her Voice in the Desert" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-11-14 .
^ New York Times (September 6, 2019). "Overlooked No More: Alice Guy Blaché, the World's First Female Filmmaker". New York Times .
^ "Overlooked No More: Alan Turing, Condemned Code Breaker and Computer Visionary" . The New York Times . 2019-06-05. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-06-06 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Dorothy Bolden, Who Started a Movement for Domestic Workers" . The New York Times . 2019-02-20. Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Dudley Randall, Whose Broadside Press Gave a Voice to Black Poets" . The New York Times . 2019-02-13. Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Mabel Grammer, Whose Brown Baby Plan Found Homes for Hundreds" . The New York Times . 2019-02-06. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-02-09 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Forough Farrokhzad, Iranian Poet Who Broke Barriers of Sex and Society" . The New York Times . 2019-01-30. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-02-09 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Mabel Stark, Fearless Tiger Trainer" . The New York Times . 2019-01-23. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-27 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Isabelle Kelley, Who Developed a Food Stamp Program to Feed Millions" . The New York Times . 2019-01-16. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-16 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Laura de Force Gordon, Suffragist, Journalist and Lawyer" . The New York Times . 2019-01-09. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-10 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Karen Sparck Jones, Who Established the Basis for Search Engines" . The New York Times . 2019-01-02. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-16 .
^ "Overlooked No More: Charley Parkhurst, Gold Rush Legend With a Hidden Identity" . The New York Times . 2018-12-05. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-01-16 .
^ "HIGHER GROUND ANNOUNCES UPCOMING SLATE OF PROJECTS EXCLUSIVE TO NETFLIX" . Netflix Media Center . Retrieved 2019-05-01 .
^ "The 88th annual Waa-Mu Show 'For the Record' will feature the untold stories of history-making women" . news.northwestern.edu . Retrieved 17 July 2021 .
External links