Virginia Women in History Virginia Women in History was an annual program sponsored by the Library of Virginia that honored Virginia women, living and dead, for their contributions to their community, region, state, and nation.[ 1] The program began in 2000 under the aegis of the Virginia Foundation for Women and Delta Kappa Gamma Society International; from 2006 to 2020 it was administered by the Library of Virginia. In 2021, it was replaced by the Strong Men and Women in Virginia History program.
2000 honorees
Ella Graham Agnew (1871–1958), Blacksburg , educator and social worker
Mary Julia Baldwin (1829–1897), Staunton , educator
Margaret Brent (c. 1601–c. 1671), Stafford County , planter
Willa Cather (1873–1947), Frederick County , writer
Jennie Dean (1848–1913), Manassas , educator
Sarah Lee Fain (1888–1962), Norfolk , legislator
Ellen Glasgow (1873–1945), Richmond , author
Dolley Madison (1768–1849), Orange County , First Lady
Pocahontas (c. 1596–1617), Jamestown
Clementina Rind (c. 1740–1774), Williamsburg , printer
Lila Meade Valentine (1865–1921), Richmond, reformer and suffragist
Maggie Lena Walker (1864–1934), Richmond, entrepreneur and civil rights leader
2001 honorees
Rosa Dixon Bowser (1855–1931), Richmond, educator and civic leader
Elizabeth Pfohl Campbell (1902–2004), Arlington , public television pioneer
Thomasina Jordan (1940–1999), Alexandria , American Indian advocate
Elizabeth Hobbs Keckly (1818–1907), Dinwiddie County , seamstress and author
Theresa Pollak (1899–2002), Richmond, artist and educator
Sally Louisa Tompkins (1833–1916), Richmond, hospital administrator
Elizabeth Van Lew (1818–1900), Richmond, spy
Edith Bolling Galt Wilson (1872–1961), Wytheville , First Lady
2002 honorees
Rebecca Adamson (born 1950), Fredericksburg , Native American advocate and business developer
Janie Porter Barrett (1865–1948), Hanover County , educator
Patsy Cline (1932–1963), Winchester , singer
Hannah Lee Corbin (1728–1782), Westmoreland County , planter
Christine Mann Darden (born 1942), Hampton , engineer
Lillian Ward McDaniel (1902–1981), Richmond, educator and civic leader[ 2]
Mary-Cooke Branch Munford (1865–1938), Richmond, social reformer and community activist
Jessie Manfield Rattley (1929–2001), Newport News , mayor and social activist[ 3]
2003 honorees
Nancy Langhorne Astor (1879–1964), Albemarle County , member of Parliament
Pearl Bailey (1918–1990), Newport News, singer and actor
Anna Whitehead Bodeker (1826–1904), Richmond, woman suffrage advocate
Mary Ann Elliott (born 1943), Fairfax County , entrepreneur[ 4]
Annabelle Ravenscroft Gibson Jenkins (1827–1901), Richmond, philanthropist[ 5]
Frances Benjamin Johnston (1864–1952), Fredericksburg, photographer
Anne Dobie Peebles (1922–2012), Sussex County , civic leader[ 6]
Anne B. Spencer (1882–1975), Lynchburg , poet
2004 honorees
Grace Arents (1848–1926), Richmond, philanthropist
Cockacoeske (fl. 1656–1686), Middle Peninsula , Pamunkey chief
Katie Couric (born 1957), Arlington County, television journalist
Ann Makemie Holden (1702–1788), Accomack County , planter
Mary Draper Ingles (1732–1815), New River Valley , frontierswoman
Sarah Garland Boyd Jones (1866–1905), Richmond, physician
Elizabeth "Annie" Snyder (1921–2002), Manassas, preservationist[ 7]
Martha Dandridge Custis Washington (1731–1802), Fairfax County, First Lady
2005 honorees
Clara Leach Adams-Ender (born 1939), Prince William County , chief of the United States Army Nurse Corps
Caitlyn Day (born 1986), Craig County , community activist[ 8]
Bessie Blount Griffin (1914–2009), Princess Anne County , inventor and forensic scientist
Nora Houston (1883–1942), Richmond, artist and social reformer
Barbara Johns (1935–1991), Prince Edward County , Civil Rights activist
Mary Johnston (1870–1936), Bath County , writer and suffragist
Lee Marshall Smith (born 1944), Roanoke , writer[ 9]
Mary Belvin Wade (1951–2003), Richmond, civic leader[ 10]
2006 honorees
Katherine Harwood Waller Barrett (1865–1948), Henrico County , physician and educator
Sister Marie Majella Berg (1916–2004), Arlington County, president of Marymount University [ 11]
John-Geline MacDonald Bowman (1890–1946), Richmond, business executive[ 12]
Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906–1992), Arlington County, computer scientist and rear admiral
Mary Tyler Freeman Cheek McClenahan (1917–2005), Richmond, civic leader[ 13]
Benita Fitzgerald Mosley (born 1961), Haymarket , media executive and Olympic gold medalist[ 14]
G. Anne Nelson Richardson (born 1956), King and Queen County , Rappahannock chief
Mary Virginia Hawes Terhune (1830–1922), Amelia County , writer
2007 honorees
Mary Willing Byrd (1740–1814), Charles City County , planter
Maybelle Addington Carter (1909–1978), Scott County , singer
Laura Lu Scherer Copenhaver (1868–1940), Smyth County , founder of Rosemont Industries and Lutheran lay leader
Mary Alice Franklin Hatwood Futrell (born 1940), Lynchburg , educator[ 15]
Mary Jeffery Galt (1844–1922), Norfolk , preservationist[ 16]
Sheila Crump Johnson (born 1949), Loudoun County , founder of Black Entertainment Television (BET) and sports franchise owner
Opossunoquonuske (fl. 1607–1610), Chesterfield County , Appamattuck leader
Camilla Williams (1919–2012), Danville , opera singer
2008 honorees
Frances Culpeper Berkeley (1634–c. 1695), James City County , leader of the Green Spring faction
Lucy Goode Brooks (1818–1900), Richmond , founder of the Friends' Asylum for Colored Orphans
Providencia Velazquez Gonzalez (1917–2013), Dale City , community activist[ 17]
Elizabeth Bermingham Lacy (born 1945), Richmond , judge of the Supreme Court of Virginia
Sharyn McCrumb (born 1948), Roanoke County , writer
Patricia Buckley Moss (1933–2024), Waynesboro , artist and philanthropist
Isabel Wood Rogers (1924–2007), Richmond , moderator, General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA)[ 18]
Edith Turner (Wané Roonseraw) (c. 1754–1838), Southampton County , chief of the Nottoway (Cheroenhaka)
2009 honorees
Pauline Adams (1874–1957), Norfolk , suffragist
Caroline Bradby Cook (c. 1839–1913), King William County , Pamunkey leader and Unionist[ 19]
Claudia Emerson (1957–2014), Fredericksburg , poet
Drew Gilpin Faust (born 1947), Clarke County , historian and president of Harvard University
Joann Hess Grayson (born 1948), Harrisonburg , educator and advocate for abused children[ 20]
Mary Randolph (1762–1828), Chesterfield County and Richmond , writer
Virginia Estelle Randolph (1874–1958), Henrico County , educator
Mary Sue Terry (born 1947), Patrick County , attorney general
2010 honorees
Mollie Holmes Adams (1881–1973), King William County, Upper Mattaponi leader
Ethel Bailey Furman (1893–1976), Richmond, architect
Edythe C. Harrison (born 1934), Norfolk, civic leader
Janis Martin (1940–2007), Danville, singer and composer
Kate Mason Rowland (1840–1916), Richmond, writer
Jean Miller Skipwith (1748–1826), Mecklenburg County, book collector
Queena Stovall (1888–1980), Lynchburg and Amherst County, artist
Marian A. Van Landingham (born 1937), Alexandria, civic leader
2011 honorees
Lucy Addison (1861–1937), Roanoke, educator
Eleanor Bontecou (1891–1976), Arlington County, attorney
Emily White Fleming (1855–1941), Fredericksburg, preservationist[ 21]
Pearl Fu (born 1941), Roanoke, civic leader[ 22]
Lillian Lincoln Lambert (born 1940), Mechanicsville, businesswoman and author
Bessie Niemeyer Marshall (1884–1960), Petersburg, botanical illustrator
Felicia Warburg Rogan (born 1927), Albemarle County, vintner[ 23]
Elizabeth Henry Campbell Russell (1749–1825), Saltville, Methodist lay leader
2012 honorees
Susie May Ames (1888–1969), Accomack County, historian
Monica Beltran (born 1985), Woodbridge, army Bronze Star Medal recipient[ 24] [ 25] [ 26] [ 27] [ 28]
Christiana Burdett Campbell (c. 1723–1792), Williamsburg, innkeeper
Betty Sams Christian (1922–2006), Richmond, business executive and philanthropist[ 29]
Elizabeth Peet McIntosh (1915–2015), Woodbridge, intelligence agent
Orleana Hawks Puckett (c. 1844–1939), Patrick and Carroll Counties, midwife
Judith Shatin (born 1949), Charlottesville, composer
Alice Jackson Stuart (1913–2001), Richmond, principal in a 1935 civil rights turning point
2013 honorees
Mary C. Alexander (1893–1955), Lynchburg, aviator
Louise A. Reeves Archer (1893–1948), Vienna, educator
Elizabeth Ambler Brent Carrington (1765–1842), Richmond, civic leader
Ann Compton (born 1947), Roanoke, news correspondent
JoAnn Falleta (born 1954), Norfolk, musician
Cleo Powell (born 1957), Brunswick County, judge
Inez Pruitt (born 1962), Tangier Island , physician assistant
Eva Mae Fleming Scott (1926–2019), Amelia County, legislator, recipient of the VABPW Foundation Business Leadership Award
2014 honorees
Mary Berkeley Minor Blackford (1802–1896), Fredericksburg, antislavery activist
Naomi Silverman Cohn (1888–1982), Richmond, civic activist
Elizabeth Ashburn Duke (born 1952), Virginia Beach, banker, recipient of the VABPW Foundation Business Leadership Award
Rachel Findlay (c. 1750–d. after August 17, 1820), Wythe County, principal in a freedom suit[ 30]
Christine Herter Kendall (1890–1981), Bath County, artist and patron of the arts
Mildred Delores Jeter Loving (1939–2008), Caroline County, principal in a 1967 civil rights turning point
Deborah A. "Debbie" Ryan (born 1952), Albemarle County, basketball coach and cancer treatment advocate
Stoner Winslett (born 1958), Richmond, artistic director and choreographer
2015 honorees
Nancy Melvina Caldwell (1868–1956), Carroll County, legislator
Nikki Giovanni (born 1943), Blacksburg, poet
Ruth Coles Harris (born 1928), Richmond, business professor[ 31]
Dorothy Shoemaker McDiarmid (1906–1994), Fairfax County, legislator
Rebekah Dulaney Peterkin (1849–1891), Richmond, philanthropist
Vivian W. Pinn (born 1941), Lynchburg, pathologist and women's health advocate
Elizabeth Bray Allen , also known as Elizabeth Bray Allen Smith Stith (c. 1692–1774), Isle of Wight County, planter and philanthropist
Karenne Wood (1960–2019), Fluvanna County, Virginia Indian scholar and advocate
2016 honorees
Flora D. Crittenden (1924–2021), Newport News, educator and legislator
Mary Elizabeth Nottingham Day (1907–1956), Staunton, artist
Sarah A. Gray (c. 1847–1893), Alexandria, educator
Edwilda Gustava Allen Isaac (1937–2022), Farmville, civil rights pioneer[ 32]
Katherine Coleman Goble Johnson (1918–2020), Hampton, mathematician
Ana Ines Barragan King (born 1957), Richmond, founder and Artistic Director of the Latin Ballet of Virginia
Betty Masters (1929–2015), Salem, photojournalist[ 33]
Meyera Oberndorf (1941–2015), Virginia Beach, mayor
2017 honorees
Corazon Sandoval Foley (born 1950), Fairfax County, community activist[ 34]
Nora Houston (1883–1942), Richmond, artist and social reformer
Cynthia Eppes Hudson (born 1959), Nottoway County, Chief Deputy Attorney General of Virginia
Mary Virginia Jones (born 1940), Prince William County, mechanical engineer[ 35]
Louise Harrison McCraw (1893–1975), Buckingham, author and executive secretary of the Braille Circulating Library
Doris Crouse-Mays (born 1958), Wythe County, labor leader
Undine Smith Moore (1904–1989), Ettrick, educator and composer
Martha Rollins (born 1943), Richmond, community activist and philanthropist; recipient of the VABPW Foundation Business Leadership Award[ 36]
2018 honorees
Gaye Todd Adegbalola (born 1944), blues singer and guitarist, teacher, lecturer, activist, and photographer
Rita Dove (born 1952), poet and essayist
Isabella Gibbons (c. 1836–1890), teacher and minister
Marii Kyogoku Hasegawa (1918–2012), peace activist
Kay Coles James (born 1949), president of The Heritage Foundation
Barbara Kingsolver (born 1955), novelist
Mary Aydelotte Rice Marshall (1921–1992), Virginia House of Delegates
Temperance Flowerdew Yeardley (1590–1628), settler of the Jamestown Colony
2019 honorees
Sharifa Alkhateeb (1946–2004) Muslim writer and teacher
Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief) (fl. 1706–1712)
Claudia Lane Dodson (1941–2007), women's sports advocate[ 37]
India Hamilton (c. 1879–1950), educator[ 38]
Georgeanna Seegar Jones (1912–2005), American physician who with her husband, Howard W. Jones , pioneered in vitro fertilization in the United States
Ona Maria Judge (c. 1773–1848), Fugitive slave of US President George Washington, who successfully escaped Mount Vernon. The Washington family never pursued her, but never freed her.
Lucy Randolph Mason (1882–1959), civil rights activist, labor activist and suffragette
Kate Peters Sturgill (1907–1975), musician and folk song collector
2020 honorees
Pauline Adams (1874–1957), suffragist
Fannie Bayly King (1864–1951), social reformer and suffragist[ 39]
Elizabeth Dabney Langhorne Lewis (1851–1946), suffragist
Sophie G. Meredith (1851–1928), suffragist[ 40]
Josephine Mathes Norcom (1873–1927), community activist and suffragist[ 41]
Mary Elizabeth Pidgeon (1890–1979), suffragist and labor economist
Ora Brown Stokes (1882–1957), educator, probation officer, temperance worker, and clubwoman
Lila Meade Valentine (1865–1921), reformer and suffragist
Maggie Lena Mitchell Walker (1864–1934), entrepreneur and civil rights leader
References
External links
2000–2009
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
2010–2019
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
United States and International Women's Halls of Fame
US National States US Territories
American Samoa
Guam
Northern Mariana Islands
Puerto Rico
Virgin Islands
County-Region City-Town Misc United States International