Iowa Women's Hall of Fame
The Iowa Women's Hall of Fame was created to acknowledge the accomplishments of female role models associated with the U.S. state of Iowa, and is an endeavor of the Iowa Commission on the Status of Women (ICSW).
History[]
In 1972, the state of Iowa created the ICSW to oversee women's issues, with as its first chair. Since the Hall of Fame's beginnings in 1975, four annual nominees are inducted by the ICSW and the Governor of Iowa in a public ceremony. The event is held on Women's Equality Day, which commemorates the August 26, 1920 ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution that gave women the right to vote. The honorees are nominated by the public via online forms available on the ICSW website.[1] The ICSW also created the annual "Cristine Wilson Medal for Equality and Justice" in 1982. Wilson was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1989.[2]
The initial inductees were Iowa's first female Secretary of State Ola Babcock Miller, who created the Iowa State Patrol; president and founding member of Iowa Woman Suffrage Association, Amelia Bloomer; president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, and founder of the League of Women Voters, Carrie Chapman Catt; and Annie Turner Wittenmyer who founded the Women's Christian Temperance Union, formed an aid society to support Union Army soldiers during the Civil War, as well as helped to pass pension legislation for nurses in that same war. Catt was the first inductee.
In the ensuing years, the Hall of Fame ranks were joined by women from all walks of life. As of the 2017 inductee ceremonies, there have been 172 women inducted.[3] The list of inductees includes civil rights pioneers, global issues leaders, community volunteer workers, elected officials, artists, the medical profession and a large cornucopia of contributions by the state's women. Two First Ladies of the United States, Lou Henry Hoover and Mamie Eisenhower were added in 1987 and 1993 respectively. Environmental preservationist Gladys B. Black made the list in 1985. Mycologist Lois Hattery Tiffany was added in 1991 for her career of educating the public about mushrooms. The military is represented by Women's Army Corps veteran Rosa Cunningham in 1980 and by former United States Army Judge Advocate General officer in 2001. Vietnam War era anti-war activist Peg Mullen was inducted in 1997. Pulitzer Prize winner Susan Glaspell was a 1976 inductee. Hualing Nieh Engle, who in 1976 was co-nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, became a Hall of Fame inductee in 2008. Cattle breeder was added in 1981. Several women farmers are on the list, and added in 2001was attorney who had also been honored by Pope John Paul II for her legal assistance to the farm community.
Inductees[]
Name | Image | Birth–Death | Year | Area of achievement | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mark Cady | (1953–2019) | 2020 | Chief Justice, Iowa Supreme Court from 2011 to 2019, wrote the Varnum v. Brien opinion that legalized same-sex marriage in Iowa in 2009. | [4] | |
(d. 2019) | 2020 | WWII WAVES US Navy veteran, one of the founders of the Iowa Commission on the Status of Women | [4] | ||
2020 | Agriculture | [4] | |||
Helen Miller | 2020 | Former Iowa State Representative | [4] | ||
2020 | Meskwaki native American birth name "Bo na bi go". Artist and art conservator, educator, cultural historian, civic leader and political activist, humanitarian, community leader and mentor | [4] | |||
2019 | Attorney, first probate judge in the State of Iowa in 1978; former Special Counsel to the Iowa Department of Revenue | [5] | |||
Mona Kadel Martin | (b. 1934) | 2019 | Iowa House of Representatives | [6] | |
2019 | Founding member of both the Iowa Women Attorneys Association and the Iowa Women's Political Caucus; member of the Governor's Committee to remove sexism from the Iowa Code | [7] | |||
2019 | Teacher, coach, organizer | [8] | |||
2018 | Director of Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics at Iowa State University | [9] | |||
Ruth Harkin | (b. 1944) | 2018 | Harkin Institute for Public Policy and Citizen Engagement at Drake University | [10] | |
2018 | University of Iowa’s College of Medicine. Won a landmark harassment legal case against the University of Iowa. Jean Y. Jew Human Rights Award named in her honor. | [11] | |||
Peggy Whitson | (b. 1960) | 2018 | Astronaut | [12] | |
(1869–1932) | 2017 | Social worker, namesake of the Jane Boyd Organization | [13] | ||
Joni Ernst | (b. 1970) | 2017 | United States Senator from Iowa | [14] | |
(b. 1949) | 2017 | Des Moines City Council | [15] | ||
Kim Reynolds | (b. 1959) | 2017 | Governor of Iowa | [16] | |
2016 | Nurse | [17] | |||
2016 | Polk County Board of Supervisors | [18] | |||
2016 | Professor of Global Public Health and Chair of the Division of Health Promotion and Education at the University of Northern Iowa and Director of the Iowa Center on Health Disparities | [19] | |||
2016 | Founder of Cedar Rapids Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) | [20] | |||
2015 | First female president of the West Des Moines Chamber of Commerce, the West Des Moines Development Corp. and Rotary Club of Des Moines Foundation. The first female executive vice president at West Bank, director of West Bank since 1975. | [21] | |||
Michelle D. Johnson | 2015 | Lt. General and superintendent of the United States Department of Defense Service Academy, the first woman to serve in that position | [22] | ||
Linda K. Neuman | 2015 | Justice of the Iowa Supreme Court | [23] | ||
Marsha Ternus | 2015 | Justice of the Iowa Supreme Court | [24] | ||
2014 | Owner of the human resources business Hardman Consulting | [25] | |||
2014 | Former vice president and marketing chief at Principal Financial Group | [26] | |||
Maggie Tinsman | (b. 1936) | 2014 | Former Iowa State Senator | [27] | |
Christie Vilsack | (b. 1950) | 2014 | Literacy advocate and politician | [28] | |
(b. 1948) | 2013 | First woman to be the executive dean at Des Moines Area Community College | [29] | ||
Patty Judge | (b. 1943) | 2013 | 46th Lieutenant Governor of Iowa and Secretary of Agriculture for Iowa | [30] | |
(1952–2012) | 2013 | Journalism professor at Iowa State University; first female corporate secretary and general counsel for the Des Moines Register and Tribune | [31] | ||
(b. 1950) | 2013 | First African American woman to be certified by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology in gynecologic oncology | [32] | ||
2012 | Educator and co-founder of the Iowa Women's Studies Association | [33] | |||
(b. 1956) | 2012 | Director of the Chrysalis Foundation | [34] | ||
(b. 1955) | 2011 | Banking industry, mentor to women in business | [35] | ||
2011 | Community activist | [36] | |||
(b. 1931) | 2011 | Civic leader | [37] | ||
Mildred Hope Fisher Wood | (1920–2014) | 2011 | Physician, learning disabilities | [38] | |
Julia Addington | (1829–1875) | 2010 | Elected 1869 Superintendent of Schools in Mitchell County, first woman in Iowa elected to office | [39] | |
Mary Lundby | (1948–2009) | 2010 | Iowa State Senator | [40] | |
(1932–2015) | 2010 | African American civil rights worker, community civic activist | [41] | ||
(b. 1949) | 2010 | Business woman, fund raiser and civic leader, helped launch Women's Power Lunch and Women United | [42] | ||
Linda K. Kerber | (b. 1940) | 2009 | Historian | [43] | |
Mary E. Kramer | (b. 1940) | 2009 | Iowa State Senator | [44] | |
(1921–1996) | 2009 | Osteopath, rural doctor and county Medical Examiner | [45] | ||
2009 | Community activist | [46] | |||
(b. 1943) | 2008 | Lawyer, civic leader; founding member of the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women in Politics | [47] | ||
(1924–2012) | 2008 | Worked to help women run for political office; helped bring global peacemakers to Iowa; Boatwright Political Action Award established in her name by the Iowa Association of Social Workers | [48] | ||
Hualing Nieh Engle | (b. 1925) | 2008 | Novelist, poet, nominated (with her husband)for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976 | [49] | |
(1932–2007) | 2008 | Executive Director of Visiting Nurses in Des Moines | [50] | ||
Ruth Ann Gaines | (b. 1947) | 2007 | Educator, created Sisters for Success mentoring program. Inductee of National Teachers Hall of Fame and | [51] | |
Emma J. Harvat | (1870–1949) | 2007 | Pioneer in government service; Emma J. Harvat and Mary E. Stach House is on the NRHP in Johnson County | [52] | |
Ada Hayden | (1884–1950) | 2007 | Botanist who added 10,000 specimens to the state herbarium | [53] | |
(b. 1932) | 2007 | Community leader, publisher, business woman | [54] | ||
Jeanette Eyerly | (1908–2008) | 2006 | Young adult fiction writer | [55] | |
Christine Grant | (b. 1936) | 2006 | University of Iowa Athletics Hall of Fame, Athlete and athletic director, University of Iowa | [56] | |
2006 | Human rights | [57] | |||
(1901–1979) | 2006 | Veterinary medicine | [58] | ||
(b. 1932) | 2005 | Politician, civic leader | [59] | ||
(b. 1928) | 2005 | Advocate for low-income needy | [60] | ||
Susan Schechter | (1946–2004) | 2005 | Social worker | [61] | |
Jo Ann McIntose Zimmerman | (1936–2019) | 2005 | 43rd Lieutenant Governor of Iowa | [62] | |
Joy Cole Corning | (1932–2017) | 2004 | 44th Lieutenant Governor of Iowa | [63] | |
(b. 1993) | 2004 | Co-founder Iowa State University's International Women in Science and Engineering, and ISU Program for Women in Science and Engineering | [64] | ||
(1922–2002) | 2004 | Social activist, patron of the arts | [65] | ||
Sally J. Pederson | (b. 1951) | 2004 | 45th Lieutenant Governor of Iowa | [66] | |
(b. 1948) | 2003 | Established Iowa CareGivers Association | [67] | ||
(1880–1968) | 2003 | Educator and author of Jim Bowie's Lost Mine | [68] | ||
Jean Hall Lloyd-Jones | (b. 1929) | 2003 | Iowa Senate, Iowa House of Representatives | [69] | |
(b. 1937) | 2003 | Volunteerism | [70] | ||
Bonnie Campbell | (b. 1948) | 2002 | 32nd Iowa Attorney General | [71] | |
(1942–1998) | 2002 | Executive director Iowa Commission on Status of Women | [72] | ||
(1916–2012) | 2002 | Musical composer | [73] | ||
(b. 1936) | 2002 | Journalist | [74] | ||
(1934–2000) | 2001 | Psychologist, academician | [75] | ||
(1908–2000) | 2001 | First female in the United States Army to serve as an officer with the Judge Advocate General, and the only female in that position deployed overseas in World War II | [76] | ||
(1912–2005) | 2001 | Honored by Pope John Paul II for legal aid to farmers; Democratic Party activist; novelist | [77] | ||
Ann Dearing Holtgren Pellegreno | (b. 1937) | 2001 | Musician | [78] | |
(1920–2005) | 2000 | Public service, Beje Clark Residential Center bears her name | [79] | ||
(b. 1949) | 2000 | Organic farmer; founder of Women, Food and Agriculture Network, represented farmers at the United Nations, serves on many coalitions representing rural women | [80] | ||
Adeline Morrison Swain | (1820–1899) | 2000 | Women's rights | [81] | |
(1919–2011) | 2000 | Volunteerism | [82] | ||
(1950–2004) | 1999 | Professor of pharmacy, advocate of women in health careers and pharmacy | [83] | ||
(b. 1936) | 1999 | Latino rights advocate | [84] | ||
(1923–2010) | 1999 | Neighborhood cooperation, working with the blind | [85] | ||
Elaine Eisfelder Szymoniak | (1920–2009) | 1999 | Iowa State Senator | [86] | |
Bess Streeter Aldrich | (1881–1954) | 1998 | Author | [87] | |
1998 | Educator, community and church leader | [88] | |||
(b.1938) | 1998 | Political worker and organizer | [89] | ||
(1913–2003) | 1998 | Educator, volunteer | [90] | ||
Charlotte Hughes Bruner | (1917–1999) | 1997 | Pioneer for African women writers | [91] | |
Margaret "Peg" Mullen | (1917–2009) | 1997 | Vietnam War era anti-war activist | [92] | |
Annie Nowlin Savery | (1831–1891) | 1997 | Women's suffrage | [93] | |
(1895–1998) | 1997 | African American civic organizer | [94] | ||
Meridel Le Sueur | (1900–1996) | 1996 | Writer | [95] | |
Joan Liffring-Zug Bourret | (b. 1929) | 1996 | Photo journalist who documented 1950s civil rights movement in Cedar Rapids | [96] | |
(1874–1967) | 1996 | Educator, voting rights for women, civic leader | [97] | ||
(1902–1998) | 1996 | Business leader, YWCA executive | [98] | ||
Sue M. Wilson Brown | (1877–1941) | 1995 | Civil rights advocate | [99] | |
(b. 1929) | 1995 | Human rights advocate | [100] | ||
(1910–2002) | 1995 | Economist, journalist | [101] | ||
(1852–1918) | 1995 | Women's suffrage | [102] | ||
Mildred Wirt Benson | (1905–2002) | 1994 | Children's author who helped develop Nancy Drew books; pilot and journalist | [103] | |
(b. 1932) | 1994 | Advocate for disadvantaged, advocate for economic development | [104] | ||
Gertrude Durden Rush | (1880–1962) | 1994 | First African American female lawyer in Iowa | [105] | |
Evelyne Jobe Villines | (1930–2017) | 1994 | Political activist | [106] | |
(1919–2012) | 1993 | Global community worker, included involvement with the Peace Corps and UNESCO | [107] | ||
Mamie Doud Eisenhower | (1896–1979) | 1993 | First Lady of the United States | [108] | |
Phebe W. Sudlow | (1831–1922) | 1993 | Educator | [109] | |
Jean Adeline Morgan Wanatee | (1910–1996) | 1993 | First woman elected to the Meskwaki tribal council | [110] | |
(1929–1997) | 1992 | African American pioneer of integration | [111] | ||
(1919–1997) | 1992 | Advocate for the mentally challenged | [112] | ||
(1907–1993) | 1992 | Broadcaster | [113] | ||
Mary Beaumont Welch | (1841–1923) | 1992 | Women's rights, home economics | [114] | |
(1878–1978) | 1991 | Educator spent her career teaching in India as the request of the Methodist Episcopal Church | [115] | ||
(1832–1903) | 1991 | helped develop the Davenport Academy of Sciences | [116] | ||
(b. 1926) | 1991 | Volunteerism | [117] | ||
Lois Hattery Tiffany | 1991 | Mycologist, educating the public on mushrooms | [118] | ||
Mary Jane Coggeshall | (1836–1937) | 1990 | Carrie Chapman Catt nicknamed Coggeshall "The Mother of Woman's Suffrage in Iowa" | [119] | |
(1926–2006) | 1990 | Civil rights and education reform | [120] | ||
1990 | Advocate for leadership skills, human rights, civil rights | [121] | |||
Glenda Gates Riley | 1990 | Historian, women's advocate | [122] | ||
Nancy Maria Hill | (1833–1919) | 1989 | Civil War nurse who became a doctor; advocated for pregnant women and children | [123] | |
(1924–2014) | 1989 | Community activist | [124] | ||
1989 | Scientist, encouraging women to enter science professions | [125] | |||
(1945–1991) | 1989 | Women's rights | [126] | ||
(1892–1955) | 1988 | African American advocate for children and youth | [127] | ||
1988 | Advocate of care and education for pregnant teenagers | [128] | |||
1988 | Volunteerism; civic leader | [129] | |||
1988 | Health care | [130] | |||
1987 | Educator, member of various public broadcasting boards and committees | [131] | |||
Gwendolyn Wilson Fowler | (1907–1997) | 1987 | First licensed African American woman pharmacist in Iowa | [132] | |
Lou Henry Hoover | (1874–1944) | 1987 | First Lady of the United States | [133] | |
Nellie Verne Walker | (1874–1973) | 1987 | Sculptor | [134] | |
(1909–1999) | 1986 | African American musician and civic leader | [135] | ||
Willie Stevenson Glanton | 1986 | First African American woman elected to the Iowa State Legislature | [136] | ||
(1879–1959) | 1986 | Educator | [137] | ||
(1909–2006) | 1986 | Global affairs | [138] | ||
Gladys B. Black | (1909–1998) | 1985 | Ornithologist and environmental preservationist | [139] | |
Edna M. Griffin | (1909–2000) | 1985 | 1948 State of Iowa v. Katz, civil rights landmark ruling | [140] | |
Anna B. Lawther | (1872–1957) | 1985 | Advocate for voting rights, women's education | [141] | |
(1912–2014) | 1985 | Farmer, community leadership, National Safety Council, Associated Country Women of the World Conference, Living History Farms | [142] | ||
Fannie R. Buchanan | (1875–1957) | 1984 | Music promoter and organizer | [143] | |
Mary Frances Clarke | (1803–1887) | 1984 | Founder of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary | [144] | |
(1932–2011) | 1984 | Volunteerism | [145] | ||
(1901–1987) | 1984 | Volunteerism | [146] | ||
Virginia Bedell | (1895–1975) | 1983 | First United States female serving on a regularly appointed parole board | [147] | |
1983 | Advocate early childhood education | [148] | |||
(1926–2001) | 1983 | Advocate for women's equality | [149] | ||
(1910–1993) | 1983 | Public service | [150] | ||
(b. 1928) | 1982 | State chair Iowa Women's Political Caucus, served on numerous boards and commissions | [151] | ||
(1921–2013) | 1982 | Author, university professor, civic leader | [152] | ||
(1889–1977) | 1982 | Scholar, author, educator | [153] | ||
(1917–2015) | 1982 | Physician | [154] | ||
Mary Newbury Adams | (1837–1901) | 1981 | Founded Northern Iowa Suffrage Association, founded Iowa Federation of Women's Clubs | [155] | |
Roxanne Barton Conlin | (b. 1944) | 1981 | U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Iowa, Assistant Attorney General of Iowa | [156] | |
(1928–2014) | 1981 | Cattle breeder, state director Iowa Beef Improvement Assn, president Iowa Simmental Cattle Assn, served on many organizations, including League of Women Voters, Planned Parenthood of Iowa, and Iowa Children's and Family Services | [157] | ||
Louise Rosenfield Noun | (1908–2002) | 1981 | Community activist, patron of the arts | [158] | |
Rosa Cunningham | 1980 | Served in the Women's Army Corps in World War II, women's rights advocate | [159] | ||
(b. 1928) | 1980 | Educator, consultant | [160] | ||
Arabella Mansfield | (1846–1911) | 1980 | First female lawyer in the United States | [161] | |
(b. 1914) | 1980 | Social worker | [162] | ||
Minnette Doderer | (1923–2005) | 1979 | Iowa House of Representatives, advocate for women's rights | [163] | |
(1886–1985) | 1979 | Physical education | [164] | ||
Mary Jane Neville Odell | (1923–2010) | 1979 | Broadcaster | [165] | |
(1906–1990) | 1979 | USDAHome economics extension agent | [166] | ||
(1918–2002) | 1978 | Civic leader, public relations officer for Veterans Administration, part of Congressional fact finding team to Vietnam during war | [167] | ||
Dorothy Houghton | (1890–1972) | 1978 | Director of the Office of Refugees, Migratory and Voluntary Assistance during the Eisenhower Administration | [168] | |
Carolyn Pendray | (1881–1958) | 1978 | Iowa House of Representatives; first female in the state legislature | [169] | |
Ruth Suckow | (1892–1960) | 1978 | Author | [170] | |
(1876–1966) | 1977 | leadership, social worker and advocate for Hull House | [171] | ||
Jessie Field Shambaugh | (1881–1971) | 1977 | Known as "The mother of 4-H clubs" | [172] | |
Ida B. Wise | (1871–1952) | 1977 | Suffragette, National president Women's Christian Temperance Union, served on White House Conference on Child Health and Protection during Herbert Hoover administration. | [173] | |
Mary Louise Smith | (1914–1977) | 1977 | Republican Party worker | [174] | |
Susan Glaspell | (1876–1948) | 1976 | 1931 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Alison's House | [175] | |
Cora Bussey Hillis | (1858–1924) | 1976 | Helped organize the Iowa Child Welfare Association | [176] | |
Agnes Samuelson | (1897–1963) | 1976 | Educator | [177] | |
Ruth Buxton Sayre | (1896–1980) | 1976 | Farm spokeswoman, co-founder Association Country Women of the World, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Dwight D. Eisenhower both appointed her to Presidential positions. | [178] | |
Amelia Jenks Bloomer | (1818–1894) | 1975 | President and founding member of | [179] | |
Carrie Chapman Catt | (1859–1947) | 1975 | President of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, founder of the League of Women Voters | [180] | |
Ola Babcock Miller | (1872–1937) | 1975 | First female Iowa Secretary of State; instituted the Iowa State Patrol; Ola Babcock Miller Building named in her honor | [181] | |
Annie Wittenmyer | (1827–1900) | 1975 | Established the Keokuk Ladies' Soldiers' Aid Society to assist Union Army soldiers during the Civil War. Assisted with passage of an 1892 bill to give pensions to Civil War nurses. Founder and President of the Women's Christian Temperance Union. | [182] |
References[]
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External links[]
- Women's halls of fame
- Lists of American women
- Women in Iowa
- Halls of fame in Iowa