Discover the Women of the Hall
These are the Inductees of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. Select any of the women to discover their stories and learn how they have influenced other women and this country.
Elouise Cobell
Business
1945
Montana
2024

Elouise Cobell
Known as “Yellow Bird Woman,” Elouise Cobell was an entrepreneur, banker, advocate, and member of the Blackfeet Nation who fought tirelessly for government accountability and for Native Americans to have control over their own financial future.
Kimberlé Crenshaw
Education, Humanities
1959
Ohio
2024

Kimberlé Crenshaw
Professor Kimberlé Crenshaw is the co-founder and ExecutiveDirector of the African American Policy Forum, a gender and racial justice legal think tank, and the founder and Executive Director of the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies at Columbia Law School. She is a trailblazing scholar, advocate, and professor whose ideas have reshaped the landscape of critical race theory and Black feminist legal theory.
Peggy McIntosh
Education, Humanities
1934
New York
2024

Peggy McIntosh
Peggy McIntosh is renowned as an educational innovator, feminist activist, author, and public speaker. McIntosh derived her understanding of white privilege from observing parallels with male privilege.
Judith Plaskow
Education, Humanities
1947
New York
2024

Judith Plaskow
In the realm of feminist theology, one of the names that stands out as a pioneering force is Dr. Judith Plaskow. An author and activist, Paskow is a visionary thinker whose intellectual contributions have shaped discourse and enriched our understanding of spirituality, gender, and equality.
Loretta Ross
Education, Humanities
1953
Texas
2024

Loretta Ross
Loretta J. Ross is a Black academic, feminist, and activist for reproductive justice, especially among women of color. Driven by her personal experiences as a survivor of rape and nonconsensual sterilization, Ross has dedicated her extensive career in academia and activism to reframing reproductive rights within a broader context of human rights.
Allucquére Rosanne Stone
Arts, Education, Humanities
1936
New Jersey
2024

Allucquére Rosanne Stone
Allucquére Rosanne Stone, also known as Sandy Stone, is an academic, media theorist, artist, audio engineer, and computer programmer. A founder of the academic discipline of transgender studies, Stone’s trailblazing work created space for trans scholars to unfold the vast spectrum of gender.
Anna Wessels Williams
Science
1863
New Jersey
2024

Anna Wessels Williams
Dr. Anna Wessels Williams was a pioneer in the field of immunology. She earned her medical degree from the Women’s Medical College in New York before joining the nation’s first municipal diagnostic laboratory at the New York City Department of Health.
Serena Williams
Athletics, Business
1981
Michigan
2024

Serena Williams
Serena Williams is a highly regarded tennis champion, entrepreneur, investor, fashion designer, and executive producer. Considered among the greatest tennis players of all time, she was ranked world No. 1 in singles by the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) for 319 weeks, including a joint-record 186 consecutive weeks, and finished as the year-end No. 1 five times.
Patricia Bath
Science
1942
New York
2024

Patricia Bath
Patricia Era Bath was an American ophthalmologist, inventor, humanitarian, and academic. She was an early pioneer of laser cataract surgery and was the first Black woman physician to receive a medical patent, which she received in 1986, for the Laserphaco Probe and technique, which performed all steps of cataract removal.
Ruby Bridges
Humanities
1954
Mississippi
2024

Ruby Bridges
Civil Rights icon, activist, author, and speaker, Ruby Bridges stepped into history books in 1960 when at six years old she single-handedly broke down barriers by desegregating the all-white William Frantz Elementary school in New Orleans.
Judy Chicago
Arts
1939
Illinois
2021

Judy Chicago
Rebecca Halstead
Government
1959
New York
2021

Rebecca Halstead
Mia Hamm
Athletics
1972
Alabama
2021

Mia Hamm
Joy Harjo
Arts
1951
Oklahoma
2021

Emily Howland
Humanities
1827
New York
2021

Emily Howland
Katherine Johnson
Science
1918
West Virginia
2021

Katherine Johnson
Indra Nooyi
Business
1955
India
2021

Indra Nooyi
Michelle Obama
Arts, Humanities
1964
Illinois
2021

Michelle Obama
Octavia E. Butler
Arts
1947
California
2021

Octavia E. Butler
Mary Church Terrell
Government
1863
2020

Mary Church Terrell
One of the most prominent activists of her era with a career that spanned well into the civil rights movements of the1950’s. Terrell believed in racial uplift and equal opportunity, actively campaigning for women’s and Black women’s suffrage.
Henrietta Lacks
Science
1920
2020

Henrietta Lacks
Lacks is best recognized for her immortal HeLa cells, which have been used in research that led to the development of the Polio vaccine, chemotherapy, and contributed to Parkinson’s research.
Toni Morrison
Arts, Humanities
1931
2020

Toni Morrison
An author and book editor who fostered a new generation of Black writers. Morrison has been unapologetic about her focus on Black people’s experiences, and the power with which she has brought this focus.
Barbara Hillary
Athletics
1931
2020

Barbara Hillary
The first Black woman to have ever traveled to both the North and South Pole- both after the age of 75. Inspired by her expeditions, Hillary took interest in the effects of climate change on the polar caps and became a fierce advocate for combating climate change.
Barbara Rose Johns Powell
Education, Government
1935
2020

Barbara Rose Johns Powell
A young, civil rights leader, and pioneer. At the age of 16, Powell led a student strike, for equal education, at R.R. Moton High School in Farmville, Virginia.
