Black History Pioneers
Women Who Changed the World
Civil Rights and Activism
Black Excellence in Arts & Sports
Women in STEM and Innovation
100

This woman refused to give up her seat on a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955.

Rosa Parks

100

She was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean.

Amelia Earhart

100

This group of African American students integrated Little Rock Central High School in 1957.

The Little Rock Nine

100

This singer was known as the “Queen of Soul.”

Aretha Franklin

100

he was a NASA mathematician whose calculations helped send astronauts to space.

Katherine Johnson

200

He delivered the famous “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

200

This scientist discovered radium and won two Nobel Prizes.

Marie Curie

200

She co-founded the National Organization for Women (NOW) in 1966 to fight for women’s rights.

Betty Friedan

200

He was the first Black player in Major League Baseball.

Jackie Robinson

200

This chemist invented hair care products and became one of the first female self-made millionaires.

Madam C.J. Walker

300

She was the first Black woman elected to Congress and later ran for president in 1972.

Shirley Chisholm.

300

She founded the Girl Scouts of the USA.

Juliette Gordon Low

300

This abolitionist and former slave became a leading voice for women’s rights and Black rights.

Sojourner Truth

300

She won 23 Grand Slam singles titles in tennis.

Serena Williams

300

She was the first Black female astronaut in space.

Mae Jemison

400

He was the first Black Supreme Court Justice.

Thurgood Marshall

400

This activist helped women win the right to vote and appeared on the U.S. dollar coin.

Susan B. Anthony

400

This Black female journalist and activist led anti-lynching campaigns in the late 1800s.

Ida B. Wells

400

This poet and activist wrote I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

Maya Angelou

400

This scientist developed a revolutionary process for storing blood, helping create blood banks.

Dr. Charles Drew

500

She was an abolitionist and conductor of the Underground Railroad, helping enslaved people escape to freedom.

Harriet Tubman

500

She was the first female Supreme Court Justice in the U.S.

Sandra Day O’Connor

500

She refused to move to the back of a train in 1884, 71 years before Rosa Parks.

Ida B. Wells

500

He composed Rhapsody in Black and was a pioneering jazz musician.

Duke Ellington

500

She helped design software for the Apollo Moon missions.

Margaret Hamilton