Abolition Was Her Mission
Industry Has No Gender
Silent No More
From Protest to Progress
She Learns, She Leads
100

Escaped slave who helped free slaves through underground railroad in 1850s

Harriet Tubman

100

prohibited gender discrimination at work.

Title IV of the Civil Rights Act

100

Gave women the right to vote

19th Amendment

100

Her arrest for refusing to give up her seat sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott

Rosa Parks

100

While primarily known for mental health reform, she also promoted education for the mentally ill and worked as a teacher early in life.

Dorthea Dix

200

Reality-based anti-slavery novel spurred northern sentiment against slavery in
the South

Uncle Toms Cabin

200

Tragic fire that killed 146 mostly immigrant women garment workers in NYC

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

200

Co-organizer of the Seneca Falls Convention (1848)—first women’s rights convention in U.S. history. Co-wrote the Declaration of Sentiments, demanding women’s suffrage

Elizabeth Cady Stanton

200

Rejection of conservatism, Victorian society norms Smoked, drank, swore, danced, dated, promiscuous, consumerist, purchased cosmetics
Short skirts, bobbed hair; prefer slender bodies/image

Flappers

200

Co-founded Hull House in Chicago, offering educational opportunities to immigrants and working-class families.

Jane Addams

300

Black woman who wrote essays and gave public speeches on abolitionism in
1830s

Maria Stewart

300

Who wrote The History of the Standard Oil Company (1902) - Muckraker articles on ruthless business exploits of John D. Rockefeller?

Ida Tarbell

300

who was the most prominent leader of the women's suffrage movement

Alice Paul

300

Former enslaved woman who became a powerful speaker for abolition and women’s rights. Gave the famous “Ain’t I a Woman?” speech challenging both racism and sexism.

Sojourner Truth

300

Advocate for women's education and teacher training. Founded schools and promoted the idea that women were morally suited to teach. Helped feminize the teaching profession in the 19th century

Catharine Beecher

400

Led abolitionist rhetoric with first-hand experiences as women living on
plantations in South Carolina

Sarah and Angelina Grimke (Grimke Sisters)

400

As men assumed managerial positions, women assumed previously male-based
professional jobs (5)

Clerks, bookkeepers, typists, secretaries, telephone operators

400

Lifelong suffrage leader and co-founder of the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) with Stanton.

Susan B. Anthony

400

who destroyed bars across the nation in her temperance riots 

Carrie A Nation

400

Author of The Feminine Mystique and co-founder of NOW (National Organization for Women) .Advocated for women’s equality in education and professional fields during the Second-Wave Feminism movement.

Betty Friedan

500

Free black women in Salem, MA establish nation’s first female-based
abolitionist society

Female Anti-Slavery Society (1832)

500

Cultural icon of the United States, representing the women who worked in factories and shipyards during World War II.

Rosie the Riveter 

500

first state granting full woman suffrage in 1869

Wyoming

500

Political writer and propagandist during the American Revolution. Criticized British rule and wrote anti-Tory plays and essays advocating rebellion.

Mercy Otis Warren

500

Founded Mount Holyoke Seminary in 1837, emphasizing science and academic discipline for women.

Mary Lyon