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Virginia

Meet the Black women making waves in this state—leaders, creators, and changemakers redefining what’s possible.

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Jan 5
January
Singer
AME
Matilda Sissieretta Jones
Jones (1869-1933) was an internatioanally acclaimed soprano opera singer who notes were said to be as clear as a mockingbird’s with perfect annunciation. Her remarkable abilities led her to perform at the White House for four U.S. Presidents: Harrison, McKinley, Cleveland, and Roosevelt. Jones toured extensively across Europe, the West Indies, South America, Australia, India, and southern Africa, performing for notable figures including Albert Edward, the Prince of Wales and future King Edward VII of England, and Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany.
Feb 4
February
Science
Dr. Beth Brown
Motivated by her childhood love for Star Wars and Star Trek, Dr. Brown (1969-2008) became an Astrophysicist in the Sciences and Exploration Directorate at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. She was also the first Black woman to earn a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan's Department of Astronomy.
Mar 1
March
Military
Aviation
Madeline Swegle
 In 2020 Swegle, a U.S. Naval Academy graduate, became both the U.S. Navy's second Black woman naval aviator to earn her wings of gold when she became the U.S. Navy's first Black woman tactical jet pilot.
Mar 4
March
Singer
Roberta Alexandra
Mar 24
March
Activist
Dorothy Height
Mar 29
March
Singer
Entertainment
Actress
Pearl Bailey
Apr 9
April
Science
Mary Jackson
Jackson (1921-2005) was a Mathematician and NASA's first Black woman engineer.
Apr 25
April
Jazz
Singer
AME
Ella Fitzgerald
"The First Lady of Song", Ella Fitzgerald (1917-1996) was the 20th century's preeminent jazz vocalist renowned for her pure tone, impeccable diction, scat singing mastery, and critically acclaimed interpretations of the Great American Songbook. She was also the first black woman to win a grammy. Over her six-decade career, she set vocal excellence standards, influenced multiple genres, and amassed top accolades including 13 Grammys, 1 Grammy Lifetime Achievement award, and the National Medal of Arts.
May 2
May
Civil Rights
Educator
Baptist
Activist
Entrepreneur
Nannie Helen Burroughs
Burroughs (1879-1961) was one of the most influential women of the early 20th century. She was a businesswoman, unbowed social and political activist, and a key figure in the women’s suffrage movement.
May 17
May
Law
Government
Hazel O'Leary
O'Leary (1937) is an American lawyer, consultant, and former government official. She served as the 7th United States Secretary of Energy from 1993 to 1997 under President Bill Clinton, becoming the first woman and first Black person to hold this position.
May 25
May
Educator
Author
Dorothy Porter Wesley
Librarian, Challenged and improved upon the Dewey Decimal system
Jun 11
June
Suffrage
Military
Addie Waites Hunton
Extraordinary
Jul 4
July
Educator
Athlete
Lucy Diggs Slowe
Slowe's legacy is deeply woven into the fabric of African American history. As one of the nine original founders of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Incorporated at Howard University in 1908, she helped lay the foundation for an organization that would empower generations of Black women. Slowe became the first African American to win a major athletic title when she won the American Tennis Association championship in 1917, and she served as the first Dean of Women at Howard University (the first African American to serve in such a position at any university in the US), dedicating her career to supporting young Black women in higher education.
Jul 15
July
Banking
Journalism
Civil Rights
Baptist
Educator
Maggie Lena Walker
On July 24, 1903, Maggie L. Walker became the first Black woman to serve as president of a U.S. bank, as well as the first woman founder of a U.S. bank, when she rallied members of the Independent Order of St. Luke to charter and capitalize the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank in Richmond, Virginia.
Aug 1
August
Medicine
Henrietta Lacks
Lacks (1920-1951) is the source of the HeLa "immortal" cell line, one of the most important human cell lines in the history of medical research. Lacks's cells, taken without her knowledge or consent, transformed the landscape of modern medicine, while Lacks herself remained long deprived of recognition and recompense.
Aug 21
August
Civil Rights
Journalist
Esther Cooper Jackson
Jackson was a civil rights activist, social worker, and journalist who played a significant role in the Civil Rights Movement.
Sep 3
September
Singer
Educator
Dorothy Maynor
Maynor (1910-1996) was an international concert soprano, the first African American to sing at a US President’s Inauguration (Harry Truman, 1949), and the Founder of the Harlem School of Arts.
Sep 11
September
Singer
Margaret Tynes
Sep 19
September
Educator
Civil Rights
Sarah Louise "Sadie" Delany
Educator, Author
Oct 10
October
Medicine
Dr. Dorothy Boulding Ferebee
Oct 18
October
Singer
Educator
Camilla Williams
Oct 24
October
Entrepreneur
Marjorie Stewart Joyner
Pioneering inventor in the haircare and beauty industry
Oct 27
October
Science
Gladys Mae West
Dr. West ...algorithm...foundation for GPS.
Dec 10
December
Entrepreneur
Olivia Clarke Stanford
Co-Owner of Rose Meta House of Beauty
Dec 13
December
Civil Rights
Ella Baker
Civil Rights Activist

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