Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Georgia women

WiR redlist index: Georgia women


Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR). Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our scope is women's biographies, women's works, and women's issues, broadly construed.

This list of red links is intended to serve as a basis for creating new articles on the English Wikipedia. Please note however that the red links on this list may well not be suitable as the basis for an article. All new articles must satisfy Wikipedia's notability criteria with reliable independent sources. This list needs to be updated manually.

Women in Red logo

This is a redlist of women from Georgia (U.S. state). It is based on multiple sources including: Follow the links to those pages to find sources to start with, if there are none on the wiki page click through to the associated website. There are also a few women listed here who aren't in any of the above lists, feel free to add more manually. Also, the NGE list (linked below) has not been updated in a while so there are no doubt some newer NGE articles that should be added below.

Biographies

  • Willette Alona Allen (1862–1941) educator, kindergarten movement
  • Annie Ogburn Anderson (1877–1962) first woman judge in Georgia law
  • Ruby M. Anderson (1893-1978) Educator gwa
  • Elena Diaz-Verson Amos (1926–2000) philanthropist nge
  • Madeleine Kiker Anthony (1903–1989) historic preservation gwa
  • Clarice Cross Bagwell (1914–2001) educator gwa
  • Sarah Randolph Bailey (1885–1972) Girl Reserves for black girls gwa
  • Dicksie Bradley Bandy (1890–1971) textile industry, historic preservation gwa
  • Laura Belle Barnard (1907-1992) missionary nge
  • Sally Smalley Bell (born 1953?) basketball referee sports
  • Jacqueline Harrison Barrett (born 1940) sheriff woc
  • Minna McLeod Beck (1880–1959) artist, educator, author
  • Sarah Amanda Clayton Blake founder of an Atlanta beauty school
  • Ruth Blair (1889–1974) state historian of Georgia
  • Adrienne Bond (1933–1996) poet, writer nge
  • Vinnie Ream Boyd (1879–1970) monologist, lecturer
  • Connie Bowlin (born 1955) civil aviation gahof
  • Margaret O. Bynum (1921–1982) educator gwa
  • Carolyn H. Byrd (born 1949) business executive woc
  • Jessie M. Candlish (1877-1964) longtime administrator of Egleston Hospital for Children
  • Henrietta Canty (1929–2002) represented Atlanta in Georgia General Assembly 1975-1980, 1990-1998
  • Carolyn Mackenzie Carter (1919–2010) photojournalist gwa
  • Betty Jean Clark (1944/1945-2011) Georgia General Assembly 1973-1990
  • Maud Barker Cobb (1870-1925) librarian
  • Laura Mays Coble (born 1962?) golf sports
  • Julia L. Coleman (1889–1973) educator gwa
  • Wessie Gertrude Connell (1915–1987) librarian gwa, nge
  • Anne Margaret Cooke or Anne Reid Cooke or Anne Cooke Reid (1907-????) theater educator, wife of Ira De Augustine Reid, granddaughter of Wilson Cooke woc
  • Nina Pearl Cox (1892–1956) first woman school superintendent in Georgia
  • Bessie Kempton Crowell (1893–1981) first woman elected to Georgia Legislature, alongside Viola Ross Napier in 1922
  • Constance Curry (1933–2020) author, civil rights activist
  • Edna Cain Daniel (1875–1957) writer, journalist gnhof
  • Rosemary Daniell (born 1935) writer nge
  • Janice Daugharty (born 1944) writer nge
  • Sallie Ellis Davis (1877–1950) educator gwa
  • Miriam Howard Dubose (1862–1945) women's suffrage wikisource
  • Kathryn Dunaway (1906–1980) anti-ERA campaigner
  • Willie Snow Ethridge (1898-1982) writer, journalist, civil rights activist
  • Vera “Punkin” Flock (1918–1978) trapshooting sports
  • Edith Lenora Foster (1906–1996) librarian, writer, historian gwa
  • Nettie Bess Fouche (1888-1978) first woman superior court clerk in Georgia
  • Frances Smith Foster (born 1944) former Emory professor of women's studies woc
  • Mary Louise Fowler (1907–1979) tennis sports
  • Charlotte Fogg Frye (1893–1983) woman pilot gahof
  • Marie Davis Gadsden (1919–2012) philanthropic administrator woc
  • Frances Poole King Garlington (1904–1991) trapshooting sports
  • Anne Richardson Gayles-Felton (born 1923) educator
  • Amilee Chastain Graves (1910–1983) publisher, politician gwa
  • Dinah M. Gretsch (born 1950) guitar manufacturing music
  • Eleanor Guest (1940-1997) singer
  • Terri Moody Hancock (born 1960?) golf sports
  • Anne Paradise Hansford (born 1924) basketball sports
  • Ethel Hillyer Harris (18??–19??) author, journalist wikisource
  • Judia C. Jackson Harris (1873–after 1949) educator woc
  • Julia Collier Harris (1885–1967) writer, journalist gwa, gnhof, gwhof
  • Beverly J. Harvard (born 1950) police chief woc
  • Evelyn Hanna (1900–1982) writer nge
  • Geneva Haugabrooks (1888-1977) businesswoman, funeral home operator
  • Louise Frederick Hays (1881–1951) historian gwa
  • Sarah Harper Heard (1853–1919) traveling library gwa
  • Patsy Jo Hilliard (born 1937) first woman and first Black mayor of East Point, Georgia woc
  • Marion Stegeman Hodgson (1921–2016) WASP gahof
  • Cora Catherine Calhoun Horne (1865–1932) activist, grandmother of Lena Horne woc
  • Edith Elizabeth House (1903-1987) first woman law grad at UGA, first woman US Attorney in Florida law
  • Annie Hornaday Howard (1882–1965) author, journalist
  • Helen Augusta Howard (1865–1934) suffragist - Currently a REDIRECT, but history contains the start of an article.
  • May duBignon Stiles Howard (1894–1983) health care gwa
  • Anne Wallace Howland (1866–1960) librarian
  • Dorothy Hubbard (born 19??) first woman mayor of Albany, Georgia
  • Anna Colquitt Hunter (1892–1985) historic preservation gwa
  • Edith Jacqueline Ingram Grant (1942–2020) first black ordinary judge; first black probate judge in Georgia woc law
  • Vara A. Majette (1875-1974) lawyer, author, artist
  • Lenna Gertrude Clarke Judd (1865–1939) clubwoman, philanthropist
  • Gwen Muriel Kesler (born 1925) music industry executive music
  • Annie Laurie Fuller Kurtz (1884–1946) writer of history
  • Love Moreland Leigh (1867–1956) creator of "Love Leigh" dolls
  • Shirley A. R. Lewis (born 1937) President of Paine College in Augusta woc
  • Mary Thomas Lumpkin (1857–1932) organized first garden club in Georgia
  • Rufe McCombs Maulsby (1918–2012) first elected judge in Georgia, without a prior appointment law
  • Bettye J. McClendon (1933-2019) basketball sports
  • Mary Lamar Knight McConnell (1899–1996) journalist for UPI
  • Heather Stepp McCormick (born 1972) gymnastics sports
  • Carrie L. McDaniel (1878–1952) first woman elected to a political office in Georgia
  • Emily C. McDougald (1848/1849–1938) women's suffrage
  • Lula Dobbs McEachern (1874–1949) educator, missionary gwa
  • Lucy Barrow McIntire (1886–1975) civic activist gwa
  • Mary Latimer McLendon (1840–1921) women's suffrage nge
  • Aurelia Roach McMillan (1865-1957) educator wikisource
  • May Melton (1923–2014) newspaper publisher gnhof
  • Madge Hilburn Methvin (1900–1982) newspaper publisher gnhof
  • Sue Methvin (1898–1965) concrete products manufacturer
  • Sue Harper Mims (1842–1913) Christian Scientist in Atlanta
  • Susie Jane Tillman Moore (1868–1951) first woman elected to Georgia Senate (in 1932)
  • Ruth Hartley Mosley (1886–1975) philanthropist gwa
  • Sarah McLendon Murphy (1892–1954) children's activist gwa
  • Liz Murphey (1933-2005) coach sports
  • Marie Antoinette Graves Nash (1892-1984) Gate City Day Nursery Association - free kindergarten for Black children
  • Isa-Beall Williams Neel (1861–1953) educator nge
  • Jean League Newton (1919–2000) architect, daughter of Ellamae Ellis League
  • Beulah Rucker Oliver (1888–1963) educator gwa
  • Passie Fenton McCabe Ottley (1870–1940) clubwoman, philanthropist
  • Nina Anderson Pape (1869–1944) educator gwa
  • Monica Jones Kaufman Pearson (born 1947) broadcast journalist music
  • Medora Field Perkerson (1892–1960) author, newspaper columnist
  • Adelaide Wallace Ponder (1925–2015) journalist, won NNA Emma C. McKinney award in 1994
  • Emily Katherine Reid owner/president of Crichton's Business College in Atlanta
  • Barbara "Babs" Janet Hamby Richardson (1928–2006) music industry executive music
  • Dorothy A. Robinson (1938-2017) first woman judge on a court of record; first woman temporary Supreme Court judge law
  • Mary Waterman Phillips Rushton (1896-1984) founder of Rushton Toy Co.
  • Ina Dillard Russell (1868–1963) mother of Richard Russell Jr. nge
  • Patricia A. Russell-McCloud (born 1946) motivational speaker woc
  • Pearl Sandow (1902–2006) baseball fan nge
  • Cynthia Shearer (born 1955) writer gwhof
  • Frances Murray Smith aka Allie Murray Smith (1905-2000) is currently a redirect to her daughter, Rosalynn Carter gwa
  • Jane E. Smith (born 1946) women's rights, ngos woc
  • Missouri H. Stokes (1838–1910) temperance movement, half sister to Mary Ann Harris Gay wikisource
  • Edna P. Lowe Swift (born 1949) first black woman to graduate from Agnes Scott College '71
  • Marian A. Sumner (1912-1999) journalist, won NNA Emma C. McKinney award in 1989
  • May Erwin Talmadge (1885-1973) president of Daughters of the American Revolution (44-47)
  • Mary Telfair (1791–1875) philanthropist nge
  • Brenda Cliette Thomas (born 1964?) basketball, track & field sports
  • Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas (1834–1907) memoirist gwa nge
  • C. Mildred Thompson (1881–1975) historian, educator, feminist nge
  • Ella May Thornton (1885–1971) State librarian of Georgia
  • Sarah Lowe Twiggs (1839–1920) writer wikisource
  • June Wood Wicker (1917–1992) architect
  • Mother Mary Theodore Williams (1868–1931) Catholic nun woc
  • Margaret A. Wilson (1855–1942) founder of "Wrens Nest" memorial
  • Naomi Chapman Woodroof (1900–1989) agriculture scientist nge
  • Nell Kendall Hodgson Woodruff (1892–1968) health care gwa
  • Jean Elizabeth Geiger Wright (1925?–2002) land conservation gwa
  • Dorothy Cowser Yancy (born 1944) first black tenured professor at Georgia Tech woc
  • Carrie Kent, the first African-American woman mayor in Georgia history as the mayor of Walthourville, Georgia [1] [2] [3]

Other women-related articles

Photos available

Here are photos already available on Commons for a few of the women listed above.

See also

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