Nina Simone - priestess of soul, she sang her heart and her mind
Mary Church Terrell
- African American activist and organizer of an earlier generation
Harriet Tubman - not just an Underground Railroad figure who helped 300+
escape, but also a soldier, spy, philanthropist, and women's rights advocate
Sojourner Truth - preacher, lecturer, abolitionist, women's rights
organizer
Alice Walker - her The Color Purple has already become a classic
Madam C.J. Walker - first African American millionaire, she taught the
women who operated beauty parlors under her direction to give generously to
their communities and people
Phillis Wheatley - "slave poet" who demonstrated that slaves could not
only learn to read and write, they could write poetry that impressed the
leaders of the nation, including George Washington
Oprah Winfrey - first black woman billionaire, Oprah Winfrey continues
to change the lives of millions, including through generous philanthropy
Lydia Maria Child - today she's best remembered as the writer of "Over
the River and Through the Woods" or of some housekeeping manuals, but she
was a noted abolitionist and women's rights worker. Her
Anti-Slavery Tracts were influential in shifting public opinion against
slavery.
Julia Ward Howe - known as the author of Battle Hymn of the Republic but
also a worker for abolition, women's rights, and peace
Lucretia Mott - a Quaker; when her rights to speak on antislavery were
denied because she was a woman, she helped get the women's rights movement
started
Mary White Ovington - she brought together the founders of the NAACP,
black and white to help change the conditions under which African Americans
suffered
Lucy Stone - after the Civil War, she didn't want to put women's rights
ahead of or above rights for the newly emancipated slaves
Harriet Beecher Stowe - Her Uncle Tom's Cabin helped solidify
public opinion in the North; her objective was to show that slavery is a sin
Two Suffrage Movements - Martha Gruening - a white woman writing for the
NAACP's the Crisis in 1912, details how the women's movement in
America grew out of the struggle for black equality
Women's history
Women's
History at About.com: quality links, plus articles, chat, etc.