Colorado Women's Hall of Fame
The Colorado Women's Hall of Fame is a non-profit, volunteer organization that recognizes women who have contributed to the history of the U.S. state of Colorado. As of 2020, 170 women have been inducted.
History
There was a short-lived recognition program established in Colorado in 1965 to honor the contributions of women to the state, known as the Colorado Women of Achievement awards. Each year, three honorees from throughout the state who had distinguished themselves in their profession or avocation were recognized at an annual banquet held in Denver, given a cash award, and received a pin with the emblem of the program, which was sponsored by the Columbia Savings and Loan Association. The 1965 inductees, honored in 1966, included Verona Burkhard, Jo Eleanor Elliott and Sister Frances Marie Walsh. In 1967 the inductees for the 1966 award were Sabina O’Malley, Elizabeth McAulliffe Calabrese, and Genevieve Fiore. In 1968, the honorees for 1967 were recognized. They included Rena Mary Taylor, Marion M. Maresh, Mrs. E. Ray Campbell. Two Life Award recipients, honoring a life-long commitment of service, were given to Mary M. McDonald and Ella Matty Orman. 1968 inductees, recognized in 1969 were Anna M. Garnett, Betty Pellet, Margaret Rossi, with Ruby Lewis Neal being recognized with the Life Award.Almost two decades later, a new recognition program began. The Hall of Fame organization was founded and incorporated as a non-profit organization in 1984 to recognize women's contributions to the territory and state of Colorado and to provide role-models for young girls and women. Serving on the board also offers leadership opportunities for women. Discussed conceptually in February 1984, it was organized by June of the same year. M.L. Hanson sat as the president on the board until 1997.
Criteria
The criteria for induction into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame is that women have "significant ties to Colorado and during their lifetimes:- Made significant and enduring contributions to their fields of endeavor
- Elevated the status of women
- Helped open new frontiers for women and for society in general
- Inspired others by their example"
Inductees
Name | Image | Birth–Death | Year | Area of achievement | |
2020 | First Latina Director of the United States Office of Personnel Management | ||||
2020 | Latina leadership in Colorado’s Labor Movement | ||||
2020 | Founder of the Denver Urban Spectrum newspaper and the Urban Spectrum Youth Foundation | ||||
2020 | Colorado Deputy District Attorney | ||||
2020 | Physician, breast feeding expoert | ||||
2020 | United States Secretary of the Interior, Attorney General of Colorado | ||||
2020 | Cultural arts and arts education | ||||
2020 | Physiclan, college professor, first president of the Colorado Woman Suffrage Association | ||||
2020 | African American educator, political activist, and suffragist | ||||
2020 | Supporter of the arts and culture; provided a safe haven for economic and political refugees in Denver. | ||||
2018 | Community activism | ||||
2018 | Community Service | ||||
2018 | NASA Astronaut aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour | ||||
2018 | Chancellor of CU Denver | ||||
2018 | Corporate and securities lawyer | ||||
2018 | 44th Lieutenant Governor of Colorado | ||||
2018 | Philanthropist who supported cultural and healthcare facilities | ||||
2018 | Accomplished journalist who led Colorado's suffrage movement | ||||
2018 | Developed protocol to teach deaf children to listen and talk | ||||
2018 | Cultural mediator who bridged Native American and Western cultures | ||||
2016 | Civil rights activist who brought the national Head Start Program to Denver; president emeritus, Mile High Montessori Early Learning Centers | ||||
2016 | Educator and pioneer of bilingual education | ||||
2016 | Catholic nun, educator and author who champions education for girls in Afghanistan and Ghana; founding member of the Rose Community Foundation | ||||
2016 | Appellate court judge and sex discrimination litigation pioneer | ||||
2016 | Attorney, advocate for abused and neglected children. Founded the Rocky Mountain Children's Law Center | ||||
2016 | Co-founder of both the Colorado Women's Foundation and the Women's Bank | ||||
2016 | American arts activist who devoted her life to the founding and support of some of Colorado's largest cultural institutions, including the Denver Art Museum, the Central City Opera, and the Denver Civic Center | ||||
2016 | Philanthropist and charter member of the Colorado Federation of Women's Clubs. | ||||
2016 | Author, activist and advocate for the disabled community. | ||||
2016 | First woman minority leader in Colorado State Legislature. | ||||
2014 | Federal judge on the United States District Court for the District of Colorado and is a former Colorado state official | ||||
2014 | Newspaper publisher, philanthropist | ||||
2014 | First black woman to head a foundation in Colorado | ||||
2014 | Pilot, educator, co-holder of World Aviation Speed Record, set October 22, 1991 | ||||
2014 | First woman to climb Pikes Peak | ||||
2014 | Architect | ||||
2014 | Optoelectronic processing systems, 3D imaging, and color management systems | ||||
2014 | Aerospace engineer | ||||
2014 | Journalist, suffragist, and the first woman elected to the Colorado State Senate | ||||
2014 | Soil invertebrate diversity expert | ||||
2012 | Tisone Professor and associate professor of surgery at the University of Colorado at Boulder | ||||
2012 | Transportation engineer for the Colorado Highway Department; won a 1972 sexual discrimination lawsuit against the Colorado Department of Highways when she was barred from working inside the Eisenhower Tunnel. | ||||
2012 | Owner of The Cotton Club bar in Colorado Springs | ||||
2012 | Dean of the University of Rochester School of Nursing, co-founded the nurse-practitioner model at the University of Colorado in 1965 | ||||
2012 | Educator and San Luis Valley postmaster | ||||
2012 | Photographer known for her portraits of Native Americans, particularly the Navajo and Pueblo, and her Southwestern landscapes | ||||
2012 | Doctor of animal science and professor at Colorado State University, bestselling author, and consultant to the livestock industry on animal behavior | ||||
2012 | Co-founder and majority shareholder of Pacific Western Technologies | ||||
2012 | Co-founder of La Leche League International; women's health advocate | ||||
2012 | Colorado Supreme Court Chief Justice | ||||
2010 | First woman to become the United States Secretary of State | ||||
2010 | Adult educator and author | ||||
2010 | Executive director of the Latin American Research and Service Agency | ||||
2010 | Biologist known for her research into T cell development, T cell apoptosis and survival, adjuvants, autoimmune disease, and for identifying superantigens, the mechanism behind toxic shock syndrome. | ||||
2010 | Businesswoman and former president of the Denver City Council; member of the Democratic National Committee since the 1990s | ||||
2010 | American actress and first African-American to win an Academy Award for her role in Gone with the Wind | ||||
2010 | First female television news director in Denver | ||||
2010 | Rancher and conservationist | ||||
2010 | Philanthropist | ||||
2010 | Author, electrical engineer | ||||
2008 | Cattle rancher, philanthropist | ||||
2008 | Mexican-American educator, human rights activist, and prominent Latina leader who became a Franciscan nun after a successful business career | ||||
2008 | Education and athletics advocate; Sportswomen of Colorado Hall of Fame 1997; Laureate of the Association of National Olympic Committees 1999; United States Track and Field Hall of Fame 2004 | ||||
2008 | First woman to become a Colorado Supreme Court Justice, former Deputy Attorney General for Colorado | ||||
2008 | First woman in the United States Navy to rise from seaman recruit to captain | ||||
2008 | Colorado Springs' first female mayor | ||||
2008 | Founder of Chinese Children Adoption International, Chinese Children Charity Fund, and the Joyous Chinese Cultural School | ||||
2008 | First woman to be elected to the Colorado Board of Education | ||||
2008 | Suffragist and Colorado's first First Lady alongside John Routt | ||||
2008 | Pilot and one of the First Lady Astronaut Trainees for the Mercury project | ||||
2008 | Athlete who achieved outstanding success in golf, basketball, and track and field. She was named the 10th Greatest North American Athlete of the 20th Century by ESPN, and the 9th Greatest Athlete of the 20th Century by the Associated Press. | ||||
2006 | Founder of the Colorado Women's Coalition; founded Women's Vision Foundation to develop leadership skills among women; first woman recipient of the Dan Ritchie Award for Ethics in Business; Businesswoman, women's advocate, and civic leader; | ||||
2006 | Singer-songwriter | ||||
2006 | Audiologist and professor at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center who pioneered universal newborn hearing screening | ||||
2006 | American poet, post-trauma specialist and Jungian psychoanalyst | ||||
2006 | Community leader, philanthropist, and activist | ||||
2006 | President and CEO of Girl Scouts – Mile Hi Council | ||||
2006 | Founder of the Denver Sheltering Home | ||||
2006 | Atmospheric chemist working for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration | ||||
2006 | Suffragist and physician | ||||
2006 | Court reporter at the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials | ||||
2004 | First woman in the United States to receive a jockey's license | ||||
2004 | Helped found the Colorado State Trained Nurses Association | ||||
2004 | Philanthropist, businesswoman, and lawyer | ||||
2004 | CEO of Denver Health and Hospital Authority | ||||
2004 | The youngest of the Little Rock Nine, a group of African-American students who, in 1957, were the first black students ever to attend classes at Little Rock Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Now a Colorado real estate broker | ||||
2004 | Along with Charlotte Perry, co-founder of the Perry-Mansfield Performing Arts School & Camp | ||||
2004 | First woman in the United States Armed Forces to be promoted to both major general and lieutenant general | ||||
2004 | Actress and director | ||||
2004 | Along with Portia Mansfield, co-founder of the Perry-Mansfield Performing Arts School & Camp | ||||
2004 | Public servant and community leader | ||||
2002 | President and CEO of Alvarado Construction | ||||
2002 | Advocate for women's rights and the elderly | ||||
2002 | Outdoorswoman and organizer of the Colorado Trail | ||||
2002 | First woman and first American to serve as secretary general for the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics | ||||
2002 | Founded the city of Lafayette, Colorado | ||||
2002 | Fashion model and breast cancer survivor who founded the Sue Miller Day of Caring | ||||
2002 | First African American woman to serve in the Colorado State Senate | ||||
2002 | First woman hired as a pilot by a major U.S. airline | ||||
2000 | First woman to chair the Democratic Caucus of the Colorado House of Representatives and the first Latina elected to the Colorado State Senate | ||||
2000 | President of the Burnsley Hotel in Denver | ||||
2000 | President of the Community Foundation serving Boulder County; Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate in 1990 and 1992; community activist and educator | ||||
2000 | Director of the World Data Center A for Solar-Terrestrial Physics | ||||
2000 | First African-American librarian in Denver | ||||
2000 | Montessori educator | ||||
2000 | United States federal judge | ||||
1997 | Frontier doctor | ||||
1997 | Folk artist | ||||
1997 | Women's basketball coach | ||||
1997 | President of the National Hispana Leadership Institute, Peace Corps volunteer and advocate for women | ||||
1997 | Founding director of the Women and Public Policy Program at the Kennedy School, and former United States Ambassador to Austria | ||||
1997 | First woman and first African-American to anchor a newscast in Colorado | ||||
1997 | American Roman Catholic Religious Sister | ||||
1996 | Athlete and organizer | ||||
1996 | Quaker sociologist and major contributor to creating the academic discipline of Peace and Conflict Studies | ||||
1996 | Historic preservationist and developer | ||||
1996 | Parole officer and advocate for women prisoners | ||||
1996 | Researcher into auto-immunity, AIDS, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and cancer | ||||
1996 | Occupational therapist and advocate for those with disabilities | ||||
1996 | Businesswoman and one of the original owners of Elitch Gardens | ||||
1996 | Denver's first city toxicologist and perhaps the first female forensic pathologist in the United States | ||||
1996 | African American educator, politician and civil rights leader; namesake of Rachel B. Noel Middle School | ||||
1996 | 1958 Miss America pageant holder and founder of the American Coalition for Abuse Awareness and One Voice | ||||
1996 | Author, activist, educator, and women's advocate | ||||
1991 | Founder of the Denver Symphony Orchestra | ||||
1991 | Humanitarian and peace activist | ||||
1991 | Entrepreneur, first wife of silver king Horace Tabor | ||||
1991 | Member of the Colorado State Legislature from 1980 to 1993; the first First Lady of Denver to have held political office herself | ||||
1990 | Journalist, former Ziegfeld Follies performer | ||||
1990 | Advocate for neglected and abused children | ||||
1990 | Suffragette and advocate for women's rights | ||||
1990 | First female landscape architect in Denver | ||||
1989 | Aided the settlement of former slaves during Colorado's Gold Rush | ||||
1989 | Author | ||||
1989 | Founding board member and executive director of the Asian Pacific Development Center in Denver | ||||
1989 | Choreographer and artistic director of the Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Ensemble | ||||
1988 | Feminist writer | ||||
1988 | Major in the U.S. Army, regional administrator of the Women's Bureau for the U.S. Department of Labor | ||||
1988 | Founding president and chief executive officer of the Women's Bank in Denver | ||||
1988 | Ran the first hotel in the Fort Collins area, serving Overland Trail travelers. She financed and initiated businesses to support the growth in and around the area. | ||||
1987 | Publisher of the Intermountain Jewish News | ||||
1987 | School teacher and philanthropist who founded the United Way and National Jewish Hospital | ||||
1987 | Journalist and lawyer; first woman to try a case before the Colorado Supreme Court | ||||
1987 | Founder of the Domestic Violence Institute | ||||
1986 | Conductor and pianist | ||||
1986 | First Native American woman director of the National Congress of American Indians | ||||
1986 | Humanitarian, industrialist, activist, and politician | ||||
1986 | Newspaper editor, Colorado legislator, and registrar of Denver's US District Land Office | ||||
1985 | Colorado educator, first Latina principal in the Denver Public Schools | ||||
1985 | Explorer, writer, and natural historian | ||||
1985 | Arts patron, philanthropist, managed the Denver Post | ||||
1985 | Socialite, philanthropist, and activist who became famous due to her survival of the 1912 sinking of the RMS Titanic | ||||
Chipeta | 1985 | Second wife of Chief Ouray of the Uncompahgre Ute tribe, she led her people after his death in 1880. Chipeta used diplomacy to try to achieve peace with the white immigrants to Colorado and often represented the Utes as a delegate to lobby the US Congress | |||
1985 | Journalist, playwright and screenwriter, known primarily for writing the Broadway play Harvey | ||||
1985 | Wife of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, and First Lady of the United States from 1953 to 1961 | ||||
1985 | Denver's first black woman physician | ||||
1985 | Pioneer of adult education, founder of the Emily Griffith Opportunity School | ||||
1985 | Writer who became an activist on behalf of improved treatment of Native Americans by the U.S. government | ||||
1985 | Former First Lady of Colorado, ran for the U. S. Senate against Ben Nighthorse Campbell | ||||
1985 | Self-educated naturalist and artist who helped found modern taxidermy | ||||
1985 | Teacher, kibbutznik and politician who became the fourth Prime Minister of Israel | ||||
Owl Woman | 1985 | Cheyenne princess who managed relations between Native American tribes and Anglo American men | |||
1985 | One of the first women to become faculty at a university; taught at the University of Colorado in Boulder | ||||
1985 | Medical scientist. She was a pioneer for women in science; she was the first woman to hold a full professorship at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, the first woman elected to the National Academy of Sciences, and the first woman to head a department at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. In her retirement years, she pursued a second career as a public health activist in Colorado, and in 1951 received a Lasker Award for this work. | ||||
1985 | Colorado botanist who conducted the first systematic study of plant life in Southwestern Colorado | ||||
1985 | Democratic politician who represented Colorado in the United States House of Representatives from 1973 to 1997 | ||||
1985 | Philanthropist | ||||
1985 | First Colorado woman to serve as president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs | ||||
1985 | Legislator; first woman president pro-tem of the Colorado State Senate | ||||
1985 | Second wife of Colorado businessman Horace Tabor and inspiration for the opera The Ballad of Baby Doe | ||||
1985 | Archaeologist and author; first woman to obtain a doctorate in anthropology at Harvard and the first archaeologist and first woman to receive a Guggenheim Foundation fellowship | ||||
1985 | Women's small business consultant and motivational speaker |