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Women in society |
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This is a list of women's firsts noting the first time that a woman or women achieved a given historical feat. A shorthand phrase for this development is "breaking the gender barrier" or "breaking the glass ceiling."[1][2] Other terms related to the glass ceiling can be used for specific fields related to those terms, such as "breaking the brass ceiling" for women in the military and "breaking the stained glass ceiling" for women clergy.[3][4] Inclusion on the list is reserved for achievements by women that have significant historical impact.
General business
- 1500s: Philippine Welser, first European female billionaire.[5][6]
- 1889: Anna Bissell, first female CEO in the United States of America.[7][8]
- 1903: Maggie L. Walker, first African-American woman to charter a bank.[9][10]
- 1915: Helena Rubinstein, first woman to found a cosmetics company.[11]
- 1945: Ruth Handler, first female president of a major toy company.
- 1961: Katherine Graham, first female to lead a Fortune 500 company.[12]
- 1992: Alice Walton, first female decabillionaire.[13]
- 1999: Andrea Jung, first female CEO of a MLM company.[14]
- 1999: Carly Fiorina, first female head of a Fortune 20 company.
- 2000: Martha Stewart, first self-made female American billionaire.[15]
- 2003: Oprah Winfrey, first female African-American billionaire.[3][4]
- 2013: Mary Barra, first female CEO of a major car manufacturer.[16][17][18]
- 2019: Kylie Jenner, first female billionaire under 30.[19][20]
- 2020: Rania Llewellyn, first female bank CEO in Canada.[21]
- 2021: Kathryn Farmer, first female CEO of a major railroad.[22]
Aviation and aerospace
Date | Name | Milestone |
---|---|---|
June 4, 1784 | Élisabeth Thible | First known woman to ride in a hot air balloon.[23][24][25] |
1805 | Sophie Blanchard | First woman to pilot a hot air balloon.[26] |
March 8, 1910 | Raymonde de Laroche | First woman to receive a pilot's license.[27] |
1910–1911 | Lilian Bland | First woman in the world to design, build, and fly an aircraft.[28][29] |
1912 | Harriet Quimby | First woman to fly across the English Channel.[30] |
1912 | Rayna Kasabova | First woman to participate in a military flight during the Siege of Odrin. |
1914 | Eugenie Mikhailovna Shakhovskaya | First woman commissioned as a military pilot; she flew reconnaissance missions for the Czar in 1914.[31][32] |
1915 | Marie Marvingt | First woman to fly a fighter plane in combat.[33][34] |
1930 | Amy Johnson | First woman to fly from Britain to Australia.[35] |
1932 | Amelia Earhart | First woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean.[36] |
1933 | Lotfia ElNadi | First African woman and first Arab woman to earn a pilot's license. |
1937 | Sabiha Gökçen | The first military woman to fly combat missions. |
May 18, 1953 | Jacqueline Cochran | First woman to break the sound barrier.[37] |
1957 | Jackie Moggridge | First woman to become a British airline captain.[38] |
June 16, 1963 | Valentina Tereshkova | First woman in space.[39] |
1963 | Betty Miller | First female pilot to fly solo across the Pacific Ocean.[40] |
1964 | Jerrie Mock | First woman to fly solo around the world.[41] |
1964 | Joan Merriam Smith | Joan was the first person in history to fly solo around the world at the equator, the first person to complete the longest single solo flight around the world, the first woman to fly a twin-engine aircraft around the world, the first woman to fly the Pacific Ocean from west to east in a twin-engine plane, the first woman to receive an airline transport rating at the age of 23, and the youngest woman to complete a solo flight around the world.[42] |
1973 | Rosella Bjornson | First female pilot for a commercial airline in North America |
1976 | Emily Howell Warner | First woman to become an American airline captain.[43][44] |
1978 | Judy Cameron | First female pilot hired to fly for a major Canadian carrier (Air Canada).[45] |
1984 | Svetlana Savitskaya | First woman to space walk.[46] |
1991 | Sony Rana | Nepal's first licensed female commercial airline pilot.[47][48] |
February 1995 | Eileen Collins | First female Space Shuttle commander.[49] |
2004 | Irene Koki Mutungi, from Kenya | First African woman to qualify to captain a commercial aircraft; she qualified to command the Boeing 737.[50] |
2005 | Hanadi Zakaria al-Hindi | First Saudi woman to become a commercial airline pilot.[51] |
September 18, 2006 | Anousheh Ansari | First female space tourist.[52] |
2009 | Patricia Mawuli Nyekodzi | Ghana's first female civilian pilot, and the first woman in West Africa certified to build and maintain Rotax engines.[53] |
2014 | Nicola Scaife, from Australia | Winner of the first women's hot air balloon world championship, which was held in Poland.[54] |
2015 | Dalia | Iraq's first female commercial airline pilot.[55] |
2015 | Ouma Laouali | Niger's first female pilot.[56] |
Computing
Dentistry
1866: Lucy Hobbs Taylor, first American woman to earn a doctorate in dentistry.[57]
Born Lucy Hobbs on March 14, 1833, in Constable, New York. She was initially denied admission to dental school, then began private study with a professor from the Ohio College of Dental Surgery. In November 1865, she entered the Ohio College of Dental Surgery, where in 1866 she earned her doctorate in dentistry, becoming the first woman in the United States to do so. She married James Taylor and he followed her into the practice of dentistry. The two moved to Lawrence, Kansas, where they practiced together until her husband's death in 1886. She retired and became active in women's rights, and died in 1910.
Education
Year | Name | Milestone |
---|---|---|
c. 1239 | Bettisia Gozzadini | First woman to teach at a university (lectured in law at the University of Bologna) |
1384 | Katherine, Lady Berkeley | Founded Katharine Lady Berkeley's School, the first founded by a layperson, the first founded by a woman, and the first to offer free education to anyone.[58] |
1608 | Juliana Morell | First woman to earn a doctorate degree.[59] |
1678 | Elena Cornaro Piscopia | First woman to earn a Philosophy doctorate degree.[60][61] |
1732 | Laura Bassi | First woman to officially teach at a European university.[62][63][64] |
1874 | Grace Annie Lockhart | First woman in the British Empire to receive a Bachelor's degree |
1875 | Stefania Wolicka-Arnd | First woman to receive a PhD in the modern era.[65][66] |
1891 | Juana Miranda | Ecuador's first female university professor.[67] |
1912 | Anna Jane McKeag | First woman president of Wilson College |
1935 | Kate Galt Zaneis | First woman president of a public college or university (Southeastern Normal College now Southeastern Oklahoma State) |
History
- 1st century AD: Ban Zhao and Pamphile of Epidaurus – first female historians in Han China and the Roman Empire respectively.
International bodies
- 1950: Geronima Pecson – first Filipino and first woman elected to the executive board of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).[68][69]
- 1981: Jeane Kirkpatrick – First woman to serve as US Ambassador to the United Nations.[70]
- 2021: Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala became the first female Director-General of the World Trade Organization.[71]
Journalism
- 1946: Katharine Graham – first female publisher of a major United States newspaper, The Washington Post.
- 1973: Linda Carter Brinson – first female assistant national editor at The Baltimore Sun.
- 2002: Linda Carter Brinson – first female editorial page editor at the Winston-Salem Journal.
- 2004: Catherine Pepinster – first woman to be editor of British newspaper The Tablet in its 175-year history.[72]
Library science
Mathematics
Military
Nobel Prizes
- 1903: Marie Sklodowska-Curie, first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physics; she shared the prize with Antoine Henri Becquerel and Pierre Curie.[73] First woman to win a Nobel Prize.
- 1905: Baroness Bertha Sophie Felicita von Suttner, first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Peace.[74]
- 1909: Selma Lagerlöf, first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.[75]
- 1911: Marie Sklodowska-Curie, first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[76] First person (and only woman to date) to win two Nobel Prizes. Only person to win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences.
- 1947: Gerty Cori, first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine; she shared the prize with Carl Ferdinand Cori and Bernardo Alberto Houssay.[77][78] Although born in Prague, Gerty Cori is considered the first American woman to win a Nobel Prize in medicine.[79] She had become a U.S. citizen in 1928.[80]
- 1983: Barbara McClintock, first woman to win an unshared Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.[81]
- 2009: Elinor Ostrom, first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Economics, and the first American woman to do so; she shared the prize with Oliver E. Williamson.[82]
Politics
Historic firsts for women as heads of state or government:
- Yevgenia Bosch, Ukrainian People's Republic (1917–1918), sometimes considered the first modern female leader of a national government.[83] She held the position of Minister of Interior and Acting Leader of the People's Secretariat of Ukraine, one of a number of competing ruling bodies in the Ukrainian People's Republic, the predecessor of Soviet Ukraine.
- Khertek Anchimaa-Toka, Tuvan People's Republic (1940–1944): The first female head of state (Chairperson of the Presidium of the Little Khural) of a partially recognized country.
- Sukhbaataryn Yanjmaa, Mongolia (1953–1954): The first female acting head of state (Chairperson of the Presidium of the State Great Khural).
- Sirimavo Bandaranaike, Ceylon, now Sri Lanka (1960–1965): The first elected female prime minister (head of government) of a sovereign country. She served again 1970–77 and 1994–2000; in total she served for 17 years.
- Indira Gandhi, India (1966–1977): The first female prime minister of a present-day G20 country. She served again 1980–1984.
- Soong Ching-ling, China (1968–1972): The first female acting co-head of state (Co-Chairperson). She later served as Honorary President for 12 days in 1981.
- Golda Meir, Israel (1969–1974): The first female prime minister in the Middle East.
- Isabel Perón, Argentina (1974–1976): The first (appointed) female president, head of state and head of government.
- Elisabeth Domitien, Central African Republic (1975–1976): The first (appointed) female prime minister of an African country.
- Margaret Thatcher, United Kingdom (1979–1990): The first female prime minister of a G7/P5 country and the first female Prime Minister of a sovereign European country.
- Eugenia Charles, Dominica (1980–1995): The longest continuously serving female prime minister.[84]
- Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, Iceland (1980–1996): The first democratically directly elected female president. With a presidency of exactly sixteen years, she also remains the longest-serving elected female head of state of any country to date.
- Jeanne Sauvé, Canada (1984–1990): The first female head of state in North America.
- Corazon Aquino, Philippines (1986–1992): The first female president in Southeast Asia.
- Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan (1988–1990): The first female prime minister of any muslim majority country. She served again 1993–96.
- Kim Campbell, Canada (1993): The first female head of government in North America.
- Tansu Çiller, Turkey (1993–1996): The first elected Muslim female prime minister in Europe.
- Chandrika Kumaratunga, Sri Lanka (1994–2000): The first time that a nation possessed a female president (Chandrika Kumaratunga) and a female prime minister (Sirimavo Bandaranaike) simultaneously. This also marked the first time that a female prime minister (Sirimavo Bandaranaike) directly succeeded another female prime minister (Chandrika Kumaratunga).
- Ruth Perry, Liberia (1996–1997): The first (appointed) female head of state in Africa. Carmen Pereira of Guinea-Bissau and Sylvie Kinigi of Burundi had previously acted as head of state for 2 days and 101 days respectively.
- Mary McAleese, Ireland (1997–2011): The first time that a female president directly succeeded another female president, Mary Robinson.
- Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberia (2006–2018): Africa's first elected female head of state.
- Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir, Iceland (2009–2013): As prime minister, she was the world's first openly lesbian world leader, first female world leader to wed a same-sex partner while in office.
- Elizabeth II, United Kingdom (1952–2022): In 2015, she became the longest-reigning queen regnant and female head of state in world history. In 2016, she became the longest currently serving head of state and longest currently reigning monarch.
- Ursula von der Leyen, European Union (2019–present): The first woman to be appointed President of the European Commission.
- Kamala Harris, United States (2021–present): The first woman to be inaugurated as Vice President of the United States in American history.
- Sandra Mason, Barbados (2021–present): The first time that a country's first president was female (Barbados has not had a male president to date).
- Giorgia Meloni, Italy (2022–present): The first woman to be elected in Italy as Head of government.
Racing
- 1949: Sara Christian became the first woman to race in NASCAR.
- 1976: Janet Guthrie became the first woman to qualify and compete in the Indianapolis 500
- 1977: Janet Guthrie became the first woman to qualify and compete in the Daytona 500
- 1989: Shawna Robinson became the first woman to win a NASCAR-sanctioned stock car race, winning in the Charlotte/Daytona Dash Series at New Asheville Speedway.
- 2005: Danica Patrick became the first woman to lead the Indianapolis 500
- 2008: Danica Patrick became the first woman to win an Indy Car Series race.
- 2013: Danica Patrick became the first woman to race a complete full-time NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series schedule.
- 2013: Danica Patrick became the first woman to win a pole position for NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Series in the 2013 Daytona 500.
- 2013: Danica Patrick became the first woman to lead the Daytona 500.
Religion
- 1935: Regina Jonas first woman to be ordained as a rabbi.[85]
- 1980: Marjorie Matthews, first woman to become a bishop of the United Methodist Church.[86]
- 1989: Barbara Harris, first woman ordained a bishop in the Anglican Communion.[87]
- March 12, 1994: The first women were ordained as Church of England priests; 32 women were ordained together.[88][89]
- 2000: Denise Wyss, first woman to be ordained as a priest in the Old Catholic Church.[90]
- 2003: Alison Elliot was elected the first female moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. She chaired the General Assembly the following year.[91]
- 2006: Katharine Jefferts Schori, first female presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States.[92]
- 2008: Kay Goldsworthy, first female consecrated bishop in Australia; she was made a bishop of the Anglican Church of Australia.[93]
- 2014: Libby Lane, first female consecrated bishop in the Church of England.[94]
- 2021: Sister Nathalie Becquart, first woman appointed as undersecretary to the Synod of Bishops.[95]
Sports
- August 6, 1926: Gertrude Ederle, first woman to swim across the English Channel.[96]
- 1937: Grace Hudowalski was the ninth person and first woman to climb all 46 of the Adirondack High Peaks.[97][98][99]
- 1940s: Lois Fegan Farrell became the first female reporter to cover a professional hockey team in America.[100]
- 1960: Mary McGee becomes the first official female motorcycle racer in the United States by earning a license from the Federation Internationale de Motocyclisme. She is also the first woman to compete in the Baja 500 off-road race.
- 1960: Wilma Rudolph, track and field champion, became the first American woman to win three gold medals in the Rome Olympics.[101] She elevated women's track to a major presence in the United States. As a member of the black community, she is also regarded as a civil rights and women's rights pioneer. Along with other 1960 Olympic athletes such as Cassius Clay (who later became Muhammad Ali), Rudolph became an international star due to the first international television coverage of the Olympics that year.
- 1967: Drahşan Arda (born 1945) is a Turkish former association football referee. She was confirmed as the world's first female football referee by FIFA cockart.[102]
- November 27, 1968: Penny Ann Early, first woman to play major professional basketball, in an ABA game (Kentucky Colonels vs. Los Angeles Stars).[103][104]
- August 15, 1970: Patricia Palinkas, first woman to play professionally in an American football game.[105]
- January 1, 1972 - Women were officially welcomed into the United States Polo Association with Sue Sally Hale becoming the first female member.
- May 16, 1975: Junko Tabei, first woman to reach the summit of Mount Everest.[106]
- 1993: Lynn Hill does the first free ascent (FFA) of the 3,000-foot Nose Route on El Capitan (5.14a/b); one of the biggest prizes in big wall climbing.[107]
- 1993: Halli Reid became the first woman to swim across Lake Erie, swimming from Long Point, Ontario, to North East, Pennsylvania, in 17 hours.[108][109][110]
- 1994: Catherine Destivelle becomes the first woman to complete the winter free solo of the "north face trilogy of the Eiger, the Grandes Jorasses, and the Matterhorn.[111][112]
- October 18, 1997: Liz Heaston, first female to play and score in a college football game, kicking two extra points in the 1997 Linfield vs. Willamette football game.[113]
- December 26, 2008: Sarah Thomas, first woman to officiate an NCAA football bowl game.[114]
- 2009: Kei Taniguchi becomes the first woman to win the Piolet d'Or (Golden Ice Axe), the "Oscar" of Mountaineering.
- September 4, 2009: Carolynn Sells became the first woman to win a solo motorcycle race on the Snaefell Mountain Course in the Isle of Man when she won the Ultra Lightweight race at the 2009 Manx Grand Prix.
- May 17, 2010, Edurne Pasaban became the first woman to climb all of the fourteen eight-thousander peaks in the World.[115]
- May 4, 2012: Rosie Napravnik became the first woman jockey to win the Kentucky Oaks, riding Believe You Can.[116]
- August 9, 2012: Shannon Eastin becomes the first woman to officiate a National Football League game in a pre-season matchup between the Green Bay Packers and the San Diego Chargers.[117]
- 2012: Anna Wardley, from England, became the first person to complete a solo swim around Portsea Island recognized by the British Long Distance Swimming Association.[118]
- May 31, 2013: Lydia Nsekera became the first female FIFA Executive Committee member.[119]
- May 18, 2013: Rosie Napravnik places third in the Preakness Stakes on Mylute, making her the first woman to have ridden in all three Triple Crown races.[120] On June 8, 2013, she rode the filly Unlimited Budget to a 6th-place finish in the 2013 Belmont, becoming the first woman to ride all three Triple Crown races in the same year.[121]
- June 2013: Ashley Freiberg became the first woman to claim an overall GT3 Cup Challenge victory in North America, winning the Porsche IMSA GT3 Cup Challenge.[122]
- September 23, 2013: Sarah Outen arrived in a small harbor on the Aleutian island of Adak, and thus became the first person to row solo from Japan to Alaska, as well as the first woman to complete a mid-Pacific row from West to East.[123]
- 2013: Davie Jane Gilmour became the first woman to lead the board of directors for Little League.[124]
- 2013: UFC 157, which took place in February, featured not only the first women's fight in UFC history but also the first UFC event to be headlined by two female fighters (Ronda Rousey and Liz Carmouche).[125]
- 2013: On her fifth attempt and at the age of 64, Diana Nyad became the first person confirmed to swim from Cuba to Florida without the protection of a shark cage, swimming from Havana to Key West.[126]
- 2013: Scotland's solicitor general, Lesley Thomson, became the first woman to be appointed to Scottish Rugby's board.[127]
- 2013: Anna Wardley, from England, became the first woman to swim non-stop around the Isle of Wight.[128]
- 2013: Peggy O'Neal, an American-born lawyer, became the first woman in the Australian Football League to hold the position of club president, being chosen as the president of the Richmond Football Club.[129]
- 2013: Tracey Gaudry became the first woman appointed as vice president of the Union Cycliste Internationale.[130]
- 2013: Adel Weir, former world number 53 from South Africa, became the first ever female squash coach hire at the Qatar Squash Federation.[131]
- 2013: Maria Toor, a squash player from South Waziristan, became the winner of the first ever women's event in the Nash Cup in Canada by beating Milou van der Heijden of the Netherlands 13–11, 11–3, 11–9.[132]
- 2013: Tatyana McFadden became the first athlete to win six gold medals at a championships during the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships in Lyon. She claimed gold in every event from the 100 meters through to the 5,000 meters.[133][134]
- 2013: Tatyana McFadden won the Boston, Chicago, London, and New York marathons in 2013.[135][136][137][138] This makes her the first person – able-bodied or otherwise – to win the four major marathons in the same year.[137][138][139] She also set a new course record for the Chicago Marathon (1 hour, 42 minutes, 35 seconds).[137]
- 2013: Denise Fejtek became the first woman to complete the "Peak to Heat Double" – the combination of summiting Mount Everest and finishing the Ironman Triathlon World Championship in Kona, Hawaii. She reached the Everest Summit on May 23, 2010, and finished the Hawaii Ironman in October 2013.[140]
- 2013: Sonya Baumstein became the first person to stand-up paddleboard across the Bering Strait.[141][142]
- 2013: Meredith Novack became the fastest person, and first woman, to pull a double crossing of the Auau Channel in Hawaii.[143][144] Her time was 11 hours and one minute.[144]
- 2013: Rosie Napravnik won 17 races to become the first woman to capture the leading rider title at Keeneland.[145]
- 2013: Olivia Prokopova became the first woman to win the World Crazy Golf Championship.[146]
- 2013: Mia Hamm became the first woman inducted into the World Football Hall of Fame in Pachuca, Mexico.[147]
- 2013: Emily Bell became the first woman to kayak the length of Britain.[148]
- 2013: Casey Stoney became the first female member of the Professional Footballers' Association's management committee.[149]
- 2013: Jodi Eller became the first woman to complete the 1,515 mile Florida Circumnavigational Saltwater Paddling Trail.[150]
- 2013: On March 1, 2013, Privateers owner and president Nicole Kirnan served as the team's coach for the first time, making her the first woman to coach a professional hockey team in the United States.[151][152]
- 2014: Torah Bright became the first woman to qualify for three snowboard disciplines at a Winter Olympics, specifically snowboard cross, halfpipe and slopestyle.[153]
- 2014: Ashley Freiberg became the first woman to win an overall race in Continental Tire Challenge History when she won the Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge. Her co-driver was Shelby Blackstock.[154]
- 2014: The first women competed in ski jumping at the Olympics.[155]
- 2014: Jennifer Welter became the first female non-kicker or placekick-holder to play in a men's pro football game; she played running back for the Texas Revolution.[156]
- 2014: Abbey Holmes became the first woman to kick 100 goals in one regular season of Australian Rules football.[157][158]
- 2014: Annabel Anderson, from New Zealand, became the first woman to cross Cook Strait standing on a paddleboard.[159]
- 2014: Peta Searle became the first woman appointed as a development coach in the Australian Football League when she was chosen by St Kilda as a development coach.[160]
- 2014: 16-year-old Katie Ormerod, from Britain, became the first female snowboarder to land a backside double cork 1080.[161]
- 2014: Shelby Osborne became the first female defensive back in American football when she was drafted by Campbellsville University in Kentucky.[162]
- 2014: Amélie Mauresmo became the first woman to coach a top male tennis player (specifically, Andy Murray).[163]
- 2014: Corinne Diacre became the first woman to coach a men's professional soccer team (Clermont Foot) in a competitive match in France on August 4, 2014, her 40th birthday.[164]
- 2014: Cecilia Brækhus, from Norway, became the first Norwegian and the first woman to hold all major world championship titles in her weight division (welterweight) in boxing.[165]
- 2014: On August 15, 2014, Mo'ne Davis was the first girl in Little League World Series history to pitch a winning game for the Taney Dragons and earned the win,[166] and she was also the first girl to pitch a shutout in Little League postseason history.[167][168]
- 2014: Amy Hughes, from England, ran 53 marathons in 53 days, thus setting the record for the most marathons run on consecutive days by any person, male or female.[169]
- 2015: Jennifer Welter became the first woman hired to coach in men's pro football when the Texas Revolution of the Champions Indoor Football league announced that Welter was hired to coach linebackers and special teams.[170]
- 2019: G. S. Lakshmi, former Indian cricketer, becomes the first female ICC match referee
- 2021: First African-American female full-time NFL coach (Washington Football Team); Jennifer King.[171]
See also
- List of American women's firsts
- Women's history – Study of women's role in history
- Timeline of women in Antarctica
- Timeline of women in science – Historical timeline of women involved in natural, social and formal sciences
- First woman
Further reading
- Timeline of Women in World History
- Nine things you didn't know were invented by women BBC, 4 September 2017
References
- ↑ "Magistrate judge who broke glass ceiling to retire". Spokesman.com. August 15, 2013. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
- ↑ Devlin, Ron. "Robesonia woman recalls breaking National Guard gender barrier". Readingeagle.com. Archived from the original on October 23, 2013. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
- 1 2 Brown, Heidi (November 11, 2009). "Ann Dunwoody: Soldiering Is All I Ever Wanted To Do". Forbes. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
- 1 2 "News – New Presiding Bishop on the horizon". VirtueOnline. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
- ↑ "Welser family". Wikipedia. July 17, 2022. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Collections Online | British Museum". www.britishmuseum.org. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Anna Bissell: America's First Female CEO Sweeping Up The Competition". https (in German). Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "All about Anna". www.bissell.com. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Maggie L. Walker". Wikipedia. July 23, 2022. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Biography: Maggie Lena Walker". Biography: Maggie Lena Walker. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Helena Rubinstein | American businesswoman | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "A Brief History of Female Fortune 500 CEOs | Lead Read Today". Lead Read Today | Fisher College of Business. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Alice Walton". Forbes. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Andrea Jung". Forbes. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Martha Stewart's Net Worth Is Nothing But Very Good Things! How the Domestic Diva Made Her Fortune | Parade: Entertainment, Recipes, Health, Life, Holidays". parade.com. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "GM's Mary Barra becomes first woman to oversee the Business Roundtable". CNN. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "How Mary Barra Became the First Female CEO of an International Automaker". Hertz Travel Blog. March 2, 2018. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Mary Barra". Forbes. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ Robehmed, Natalie. "At 21, Kylie Jenner Becomes The Youngest Self-Made Billionaire Ever". Forbes. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ Peterson-Withorn, Chase. "Inside Kylie Jenner's Web Of Lies—And Why She's No Longer A Billionaire". Forbes. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ "Canada's First Female Bank CEO Leads With Young Self in Mind". Bloomberg.com. April 8, 2022. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ Benveniste, Alexis (September 15, 2020). "Kathryn Farmer becomes the first woman CEO of an American railroad". CNN. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
- ↑ Gene Nora Jessen, The Powder Puff Derby of 1929, pg xi
- ↑ Ernst Probst Königinnen der Lüfte in Frankreich 2010 Page 61 "Élisabeth Thible Die erste Passagierin einer Montgolfière Die erste Frau, die in einer Montgolfière in die Luft abhob, war die französische Opernsängerin Élisabeth Thible, nach anderer Schreibweise auch Tible."
- ↑ Justin D. Murphy -Military Aircraft, Origins To 1918 2005 – Page 6 "In February 1784, Paolo Andreani, Agostino Gerli, and Carlo Gerli ascended in a Montgolfière outside Milan. On 4 June 1784, Élisabeth Thible became the first female aeronaut when she ascended over Lyons."
- ↑ "Sophie Blanchard – The High Flying Frenchwoman Who Revealed the Thrill and Danger of Ballooning | Past Imperfect". Blogs.smithsonianmag.com. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
- ↑ "This Week in History: The World's First Female Pilot Licensed | Golden Gazette News & This Day in History". Goldenagestories.com. February 29, 2012. Archived from the original on September 6, 2013. Retrieved September 6, 2013.
- ↑ Lewis (1964), p. 140
- ↑ McIlwaine, Eddie (August 12, 2010). "Journalist, photographer, crackshot and the first woman to fly an aeroplane ... the amazing Lilian Bland". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
- ↑ "First Woman to Fly the English Channel, 1912". Retrieved March 14, 2015.
- ↑ "Women Combat Pilots of WW1". Monash University. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
Princess Eugenie M. Shakhovskaya was Russia's first woman military pilot. Served with the 1st Field Air Squadron. Unknown if she actually flew any combat missions, and she was ultimately charged with treason and attempting to flee to enemy lines. Sentenced to death by firing squad, sentence commuted to life imprisonment by the Tsar, freed during the Revolution, became chief executioner for Gen. Tchecka and drug addict, shot one of her assistants in a narcotic delerium and was herself shot.
- ↑ "300 Women who changed the world". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
In Russia, Princess Eugenie Shakhovskaya is the first female military pilot. She flies reconnaissance missions.
- ↑ "1915 - First woman pilot in combat missions as a bomber pilot - Marie Marvingt (France)". Centennial of Women Pilots. Archived from the original on January 11, 2015. Retrieved January 10, 2015.
In 1915, Marvingt became the first woman in the world to fly combat missions when she became a volunteer pilot flying bombing missions over German-held territory and she received the Croix de Guerre (Military Cross) for her aerial bombing of a German military base in Metz.
- ↑ Historic Wings – Online Magazine; Article on Hélène Dutrieu Coupe Femina and Marie Marvingt:, Published on December 21, 2012:
- "Hélène Dutrieu and the Coupe Femina - HistoricWings.com :: A Magazine for Aviators, Pilots and Adventurers". fly.historicwings.com. Retrieved November 11, 2017.
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