South Carolina SC - Special Women in South Carolina History
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
South Carolina – Special Women in SC History
SC Home > SC History, Genealogy Resources > Special Women in SC History
Last Name: A
| B
| C
| D
| E
| F
| G
| H
| J
| K
| L
| M
| N
| O
| P
| R
| S
| T
| V
| W
| Y
A
- Kimberly Clarice Aiken - Miss America 1994 - founder, president of HERO (Homeless Education and Resource Organization)
- Marjorie Amos-Frazier - b. 1926, Manning - first woman elected to the Charleston County Council - first female SC Public Service Commissioner
B
- Augusta Baker - 1911-1998, librarian, storyteller
– More info
– A(ugusta) Baker's Dozen: A Celebration of Stories - annual event held in Columbia
- Anna DeCosta Banks - b. 1869, d. 1930 - nursing pioneer
- Margaret Catherine (Kate) Moore Barry - Battle of Cowpens heroine
- Charlotta Spears Bass - c. 1874-1969 - newspaper publisher, Civil Rights leader, first African-American woman to run for Vice President of the United States
- Mary McLeod Bethune c. 1875-1955 - founded Bethune-Cookman College, National Council for Negro Women
– Brief biography
– Bethune-Cookman College Collection - overview of collection, Bethune, and her "head-heart-hand" educational philosphy – that is, an equal focus on job training, Christianity, and mastery of at least elementary school subjects
- Ethel Martin Bolden - d. 2002 - librarian
- Mary Musgrove Matthews Bosomworth - Coosaponakesee, Queen of the Creeks
- Gwen Bristow - b. 1903, d. 1980 - bestselling author
- Lila Mae Brock - community leader
- Maxine Brown - b. 1939 - soul singer
- Betsy Byars - b. 1928 - author - scroll down
– Betsy Byars' website
C
- Maude Callen - b. 1898, d. 1990 - nurse/midwife
- Harriet Starr Cannon - b. 1823, d. 1896 - religious leader
– More about Harriet Starr Cannon
- Sallie F. Chapin - d. 1896 - author of Fitz-Hugh St. Clair, the South Carolina Rebel Boy
- Mary Boykin Miller Chesnut - b. 1823, d.1866 - wrote a diary of southern life
– More about Mary Boykin Miller Chesnut
- Alice Childress - b. 1920, d. 1994 - writer
– More about Alice Childress
- Ada Clare - c. 1836, d. 1874 - writer, actor
- Septima Poinsette Clark c. 1898-1987 - Civil Rights leader
– More about Septima Poinsette Clark
- Queen of the Cofitachiqui - c. 1540
– de Soto's encounter with Queen of the Cofitachiqui
– More about the Cofitachiqui
- Elizabeth Boatwright Coker - b. 1908, d. 1993 - author, poet, lecturer - scroll down for biography
- Affra Harleston Coming - c. 1649-1698 - large landowner including Comingtee Plantation - Was an early settler whom fled Ireland for America in 1670 aboard the ship Carolina. Later built a house in Charleston.
- Carol Connor - b.1950, d. 2004 - first woman in South Carolina elected to the circuit court
- Margaree Seawright Crosby - b. 1941 - educator
- Ann Pamela Cunningham - b. 1816, d. 1875 - Mount Vernon Ladies Association
– Portrait - at the South Carolina State House
– Rosemont Plantation - birthplace of Ann Pamela Cunningham
D
E
F
G
- Linda Dingle Gadson - social worker, executive director of Rural Mission
- Dr. Naomi Garrett - educator
- Emily Geiger - c. 1760 - Revolutionary War courier
– Source documents on Emily Geiger
- Frances Guignard Gibbes - b. 1870, d. 1948 - first woman to attend South Carolina College (now the University of South Carolina)
– More about Frances Guignard Gibbes
- Sarah Reeve Gibbes - b. 1746, d. 1825 - guardian of several children during Revolutionary War
– Peaceful Retreat Plantation - Home of Sarah Reeve Gibbes
– Diary excerpts of Sarah Reeve Gibbes
- Leeza Gibbons - b. 1957 - entertainer
- Althea Gibson - b. 1927, d. 2003 - tennis player
– Detailed article about Althea Gibson
– More about Althea Gibson
– Tennis record of Althea Gibson
– Special recognition of Althea Gibson
- Caroline Howard Gilman - b. 1794, d. 1888 - writer
– Recollections of a Southern Matron written by Caroline Howard Gilman
- Maggie Wallace Glover - first black woman to serve in South Carolina's state senate
- Vivian Glover - b. 1947 - TV news producer, writer
- Lucile "Ludy" Ellerbe Godbold - b. 1900, d. 1981 - first olympiad from South Carolina
– More about Lucile Ellerbe Godbold - scroll down
- Janie Glymph Goree - b. 1921 - educator, SC's first African-American female mayor
- Dr. Wil Lou Gray - b. 1883, d. 1984 - educator and founder of the Wil Lou Gray Opportunity School
- Frances "Fanny" Beal Griffin - c. 1747-1799 - Revolutionary War wagon driver
- Alberta Tucker Grimes - organized first SC Head Start program
- Sarah Grimke & Angelina Grimke Weld - b. 1792, d. 1873, b. 1805, d. 1879 - activists
– More about the Grimke Sisters
– More about the Grimke Sisters with portraits
H
J
K
L
M
- Andie MacDowell - b. 1958 - actress
- Judith Giton Manigault - b. 1665, d. 1711 - one of the few women among the 160 persons who settled near present day Charleston under a grant from King Charles II of England
- Celia Mann - b. 1799, d. 1867 - freed slave and mid-wife
– More on the Mann-Simons site
- Linda Martell - b. 1946 - country-western singer
- Grace and Rachel Martin - Revolutionary War patriots
- Maria Martin - b. 1796, d.1863 - painter whose work was featured in John James Audobon's natural history books
– Lecture notes including audio about Maria Martin
- Cassandra Maxwell - d. 1974 - first African-American woman admitted to SC Bar, law professor
- Louisa S. McCord - b. 1810, d. 1879 - first president of Soldier's Relief Association
– Southern Womanhood
and Slavery - biography of Louisa S. McCord
– Woodburn Plantation - Home of Louisa S. McCord
- Catherine McKee McCottry, M.D. - b. 1921 - medical doctor
- Carrie Allen McCray - b. 1913 - author, one of the founders of SC Writers Workshop
- Nina Mae McKinney - b. 1909, d. 1967 - actress
– More about Nina Mae McKinney
– Special recognition
- Janie L. Mines - military, business, and youth leader
- Frieda Mitchell - director, United Communities for Child Development
- Penina Moise - b. 1797, d. 1880 - writer, hymnist
– More about Penina Moise
- Darla Moore - business woman, philanthropist
– More about Darla Moore
- Rebecca Brewton Motte - b. 1738, d. 1815 - patriot and owner of Fairfield Plantation
– More about Rebecca Brewton Motte
– More about Mrs. Motte during the American Revolution
N
O
- Nancy O'Dell - entertainment journalist
- Mary C. Simms Oliphant - b. 1891, d. 1988 - historian, author of SC History textbook used in 3rd grade classrooms for over 60 years
P
- Peggy Parish - b. 1927, d. 1988 - children's author
– More about Peggy Parish including list of Amelia Bedelia titles
- Mary-Louise Parker - b. 1964 - Tony Award-winning actress
- Miss James M. Perry - b. 1894, d. 1964 - first woman admitted to South Carolina Bar Association
- Julia Peterkin - b. 1880, d. 1961 - won Pulitzer Prize for literature
- Lucy Petway Holcombe Pickens - b. 1832, d. 1899 - strong Confederate supporter
– Edgewood Plantation home of Lucy Pickens - house moved to Aiken County and stands today as the Pickens-Salley House
– More about Lucy Petway Holcombe Pickens
– Lucy Petway Holcombe Pickens was the only woman to appear on Confederate currency
- Eliza Lucas Pinckney - b. 1722, d. 1793 - first to cultivate indigo on a large scale in SC
- Josephine Lyons Scott Pinckney - b. 1895, d. 1957 - author
– Eldorado - Home of Josephine Lyons Scott Pinckney
- The Pollitzer Sisters - social crusaders - they grew up in downtown Charleston at 5 Pitt Street
– Anita L. Pollitzer - b. 1894, d. 1975 - key in getting women the right to vote - recollections by close friend Georgia O'Keefe - click on links for pictures
– Collection of Anita L. Pollitzer papers
– Carrie T. Pollitzer - b. 1881, d. 1974 - worked for the co-education of the College of Charleston
– Mabel L. Pollitzer - b. 1885 , d. 1979 - helped get the first public library in Charleston - index of papers
- Elizabeth Allston Pringle - b. 1845, d. 1921 - author of A Women Rice Planter and rice grower
– Chicora Wood Plantation - Plantation of Elizabeth Allston Pringle
– White House Plantation - Plantation of Elizabeth Allston Pringle
R
S
- Marguerite Eulalie Chaffe Salley - b. 1883, d. 1975 - leader for women's rights and a pioneer in Aiken real estate
– Eulalie Salley purchased Edgewood Plantation and moved the house to Aiken County where it still stands as the Pickens-Salley House
- Dori Sanders - peach farmer, writer
– More on Dori Sanders
- Martha Schofield - b. 1839, d. 1916 - educator and founder of Schofield Normal and Industrial School
- Fouche'na Everlyne "Che" Sheppard - storyteller
- Hilla Sheriff - b. 1903, d. 1988 - public health crusader
- Modjeska Monteith Simkins - c. 1899, d. 1992 - Civil Rights leader
- Bennie Lee Sinclair - b. 1939, d. 2000 - South Carolina Poet Laureate, 1986-2000
- Marlena Smalls - founder of Hallelujah Singers and Gullah Festival, actress
- Marva Smalls - network executive
- Vertamae Smart-Grosvenor - writer, broadcaster
– NPR Biography
- Alice Ravenel Huger Smith - b. 1876, d. 1958 - renaissance artist
– More about Alice Ravenel Huger Smith
- Myrtle Hall Smith - religious singer
- Laodicea "Dicey" Langston Springfield - b. 1759, d. 1837 - Revolutionary War heroine
- Lena Jones Wade Springs - d. 1942 - first woman nominated for vice president of the United States
- Angie Stone - R&B singer
– Angie Stone's Website
- Lily Strickland - b. 1884, d. 1958 - artist, composer, writer
T
V
W
- Dr. Clemmie E. Webber - professor
- Helena Wells - b. 1757, d. 1824 - first South Carolina novelist - works include Constantia Neville
- Marjory Wentworth - b. 1958 - poet, teacher, South Carolina Poet Laureate 2003-present
– More about Marjory Wentworth
- Frances Rollin Whipper - b. 1847, d. 1901 - author - scroll down
– Used the pen name Frank A. Rollin and authored Life and Public Services of Martin R. Delany.
- Dr. Ionia R. Whipper - c. 1874-1953 - doctor and social activist, founder of the Ionia R. Whipper Home
- Honorable Lucille Simmons Whipper - activist
- Elizabeth White - b. 1893, d. 1976 - well known for her works of art including All God's Chillun' Got Wings!
– The Elizabeth White House - now Sumter Gallery of Art
- Vanna White - b. 1957 - entertainer
– More about Vanna White
- Hannah English Williams - c. 1692-1722 - naturalist, helped catalog SC's natural resources
- Juanita Willmon-Goggins - first African-American woman elected to the SC general assembly
- Kate V. Wofford b. 1894, d. 1954 - professor, expert in rural education, first female elected to public office in SC
- Sylvia Woods - b. 1926 - restauranteur - owner of Sylvia's Restaurant in New York
- Elizabeth Evelyn Wright - b. 1872, d. 1906 - founded Voorhees Normal and Industrial School
Y
- Dr. Anne Austin Young - b. 1892, d. 1989 - physician, helped deliver an estimated 11,000 babies
- Virginia Durant Young - c. b. 1842, d. 1906 - author; active in women's suffrage and temperance movements
– Portraits of Virginia Durant Young
Thanks for using SCIway.net's
special women in SC history guide!
Common misspellings: southcarolina sout souh soth suth outh so carolin carolia carolna carolina carlina caolina crolina arolina caroli carolins carlina carolinas carilina caralina corolina heros pickney pinckley pinkney ertha kit
Related search terms: s.c. carolina's famous heroes elizabeth
|
|
|
ACCOMMODATIONS
ARTS, ENTERTAINMENT
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
CITIES, TOWNS
COUNTIES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
GOVERNMENT, POLITICS
HEALTH, MEDICINE
HISTORY, GENEALOGY
HOTELS, MOTELS
JOBS
LIBRARIES, MUSEUMS
MAPS
NEW SC WEBSITES
NEWS, MEDIA
ORGANIZATIONS
PHOTO GALLERY
REAL ESTATE
RELIGION
REUNIONS
SCHOOLS, COLLEGES
SPORTS, RECREATION
STATISTICS
TRAVEL, TOURISM
WEATHER, TIDES
WEB CAMS
SCIWAY.NET HOME
|
|
|