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Ada McPherson Morley

She ran the ranch and raised three children, all of whom became prominent figures in New Mexico history, including Agnes Morley Cleaveland, author of No Life for a Lady.

Agnes Morley Cleaveland

Her book No Life For a Lady, first published in 1941, is an autobiographical story of a woman's life on a turn-of-the-century ranch. The book has been an invaluable resource to subsequent generations of scholars interested in the ranching west.

Amelia Elizabeth White

Her magnificent estate on Garcia Street, now home to the School for Advanced Research (SAR), was a gathering place for Santa Fe artists, writers, and archaeologists, and White worked tirelessly to protect the heritage and improve the lives of the residents of her adopted community.

Anita Scott Coleman

An important western voice in The Harlem Renaissance, Coleman taught and published more than thirty short stories and poetry, appearing in The Competitor, Opportunity: Journal of Negro Life, and other outlets popular with Harlem Renaissance writers.

Captive Women and Children of Taos County

On the New Mexico frontier during the 17th and 18th centuries, Hispanic and Indigenous communities regularly raided each other, suffering enormous consequences. Thousands of women and children were taken captive. Most were never returned.

Carrie Wooster Tingley

Sharing a commitment to the sick and disadvantaged, she and her husband secured WPA funds and strong support from President Roosevelt to build a hospital in New Mexico for children with polio. When it opened in 1938, the Carrie Tingley Hospital for Crippled Children was a state-of-the-art facility.

Cleofas Martinez Jaramillo

As Spanish traditions began to fade in New Mexico, she wrote books to record important oral traditions in writing and founded La Sociedad Folklόrica, which today continues to preserve Spanish folklore, colcha embroidery, traditional attire, tinwork, literature, dance, music, and art.

Debbie Martinez, “La Chicanita”

One of the youngest in a musical family, she was a star of the unique Nuevo Mexico sound that started in the 1950’s. At age 12, her recording of “Una Pobre Tambien” became a hit and she toured extensively. When she lost her hearing in her 20s, she returned to school and became a lawyer for immigrants.

Dr. Annie Dodge Wauneka

Well respected within the Navajo community and on the national level for her efforts to improve healthcare on the reservation, she educated Navajos through home visits, a public health film, weekly radio programs, and collaboration with doctors on an English-Navajo dictionary of medical terms.

Dulcelina Salce Curtis

Teacher, agriculturalist, farmer, orchardist, and conservationist in flood control and surface water protection, she devoted her life to the betterment of the Corrales community, agriculture, schools, youth groups, church historical and civic programs, flood control, and politics.

Graciela Olivárez

Despite lacking a high school diploma, she was accepted to Notre Dame Law School and in 1970 became its first woman graduate. Through her work as an attorney, public servant, entrepreneur, and civil rights activist, she became one of the most notable Hispanic women in the United States.

Katherine Stinson Otero, the “Flying Schoolgirl”

One of the first American women to earn a pilot’s license and the first female skywriter, she marveled spectators, helped found the Stinson Aviation Company, designed aircraft, and operated a flight school. After setting aviation records, she went on to a successful career designing Santa Fe homes.

Ladies Auxiliary of Local 890

When a judge prohibited miners from impeding strike breakers, their mothers, wives, sisters, and daughters stood on the picket lines, risking their lives for equal pay and work conditions. The Ladies Auxiliary 890 attracted national headlines and inspired a documentary, Salt of the Earth.

María Delores Gonzáales “La Doctora”

Through her development of Spanish heritage materials, teacher training, and one-on-one work with students, she made enduring contributions that continue to help preserve the Spanish language and Hispano culture unique to New Mexico, while meeting the needs of bilingual children in our education system.

Maria Gutierrez Spencer

A bilingual student who excelled in school, she became a lifeline advocate for bilingual education and helped pioneer the field in New Mexico schools and beyond. Her revolutionary work teaching Spanish for heritage speakers became a model for programs throughout the country.

Maria Rosa Villapando

On the New Mexico frontier during the 17th and 18th centuries, Hispanic and Indigenous communities regularly raided each other, suffering enormous consequences. Thousands of women and children were taken captive. Most were never returned. Maria Rosa Villapando was one of these women.

Marjorie Bell Chambers, Ph.D.

A lifelong advocate of women’s rights, she was a national spokesperson for the Equal Rights Amendment, advisor to five U.S. Presidents and four New Mexico governors, and a leader in academia. Through education, politics, and community service, she worked tirelessly to make a positive difference in the world.

Mary Coon Walters

A transport pilot in World War II, she was the only woman in her UNM law school class when she graduated at age 40. After serving on the state Court of Appeals and as a probate judge, she became the first female New Mexico Supreme Court justice in 1984.

Myrtle Attaway Farquhar

Inducted into the Southeastern New Mexico Education Association Hall of Fame in 1969, she devoted her career to advancing opportunities for Black children through education, encouraging and inspiring her students to pursue their personal interests and achieve their educational best.

Nina Otero-Warren

A leader in New Mexico’s suffrage movement, she was active in politics and served as one of the first female Superintendents of Public Schools for Santa Fe. In 2021, the United States Mint selected her to be one of the first women in the American Women quarters series.

Peggy Pond Church

A noted author for her poetry, novels, and memoirs, she captured the unique beauty of New Mexico’s land and people, leaving a legacy in her literature that both described and shaped the culture of the state. Shortly before her death in 1986, she was named a Living Treasure of Santa Fe.

Three Fates

Progressive thinkers, intellectuals, and artists, these three women were instrumental in shaping the artistic life of Taos, individually and together. A painting by one of the women entitled “Lawrence’s Three Fates” has become emblematic of their complex relationships with each other and D.H. Lawrence.

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