Hetty Green was born Henrietta Robinson in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The lone woman among 19th century tycoons such as Andrew Carnegie, J.P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, she was an innovator in the field of value investing. Green believed that women should learn about bank accounts, mortgages, bonds and how interest works.
Lorraine Hansberry was born the youngest of four to Carl Hansberry and Nannie Hansberry in Chicago, IL on May 19, 1930. She became the first African American, the youngest playwright, the fifth woman to win the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for the best play of the season on April 7, 1959 for her a play A Raisin in the Sun, which addressed equal rights in work/housing, and freedom.
Mary Anning unearthed the first complete ichthyosaur fossil. She found another complete ichthyosaur in 1821, two complete plesiosaurs (1823 and 1830) and the first pterodactyl found in Britain (1828), becoming important contributions to the science of paleontology. While she was not trained as a scientist, her findings changed science.
Olive Ann Beech was born on September 25, 1903 in Waverly, Kansas to Franklin Benjamin Mellor and Susannah Miller Mellor. She was the youngest of four girls and would become the co-founder, president, and chairwoman of Beech Aircraft Corporation. Her career spanned 50 years prior to her retirement in September 1982, she was the first woman to head a major aircraft company.
Considered to be one of the first African American women to become a millionaire, Annie Turnbo developed and manufactured her own line of hair straighteners, special oils, and hair-stimulant products for African-American women. At the time of her death in 1957, Poro beauty colleges still operated in over thirty cities across the nation.