Mary McLeod Bethune was the first African American woman to head a federal agency
The first African American woman to head a federal agency was Mary Jane McLeod The first African American woman to head a federal agency was Mary Jane McLeod
Patricia Roberts Harris, who was Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under President Jimmy Carter. She was later Secretary of Health and Human Services too.
Shirley Anita Chisholm became the first black woman elected to the United States Congress in 1968.
Hilary Clinton was the woman running in the most recent election but she dropped out and Barak Obama won who is the first black president ever.
Deborah Sampson was a black woman.
Durba Banerjee was the FIRST INDIAN WOMAN PILOT and the FIRST WOMAN to fly the A200
Established by Congress on 8 April 1912 (Stat. L., 79), the U.S. Children's Bureau became the first national agency in the world created solely to focus on the needs of children and youth. The act establishing the bureau instructed that the new agency "investigate and report . . . upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life among all classes of our people." This broad mandate marked the national government's permanent entrance into the general arena of social welfare. Julia C. Lathrop was named as the Children's Bureau chief and thereby became the first woman to head a U.S. federal agency. Along with the fight for female suffrage, women had been increasingly engaged in reform efforts for children and their families. Underscoring this important role, the first five Children's Bureau chiefs were women: Grace Abbott (1921-1934), Katharine F. Lenroot (1934-1951), Martha May Eliot (1951-1956), and Katherine B. Oettinger (1956-1969). In 1972 President Richard Nixon appointed the first man to head the agency, Edward F. Zigler, who was also the first African American Children's Bureau chief.
Mary Jane McLeod Bethune, who, in 1938 was appointed to Director of the Division of Negro Affairs, which was a branch of the National Youth Administration. The NYA was an agency that created works programs and aided youths in finding employment and furthering their education. Bethune's primary responsibility was issuing funds to black students for college.
Linda L. Baker was the first black woman accountant.
Rosemary Brown (1930-2003) was a Jamaican-Canadian legislator in the provincial government of British Columbia. In 1972, she was the first black woman to be elected to a provincial legislature, and in 1975, the first black woman to run for the leadership of a federal party in Canada.
Madam CJ Walker was the first black woman to invent the perm for women
kim Campbell
Juliette Gordon Lowe
The first black woman soccer player was named Briana Scurry. She was the goalkeeper. As of 2014, she is now retired.
My idol, Serena Williams was the first black woman to win a major tennis championship.
"A black woman can invent something for the benefit of human kind" - Bessie Blount She invented a feeding tube for amputees.
Bessie Coleman
Mary Surratt, the first woman executed by the federal government.
The first Black Miss Arkansas was Lencola Sullivan