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  • 50 legendary athletes who’ve changed the world of women’s sports

    Serena Williams posed with her trophy after winning the Australian Open in 2017, her final Grand Slam title.
    Serena Williams is widely regarded as one of the best female tennis players ever.

    • Interest and investment in women’s sports have been on the rise.
    • Stars like A’ja Wilson and Ilona Maher are inspiring younger generations of female athletes.
    • Katie Ledecky is the most decorated American woman in Olympic history, with 14 medals.

    Women are dominating the world’s largest athletic stages.

    At the 2024 Olympics in Paris, Katie Ledecky brought her total medal count to a record 14, Ilona Maher helped lead the US Women’s Rugby Team to its first-ever Olympic medal, and Simone Biles became the most decorated American gymnast in Olympic history.

    And now, women’s sports are continuing to reach unprecedented heights: A’ja Wilson was named WNBA MVP for the third time in her career, the Professional Women’s Hockey League is breaking attendance records in its sophomore season, and the National Women’s Soccer League just kicked off its 13th season with plans to expand.

    Recent breakthroughs in visibility, pay, and societal attitudes have helped usher female athletes and their organizations closer to the mainstream, with Deloitte predicting that women’s sports would surpass $1 billion in revenue for the first time in 2024.

    But what we’re seeing now is the result of decades of hard work by pioneering women in sports who fought to foster inclusive environments for women regardless of their race, sexuality, or socioeconomic status.

    From Althea Gibson breaking the color barrier in not just one but two sports to Megan Rapinoe leading the fight for pay equality, here are 50 legendary female athletes who’ve helped change the world of women’s sports for the better, ushering in future generations of young girls who can see their futures clearer than ever before.

    Simone Biles

    Simone Biles poses with her gold medal and holds a silver necklace with a goat charm after the Artistic Gymnastics Women's All-Around Final medal ceremony.
    Biles is widely considered the greatest gymnast of all time.

    In 2016, American gymnast Simone Biles competed in her first Olympics, winning the individual all-around, team all-around, vault, floor, and balance beam gold medals.

    She famously struggled with “the twisties” — a phenomenon that throws off a gymnast’s balance — during the Tokyo Olympics and catalyzed a larger conversation around self-advocacy and mental health in athletics. Despite the struggle, Biles still walked away from the competition with a silver medal in the team all-around competition and a bronze on the balance beam.

    In Paris, Biles reminded everyone why she’s the greatest gymnast of all time, as she became the first American woman to win gold in the Olympic individual all-around competition twice. She also brought home gold medals for the team all-around and vault, as well as a silver medal on the floor.

    In addition to the Olympics, Biles is a six-time World all-around champion, with three consecutive victories from 2013-15, then in 2018, 2019, and 2023.

    With 11 Olympic and 30 World Championships medals, she is the most decorated gymnast in history.

    Sunisa ‘Suni’ Lee

    Sunisa Lee smiled and saluted after finishing her floor routine during the Artistic Gymnastics Team Final. She wore a bedazzled leotard that resembled the US flag.
    Lee is the first Hmong-American to win the Olympic gymnastics all-around title.

    Biles’ two-time Olympic teammate, Sunisa “Suni” Lee, also made history as the first Hmong-American to win the Olympic all-around title in Tokyo when she was just 18 years old.

    That same Olympics, Lee brought home a silver medal in the team all-around competition and a bronze medal on the uneven bars.

    After Tokyo, she continued her gymnastics career at Auburn University. However, she was forced to stop training in the spring of 2023 as a result of two kidney diseases.

    She was able to navigate her diagnoses to return to the sport at the highest level for the 2024 Olympics in Paris, where she finished with a bronze medal on the uneven bars, a gold medal in the team all-around final, and another bronze in the individual all-around competition to bring her total medal count to six, making her tied with Aly Raisman for third-most career medals by a female Olympic gymnast.

    Katie Ledecky

    Katie Ledecky posed in front of a brick red background with her two gold, one silver medal, and one bronze medal from the 2024 Olympics.
    Katie Ledecky won four medals in Paris to become the most decorated American woman in Olympic history.

    American swimmer Katie Ledecky has won nine Olympic gold medals and 21 world championship gold medals, both of which are records among female swimmers. She currently holds the world record in women’s 800-meter and 1,500-meter freestyle short- and long-course races.

    Ledecky made her international debut at the 2012 Olympics in London at 15 years old and surprised everyone when she won the gold medal in women’s 800-meter freestyle, becoming the youngest ever to win.

    Four years later, she finished the 2016 Olympics with four gold medals, one silver medal, and two world records. In 2020, she added two more golds and two silvers at the Tokyo Olympics; and in 2024, she completed her run in Paris by adding four more medals to her count, for a total of 14 Olympic medals — the most of any American woman.

    She has broken more than a dozen world records throughout her career and is widely considered one of the most dominant swimmers alive.

    Wilma Rudolph

    A black-and-white photo of Wilma Rudolph posing with her three gold medals from the 1960 Olympics. She's wearing one and holding the other two in each hand.
    Wilma Rudolph was the fastest woman in the world at the 1960 Olympics.

    Sprinter Wilma Rudolph was the first American woman to win three gold medals in a single Olympics. She overcame the loss of strength in her left leg and foot, caused by polio at 5 years old, to become the fastest woman in the world at the 1960 Olympics. She held the records for the 100 meters at 11.2 seconds and 200 meters at 22.9 seconds.

    Because of worldwide television coverage throughout the 1960 Olympics, Rudolph gained international recognition and became an iconic figure for Black and female athletes.

    During the peak of the civil rights movement, Rudolph was a trailblazer for the rights of Black women. She broke the gender barrier of all-male events in track and field, and her legacy lives on today. 

    Billie Jean King

    A profile of Billie Jean King from 1973.
    Billie Jean King is the former No. 1 tennis player in the world and a longtime advocate of equal pay and LGBTQ+ rights.

    Former World No. 1 professional tennis player Billie Jean King is regarded as one of the greatest women’s tennis players of all time. She won 39 Grand Slam titles: 12 in singles, 16 in women’s doubles, and 11 in mixed doubles. 

    King is an advocate for gender equality and social justice. She campaigned for equal pay when the Open Era began in 1968 and became the first female athlete to earn over $100,000 in prize money in 1971. Two years later, she beat tennis superstar Bobby Riggs in “The Battle of the Sexes” and helped found the Women’s Tennis Association, both of which contributed to her legacy of making tennis among the most equitable professional sports on the planet.

    Her fight for equity in sports has continued ever since. Today, King remains a primary advocate for women as the founder of the Women’s Sports Foundation.

    She’s also a firm proponent of LGBTQ+ equality. In 1981, she was outed as having been in a long-term relationship with a woman. King and Ilana Kloss, her partner of 40+ years, got married in 2018.

    Lindsey Vonn

    Lindsey Vonn skiing.
    Lindsey Vonn is one of the greatest skiers of all time.

    Lindsey Vonn won three consecutive titles at the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup from 2008 to 2010 and another in 2012. She was also the first American woman to win a gold medal in the downhill, which she did at the 2010 Winter Olympics.

    Vonn won her 20th World Cup crystal globe title in 2016 to surpass Ingemar Stenmark for the overall record for men or women. She is also one of six women to win a World Cup race in all five disciplines of alpine skiing.

    With three Olympic medals, four World Cup titles, 82 World Cup victories, and two World Championship gold medals to her name, Vonn is widely considered one of the greatest skiers of all time.

    After missing parts of several seasons as a result of injuries, Vonn ultimately opted to retire from the sport in 2019.

    Aly Raisman

    Aly Raisman.
    Aly Raisman is the third-most decorated American gymnast and a strong advocate for survivors of sexual abuse.

    Aly Raisman is a two-time Olympic gymnast. In 2012, she won the team gold medal, floor gold medal, and bronze medal on balance beam with Team USA. She took home the individual all-around silver medal and floor silver medal in 2016, as well as another team gold medal to become the third-most decorated American gymnast in Olympic history.

    As accomplished as she is in the gym, Raisman may be even better known for her work in the fight to end sexual abuse. She was among hundreds of gymnasts who came forward to speak out against former USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar.

    Since Nassar’s trial, during which she delivered a blistering speech, she has used her platform to focus on fixing USA Gymnastics and fighting for justice for all victims of sexual abuse.

    Alex Morgan

    Alex Morgan held a microphone and a bouquet of flowers while speaking to the crowd after a San Diego Wave FC game in September 2024.
    Two-time World Cup champion Alex Morgan was a key figure in the USWNT’s fight for equal pay.

    Alex Morgan is a United States Women’s Soccer Team legend who won her second consecutive FIFA World Cup championship in 2019. She made her World Cup debut in 2011, where the team won silver.

    In 2012, Morgan recorded 28 goals and 21 assists to become the second American woman to score 20 goals and 20 assists in the same calendar year, alongside Mia Hamm. She was also the sixth and youngest US player to score 20 goals in a single year.

    Throughout her national team career, Morgan accumulated more than 200 caps and 120 goals. She was also one of the first women’s soccer players to appear on the cover of a FIFA video game.

    Off the field, she was crucial to the USWNT’s successful fight for equal pay, which involved a lengthy lawsuit against the US Soccer Federation. She was also instrumental in the National Women’s Soccer League’s reckoning over pervasive emotional, mental, and sexual abuse.

    Morgan announced her retirement from the sport in September 2024.

    Gymnast Nastia Liukin won five medals at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

    Nastia Liukin posed on the Emmys red carpet in 2017.
    Gymnast Nastia Liukin won five medals at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

    Nastia Liukin was a pivotal member of the US gymnastics team during three World Championships and the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. She won the 2008 Olympic all-around, as well as five Olympic medals, which tied the record for most medals won by an American gymnast in a single non-boycotted Olympic Games. (Simone Biles later tied the record.)

    A four-time all-around US national champion, Liukin’s strongest events were the uneven bars and balance beam. She attempted a comeback in 2011 with hopes of making the 2012 Olympic team, but fell several times during the Olympic Trials and retired in 2012. 

    Since then, she has worked as a gymnastics analyst for NBC Sports. She also hosts an annual Nastia Liukin Cup to support the growth of gymnastics.

    Serena Williams is widely regarded as one of the best female tennis players ever.

    Serena Williams posed with her trophy after winning the Australian Open in 2017, her final Grand Slam title.
    Serena Williams is widely regarded as one of the best female tennis players ever.

    Serena Williams is widely regarded as the best female tennis player of the Open Era. She is tied for the third-most Grand Slam titles in singles, doubles, and mixed doubles on the all-time list and is second in the Open Era.

    Her 23 Grand Slam singles titles are also a record for the most tournament wins in the Open Era and just one shy of Margaret Court’s all-time record.

    She and her sister, fellow tennis legend Venus Williams, are considered pioneers of a new era for women in tennis that focuses on power. And throughout her career, she was often among the only women on the list of the world’s highest-paid athletes, according to Forbes.

    In 2022, Williams announced her retirement from tennis, playing her final match in the third round of that year’s US Open.

    Off the court, Williams has been outspoken about the state of Black maternal healthcare, sharing her own near-death experience after giving birth to her first daughter in 2017.

    She’s also been building her portfolio in venture capital; in an email to Business Insider in 2023, Williams wrote, “Coming from a sports background and a sport that was an individual one, I’ve developed a habit of trusting my gut. So when it came to venture and founders, it wasn’t hard to apply it. I also know what it looks like to be incredibly talented and not given the exposure because of the color of your skin. It’s another reason I love investing — to close that gap.”

    Danica Patrick

    Danica Patrick.
    In 2008, Danica Patrick became the first woman to win an IndyCar Series race.

    Danica Patrick is the most successful woman in the history of American open-wheel racing. She accomplished multiple firsts for women in the sport, including being the first woman to win an IndyCar Series race at the 2008 Indy Japan 300. 

    Patrick also had the highest finish by a woman in the Indianapolis 500 (third) and Daytona 500 (eighth). She did not endure as much success as many expected, but she had an undeniable impact on the sport.

    In a predominantly male industry, Patrick is often credited for inspiring more women to take part in auto racing and motorsports.

    Ronda Rousey

    Ronda Rousey during a fight.
    Ronda Rousey was the first American woman to win an Olympic medal for judo.

    Ronda Rousey is a retired professional wrestler and mixed martial artist. She is considered to be one of the greatest female athletes as the only woman to win both a UFC and WWE championship. She is also one of the only women to headline a pay-per-view event.

    At the 2008 Olympics, Rousey won a bronze medal in judo, becoming the first American woman ever to do so. She took part in the first UFC women’s fight, successfully defending her title against Liza Carmouche.

    Rousey was the first female fighter to be inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame in 2018. That same year, Rousey signed a contract with WWE and began professional wrestling.

    Outside the ring, Rousey has written an autobiography and starred in several films, including “Furious 7” and “Mile 22.”

    She left the WWE in 2023.

    Maria Sharapova

    Maria Sharapova raising her hand to her mouth to blow a kiss to the crowd.
    Maria Sharapova won 36 singles, including five Grand Slams, throughout her career.

    Maria Sharapova is a retired professional tennis player and the only Russian to have a career Grand Slam. When she was 18 years old, Sharapova was ranked world No. 1 and was the first female from Russia to do so. 

    Sharapova accumulated 36 singles titles and five Grand Slam titles, and is considered to be one of the best tennis players to play the game. 

    She also has been involved in various humanitarian endeavors, including being a United Nations Goodwill Ambassador focused on the Chernobyl Recovery and Development. She also launched a program in 2018 to mentor women entrepreneurs.

    Sharapova announced her retirement from tennis in February 2020.

    Missy Franklin

    Missy Franklin posed with her gold medal for the women's 100m backstroke at the 2012 Olympics in London.
    Missy Franklin won four gold medals at the London Olympics when she was only 17.

    At just 17 years old, Missy Franklin became the first American woman to win four gold medals in a single Olympics in any sport during the 2012 London Olympics. She quickly captivated America’s attention and went on to win six gold medals at the 2013 World Aquatics Championship.

    Franklin previously held the record at the World Aquatics Championships with 11 gold medals, but Katie Ledecky broke it in 2017 with 14.

    If not for chronic pain cutting Franklin’s career short, many believed she would go on to dominate women’s swimming the way Michael Phelps dominated men’s. In December 2018, Franklin announced her retirement due to shoulder issues, but she will always be remembered as one of the greats in women’s swimming.

    Megan Rapinoe

    Megan Rapinoe smiled and raised her arms after winning the FIFA Women's World Cup in 2019. She held the trophy in one hand.
    USWNT legend Megan Rapinoe has been an influential figure in women’s sports both on and off the field.

    Megan Rapinoe has been one of the most recognizable faces on the US Women’s National Soccer Team for more than a decade.

    She put on a dominant performance to lead the Stars and Stripes to a second consecutive FIFA Women’s World Cup championship in 2019, scoring six goals to earn the Golden Boot and Golden Ball Awards. All the while, she was publicly feuding with then-US President Donald Trump.

    Rapinoe was also on the 2015 team that won the World Cup, as well as the 2012 Olympic team, which took home gold.

    Rapinoe has made noise both on and off the field as an advocate for numerous LGBTQ+ organizations, women in sports, and other social justice issues.

    She retired from club and country in 2023.

    Steffi Graf

    Steffi Graf waving to the crowd.
    Tennis legend Steffi Graf held the world’s No. 1 ranking for 377 days, longer than any other player, male or female.

    Former German tennis player Steffi Graf is the only tennis player to win each Grand Slam tournament at least four times and achieve the Golden Slam by winning all four Grand Slam singles titles and the Olympic gold medal in the same calendar year. She won 22 Grand Slam singles titles overall.

    She was ranked world No. 1 for 377 weeks by the Women’s Tennis Association, which is the longest for any player, male or female, since rankings began being issued. 

    Along with Margaret Court, the two are the only players to win three Grand Slam tournaments in a calendar year five times, among male and female players. 

    Her aggressive game has been noted as the starting point for today’s modern style of play. She is regarded as the greatest female tennis player of all time by many, including by tennis great Billie Jean King. She is credited with helping to increase the sport’s popularity in Germany, where it has remained popular since. 

    Graf retired in 1999 and was inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame in 2004.

    Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings

    Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings cheering together.
    Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings are one of beach volleyball’s most iconic duos.

    Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings are considered the greatest beach volleyball team of all-time. They won three consecutive Olympic gold medals from 2004 to 2012. They also won 21 consecutive Olympic matches and only lost one set during their 11-year run. 

    May-Treanor announced her retirement following her and Walsh Jennings’ third gold medal at the 2012 London Olympics. She was inducted into the Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2016.

    Walsh Jennings began playing with former teammate April Ross in 2013 after May-Treanor’s retirement. The two won the bronze medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics, making her the most decorated beach volleyball Olympian, male or female, in history.

    Diana Taurasi

    Diana Taurasi, #3 of the Phoenix Mercury, with the ball.
    Diana Taurasi won an NCAA championship, a WNBA championship, and an Olympic gold medal.

    Recently retired Diana Taurasi is the all-time leading scorer in the WNBA. Since being drafted No. 1 overall by the Phoenix Mercury in 2004, she won the WNBA Rookie of the Year Award, three WNBA championships, and five Olympic gold medals from 2004-2020.

    She also won the WNBA MVP Award in 2009, two WNBA Finals MVP Awards (2009, 2014), and was selected to 11 WNBA All-Star teams. She is also one of just a handful of women who have won an Olympic gold medal, an NCAA championship, and a WNBA championship.

    Taurasi is considered one of the greatest women to play basketball, with late legend Kobe Bryant dubbing her the “White Mamba.”

    Larisa Latynina

    Larisa Latynina competing.
    Larisa Latynina holds the record for most Olympic medals won by a gymnast.

    Larisa Latynina holds the record for most Olympic medals by any gymnast, male or female, with 18, nine of which were gold.

    Latynina retired in 1966 but went on to coach the Soviet’s women’s gymnastics team for the 1968-1976 Olympics. She is often regarded with the establishment of the Soviet Union’s dominance in gymnastics.

    Jackie Joyner-Kersee

    Jackie Joyner-Kersee posed on the podium after winning the bronze medal in the women's long jump at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.
    Jackie Joyner-Kersee is an accomplished track-and-field athlete and activist.

    One of the greatest American track-and-field athletes of all time, Jackie Joyner-Kersee was known for the heptathlon (where athletes compete in seven different track and field events in two days) and long jump. Over four Olympic Games, she took home three gold, one silver, and two bronze medals in the two events.

    Joyner-Kersee established the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Foundation in 1988, which is dedicated to providing youth, adults, and families with athletic lessons and resources to improve their quality of life. She also is one of 11 athletes who founded Athletes for Hope, which helps professional athletes take part in charity events and volunteering.

    She is also an activist for children’s education, racial equality, and women’s rights.

    Candace Parker

    Candace Parker preparing to shoot.
    Candace Parker was the No. 1 pick in the 2008 WNBA Draft.

    Candace Parker was the first woman to dunk in an NCAA tournament game. Drafted by the Los Angeles Sparks No. 1 overall in 2008, she became the second player to dunk in a WNBA game in June 2008 and went on to become the league’s only player to earn Rookie of the Year and WNBA MVP honors in the same season.

    Parker was named WNBA Finals MVP after leading the Sparks to the 2016 WNBA championship alongside Alana Beard and Nneka Ogwumike. She was named league MVP again in 2013 and Defensive Player of the Year in 2020. 

    After more than a decade in Los Angeles, Parker made a blockbuster free agency move to join her hometown Chicago Sky in 2021. She led the franchise to its first-ever WNBA title that same year.

    Parker retired from the sport in the spring of 2024 and was named president of Adidas Women’s Basketball. She also serves as an NBA analyst and commentator.

    Nadia Comaneci

    Nadia Comaeci during an uneven bars routine at the 1976 Olympics.
    Nadia Comaneci helped popularize the sport of gymnastics.

    Nadia Comaneci competed during the 1976 and 1980 Summer Olympics in gymnastics and is credited with bringing attention to the sport worldwide. From Romania, she won five gold medals in individual events and was the first to be awarded a perfect 10 score. 

    In two Olympics, Comaneci had nine perfect 10s. She won nine Olympic medals and four World Artistic Gymnastics Championship medals. 

    Now retired, Comaneci has remained a prominent figure in gymnastics. She also is involved in fundraising for various different charities.

    Martina Navratilova

    Martina Navratilova during a tennis match.
    Martina Navratilova holds the record for the longest winning streak in tennis history.

    Martina Navratilova is considered to be one of the best female tennis players in history. She is the only player to be ranked No. 1 in singles (332 weeks) and doubles (237 weeks) for more than 200 weeks. She won 18 Grand Slam singles titles, a record 31 major women’s doubles titles, and 10 major mixed doubles titles.

    She won the Wimbledon women’s singles title a record nine times, including six consecutive titles, which is regarded as the best performance by a player at a major event.

    Navratilova is one of only three women to achieve a Career Grand Slam in women’s singles and doubles, and mixed doubles, which consists of every senior Grand Slam title. Over five seasons from 1982-86, she won 428 out of 442 singles matches. She owns the best win-loss record in the Open Era going 86-1, as well as the longest winning streak with 74 consecutive wins.

    Navratilova came out as bisexual in 1981 and has been an activist for gay rights, along with animal rights and underprivileged children. However, she has also been criticized for making “transphobic” comments

    Marta

    Marta held her hands in a heart for fans after the women's gold medal match between Brazil and the United States at the 2024 Olympics.
    Marta is one of the best female soccer players of all time.

    Marta Vieira da Silva, more commonly known as Marta, was the first soccer player to ever score at five FIFA World Cups, men’s or women’s. Her 17 total goals set the all-time record for most goals scored at the tournament by any player.

    Marta has been named FIFA World Player of the Year six times, including five consecutive from 2006 to 2010, and is regarded as one of the best female players of all-time. She won a silver medal at the 2004, 2008, and 2024 Olympics, as well as the Golden Ball and Golden Boot at the 2007 Women’s World Cup. 

    The Brazilian is highly regarded as a prolific scorer and leader who excels as a creative playmaker.

    Lexi Thompson

    Lexi Thompson competing at the US Open.
    At 16, Lexi Thompson became the youngest winner of an LPGA tournament.

    Lexi Thompson was the youngest golfer to qualify to play in the US Women’s Open at 12 years old. At 15, she turned professional and a year later set a new record as the youngest-ever winner of an LPGA tournament. She was 16 years, seven months, and eight days old. 

    Thompson won her first major championships at 19 years, 1 month, and 27 days old, making her the second-youngest LPGA golfer to win a major at the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship.

    She has accumulated 11 LPGA Tour victories and one major.

    Nancy Lieberman

    Nancy Lieberman posed with a basketball.
    In 1996, Nancy Lieberman was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame.

    Regarded as one of the greatest figures in American women’s basketball, Nancy Lieberman played for several different teams and leagues before being drafted No. 1 overall by the Dallas Diamonds. 

    She was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1996 and the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 1999. Lieberman played for the Phoenix Mercury in the WNBA’s inaugural year in 1997, when she was the oldest player at 39.

    In 1998, Lieberman became the general manager and head coach of the WNBA’s Detroit Shock, where she coached for three seasons. She broke her own record as the oldest player in WNBA history when she signed a seven-day contract in 2008 at 50 years old with the Shock, playing in one game.

    She moved on to become a broadcaster for the New Orleans Pelicans and is now head coach of the Power in the BIG3.

    Mia Hamm

    Mia Hamm, then #9 of the USWNT, reacted during the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup final.
    Mia Hamm helped inspire a generation of female soccer players.

    Soccer icon Mia Hamm was a member of the USWNT from 1987 to 2004, where she became a two-time Olympic gold medalist and two-time FIFA Women’s World Cup champion. During her college years, she led the University of North Carolina Tar Heels to four consecutive NCAA Division I Women’s Soccer Championships. 

    Hamm was a member of the USWNT during the 1991 inaugural Women’s World Cup in China and remained on the team for the three tournaments that followed. She was also a member of the US team during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, which was the first games that held women’s soccer as an event. 

    Hamm ranks fourth in USWNT history with 276 international caps and first in career assists with 147, NBC Sports reported. She was the first woman inducted into the World Football Hall of Fame. 

    She retired in 2004 but has inspired many in the sport, including 2019 World Cup Champion Rose Lavelle

    Abby Wambach

    Abby Wambach smiled before her last game with the USWNT in December 2015.
    Abby Wambach is the most prolific scorer in USWNT history.

    Two-time Olympic gold medalist Abby Wambach is the highest all-time goal scorer for the US Women’s National Soccer Team. Upon retiring, she held the record for most international goals among male and female players with 184.

    Wambach was a member of USWNT from 2001 to 2015, winning the 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup title. She is known for her skillful play and diving headers to score goals.

    Her equalizing header against Brazil in 2011 in the 122nd minute off a cross from Megan Rapinoe is often called one of the greatest goals in the history of the Women’s World Cup and it set a record for the latest goal ever scored.

    She was awarded the Bronze Boot and Silver Ball after the tournament. That same year, she also became the first soccer player of either gender to be named Athlete of the Year by the Associated Press. 

    Wambach retired in 2015 and is regarded as one of the best to play US soccer. She’s now a partial owner of the National Women’s Soccer League club Angel City FC.

    Mary Lou Retton

    Mary Lou Retton posed on the podium after winning gold in the women's gymnastics all-around competition at the 1984 Olympics.
    Mary Lou Retton was the first American gymnast to win gold in the all-around competition at the Olympics.

    At the boycotted 1984 Summer Olympics, Mary Lou Retton became the first-ever American woman to win the all-around gold medal in gymnastics. She won by .05 points, beating Romania’s Ecaterina Szabo. It marked the first time a female gymnast outside Eastern Europe won the individual all-around gold. 

    She also took home two silver medals and two bronze medals, helping her rise to popularity in the United States.

    Retton coined her move on the uneven bars “The Retton Flip.” The move consists of a transition from low-bar to high-bar, ending with the gymnast sitting on top of the high bar. It was removed from the Code of Points because it was a “belly beat” move, which is when the gymnast hits their hips into the low bar to gain momentum.

    Michelle Kwan

    A close-up of Michelle Kwan.
    Michelle Kwan is one of the best figure skaters in history.

    Retired American figure skater Michelle Kwan is a five-time World Champion and nine-time US champion, which ties her for the all-time National Championship record. She is a two-time Olympic medalist, winning a silver in 1998 and bronze in 2002.

    She is the most decorated figure skater in US history and is considered one of the greatest figure skaters of all time. Kwan stole the hearts of the American people to become one of the country’s most popular female athletes.

    Kwan also served as the US Ambassador to Belize from 2022 to 2025.

    Venus Williams

    Venus Williams raised her fist and smiled at a US Open match in 2017.
    Venus Williams is undefeated in women’s doubles Grand Slam titles.

    Along with her sister Serena Williams, Venus Williams is highly regarded as one of the greats of tennis. She was the first Black woman to be ranked No. 1 by the Women’s Tennis Association in the Open Era, and second all-time. 

    She has seven Grand Slam singles titles and is also unbeaten in Grand Slam Women’s doubles titles. She and Serena have 14 together.

    Williams has four Olympic gold medals, one in singles and three in women’s doubles. She also has a silver medal in mixed doubles, which ties her with Kathleen McKane Godfree for the most Olympic medals won by a male or female tennis player. She is the only tennis player to win a medal at four Olympic Games.

    Following in the footsteps of Billie Jean King, Williams fought for equal prize money at Wimbledon, gaining the backing of then-British Prime Minister Tony Blair and winning the fight.

    Maya Moore

    Maya Moore, then #23 of the Minnesota Lynx, posed with a basketball for a media day press shot in 2014.
    In 2014, Maya Moore was named MVP of the WNBA.

    WNBA star Maya Moore was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2011 WNBA Draft by the Minnesota Lynx after leading the University of Connecticut women’s basketball team to back-to-back national championships. Her standout career with the Huskies included an unbeaten streak of 90 games, which is an NCAA record among men’s and women’s teams.

    Moore won four WNBA titles with the Minnesota Lynx, as well as the WNBA Rookie of the Year Award. She also won MVP in 2014. She won titles in the Spanish league, EuroLeague, and Chinese League.

    In February 2019, Moore penned an article for The Player’s Tribune saying that she would take a sabbatical for the 2019 season to focus on family and ministry dreams. She has since fought for social justice reform, specifically in the realm of wrongful convictions. Moore helped free her now-husband, Jonathan Irons, after 23 years of wrongful imprisonment.

    She officially retired from the WNBA in 2023, and co-wrote the memoir “Love and Justice” with Irons, Time magazine reported.

    Babe Didrikson Zaharias

    Babe Didrikson Zaharias competing in a track and field event.
    Babe Didrikson Zaharias was a multi-sport athlete who also advocated for cancer awareness.

    Multi-sport American athlete Babe Didrikson Zaharias won two gold medals in track and field at the 1932 Olympics and won 10 LPGA major championships. She also participated in basketball, baseball, softball, diving, roller-skating, and bowling.

    Zaharias was known for breaking the boundaries of what it meant to be a woman in her time.

    She was inducted into the LPGA Hall of Fame in 1951 and the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 1976. 

    Zaharias was diagnosed with colon cancer in 1953 and she became known as an advocate for cancer awareness, using her popularity to raise money for her cancer fund. (At the time, many Americans refused to seek treatment for cancer.)

    She died three years later in 1956 at just 45 years old.

    Sheryl Swoopes

    Sheryl Swoopes, then #22 of the Houston Comets, prepared to take a shot during a 2000 game against the Los Angeles Sparks.
    Sheryl Swoopes was a three-time WNBA MVP.

    Sheryl Swoopes was the first player to sign a WNBA contract, and for good reason; she was a generational talent who went on to win three WNBA MVP awards. She won three Olympic gold medals with Team USA and was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2017. 

    Swoopes was the first WNBA player to have a triple-double in the regular season and playoffs. She was also the first women’s basketball player to have a Nike shoe named after her, called the Air Swoopes.

    In 2005, she publicly announced that she’s gay, becoming one of the highest-profile athletes to do so. Since retiring from the sport, Swoopes has coached various women’s basketball programs.

    Cheryl Miller

    Cheryl Miller in USC Basketball gear.
    Basketball player Cheryl Miller still holds numerous records at the University of Southern California.

    Gold medalist and University of Southern California women’s basketball star Cheryl Miller is one of the most well-known collegiate players to ever play the game. Miller never played in the WNBA but led the USA basketball team to a gold medal during the 1984 Olympics.

    Her jersey was the first retired jersey at USC from both basketball teams. She scored 3,018 career points and had 1,534 career rebounds. She helped the Trojans to two NCAA titles, winning NCAA Tournament MVP both seasons.

    Miller still holds multiple records at USC, including career scoring, scoring average, rebounds, rebound average, and free throws. After playing, she worked as a coach and sportscaster.

    In January 2024, USC reported that she was one of 10 Californians chosen to be inducted to the California Hall of Fame.

    Nancy Lopez

    Nancy Lopez.
    Nancy Lopez was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1987.

    Golf great Nancy Lopez left college during her sophomore year to turn professional in 1977. She won nine tournaments during her first full season on the LPGA Tour in 1978.

    She was named LPGA Rookie of the Year and LPGA Player of the Year, and won the Vare trophy, which is given to the player with the lowest-scoring average for the season. She was the only woman to achieve all three in the same season.

    From the late 1970s to late 1980s, Lopez was the game’s best player, winning three majors, all at the LPGA Championship. She never won the US Women’s Open, but finished second four times.

    In 1997, Lopez became the first woman to score under 70 for all four rounds but finished second to Alison Nicholas. She was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1987.

    Lisa Leslie

    Lisa Leslie held the WNBA Championship trophy and kissed the Finals MVP trophy.
    Lisa Leslie was the first player to dunk in a WNBA game.

    Lisa Leslie is a three-time WNBA MVP and a four-time Olympic gold medalist. She was drafted No. 7 overall in the 1997 inaugural WNBA draft and went on to win two WNBA championships with the Los Angeles Sparks. She was also selected as a WNBA All-Star eight times. 

    Leslie was the first player to dunk in a WNBA game and is widely considered one of the greatest in the league’s history.

    Since her retirement in 2009, she has served as a sports commentator in several sports networks and in 2018 joined Fox Sports Florida as a studio analyst on Orlando Magic broadcasts. She currently coaches the Triplets in the BIG3.

    Gabby Douglas

    Gabby Douglas smiling and holding her Olympic gold medal in 2012.
    In 2012, Gabby Douglas became the first Black woman to win gold in the all-around competition at the Olympics.

    At the 2012 London Games, then-16-year-old Gabby Douglas made history as the first Black woman to win gold in the all-round Olympic gymnastics competition. Known with her teammates as the “Fierce Five,” Douglas also became the first US gymnast to win gold in both the all-around and team titles at the same Olympic Games.

    She returned to Olympic competition in 2016 alongside 2012 Olympic teammate Aly Raisman, winning the team gold medal alongside Simone Biles, Madison Kocian, and Laurie Hernandez, dubbed the “Final Five.”

    In 2017, Business Insider reported that Douglas was facing swift criticism for a deleted tweet that appeared to victim-blame Raisman, who’d recently spoken out about sexual abuse. She later apologized, writing that she was “deeply sorry for coming off like I don’t stand alongside my teammates.”

    In July 2023, Douglas announced her intent to return to the Olympics after an eight-year hiatus, but a foot injury during practice in May 2024 forced her to drop out of the running, the Olympics reported.

    Ons Jabeur

    Ons Jabeur attends the 2024 Desert Smash charity event to benefit the Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project.
    Ons Jabeur is the first African and Arab woman to reach the final of Wimbledon.

    Ons Jabeur is a professional tennis player from Tunisia who made history in 2022 when she became the first African and Arab woman in the Open Era to reach the final of a Grand Slam, finishing as the runner up at Wimbledon, the WTA reported.

    Jabeur had previously made history in 2021 when she became the first Arab woman to win a WTA title. 

    CNN reported that at a press conference at the 2022 US Open, Jabeur told media, “I hope I can send a powerful message that if I made it here, everybody can make it here. Especially for women from different countries, especially from women from the Middle East, from the Arab world.”

    Jabeur’s success has been highly influential in attracting young girls in Tunisia to tennis, with CNN noting that “membership in the Tunisian Tennis Federation has grown and the number of young Tunisians showing interest in the sport has climbed with Jabeur’s success.”

    As of March 2025, she is ranked the No. 30 player in the world and has been to three Grand Slam finals.

    Briana Scurry

    Briana Scurry in goal during the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup Semifinals.
    Briana Scurry is one of the best goalkeepers in USWNT history, competing in four World Cups and two Olympics.

    When the public remembers the 1999 Women’s World Cup final, they often envision Brandi Chastain celebrating on the ground, jersey in hand. What they may forget, though, was the incredible save made by legendary USWNT goalkeeper Briana Scurry that allowed the US to raise the trophy for their second World Cup title.

    Scurry played 173 full international games throughout her career, including four World Cups and two Olympics, in which the US brought home gold medals in both; giving her the second most appearances of any female goalkeeper.

    In addition to being the only Black starter for the 1999 Women’s World Cup final, Scurry was also one of the first out lesbians in professional soccer, the National Museum of African American History reported.

    She was elected to the FIFA Hall of Fame in 2010 and the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 2017, becoming the first Black woman and first female goalkeeper to receive the honor.

    Scurry now works as an influential speaker, focusing on advocating for concussion awareness, having suffered a career-ending concussion in 2010.

    Tessa Virtue

    Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir celebrate winning the gold medal at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
    Tessa Virtue is one of the most awarded figure skaters in history.

    Tessa Virtue and her skating partner Scott Moir are widely regarded as one of the best ice-dancing teams of all time. By 2025, their Olympic-winning 2018 routine to “Moulin Rouge” has been viewed more than 24 million times on the Olympic YouTube channel, demonstrating the captivating nature of their performances that have resonated with audiences for years.

    In the ice-dancing event, the duo won gold at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, silver in 2014 at the Sochi Games, and gold again in 2018 in Pyeongchang. They also have won two team medals, making them the first figure skaters to own five career Olympic medals, the Olympics reported.

    Amy Purdy

    Amy Purdy attends the 11th Annual Gold Meets Golden Celebration.
    Paralympic snowboarder Amy Purdy has helped increase representation for athletes with disabilities.

    At just 19 years old, Amy Purdy lost both legs below the knee, her spleen, and hearing in her left ear after contracting bacterial meningitis.

    Despite the immense change, she told NIH MedlinePlus Magazine in 2023 that “mentally, I adjusted right away to my new reality.” Purdy returned to her love of snowboarding just seven months later, and went on to compete at the 2014 Paralympic Games in 2014 in Sochi, bringing home the bronze medal for snowboard-cross standing, an event the International Paralympic Committee said she was “instrumental” in getting included in the games.

    After her Olympic success, Purdy returned to the US to compete as the first double amputee on “Dancing With the Stars,” placing second with her partner Derek Hough. She also released her New York Times bestselling memoir, “On My Own Two Feet: From Losing My Legs To Learning The Dance Of Life,” that same year.

    Purdy returned to Olympic competition in 2018, competing in the Paralympic Winter Games in Pyeongchang and winning a silver and bronze medal in the women’s snowboard cross SB-LL1 and women’s banked slalom SB-LL1 events, respectively.

    Since retiring from the sport in 2022, Purdy has continued to work with her non-profit, Adaptive Action Sports, which she founded in 2005 with her now-husband Daniel Gale. The group works to help individuals with physical disabilities who want to get involved in action sports, art, or music.

    When NIH MedlinePlus Magazine asked what the future holds for her, Purdy said that she wants to help others live a life as accomplished and fulfilled as hers. “I’m at the beginning of writing my second book, and I have plans to help people find their voice and use their own stories to impact the world,” she said.

    Naomi Osaka

    Naomi Osaka celebrates her win in the first round of the Miami Open in 2024.
    Former tennis world No. 1 Naomi Osaka has been an influential figure on and off the court.

    Naomi Osaka is a Japanese-American tennis player known both for her abilities on the court and her advocacy of mental health and social justice issues.

    She has previously held the No. 1 world tennis ranking, becoming the first Asian player to do so in the singles category. Osaka is a four-time Grand Slam singles champion, with two wins at both the Australian and US Opens, as well as seven WTA titles.

    In 2020, she was an influential public figure during the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement, penning an essay for Esquire, attending protests, and even withdrawing from the Western & Southern Open in August after the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin. She posted her decision on Instagram, writing, “Before I am an athlete, I am a black woman. And as a black woman I feel as though there are much more important matters at hand that need immediate attention, rather than watching me play tennis.”

    Osaka won that year’s US Open wearing masks with a different name of a victim of police brutality for each match, a gesture that caught the attention of the families of Ahmaud Arbery and Tamir Rice, who thanked her for remembering their loved ones, The New York Times reported.

    She has also been honest about her experiences with depression as an athlete, telling reporters after a loss in 2021’s US Open, “I feel like for me recently when I win, I don’t feel happy. I feel more like a relief. And then when I lose, I feel very sad. I don’t think that’s normal,” NPR reported.

    Osaka took an extended break from playing and gave birth to her daughter in 2023. She has since returned to the court with recent appearances at the US Open, China Open, and Australian Open.

    Allyson Felix

    Allyson Felix celebrates at the World Athletics Championships in 2022.
    Track-and-field star Allyson Felix wrote a powerful op-ed that helped change Nike’s maternity policy.

    Allyson Felix is the most decorated American track-and-field athlete of all time, with 11 Olympic medals — seven of which are gold — from five consecutive Olympic games, per the Olympics.

    Another of her biggest accomplishments in her career was raising public consciousness about the issues female athletes face when they become pregnant, penning a powerful op-ed in 2019 for The New York Times saying Nike planned to reduce her pay by 70% after giving birth to her first child.

    Her article, in addition to experiences shared by fellow runners Alysia Montaño and Kara Goucher, gained widespread attention and sparked Nike to create a new maternity policy for its athletes.

    Felix has also been outspoken about her birthing experience after having an emergency C-section because of complications with preeclampsia. In 2022, she partnered with Pampers to help combat disparities in Black maternal healthcare.

    She told Business Insider in 2022, “All Black women, all women of color are at risk. It doesn’t matter how great of medical care that you have, or being a professional athlete. I never would’ve imagined that this would be my situation. And I think that that’s what a lot of people think.”

    “When I went through this situation, my eyes were just opened. I wanted to take action, but I think what’s even more incredible is these organizations and companies who are stepping up and have been doing this and been in this space for so long,” she added.

    She retired from the sport in 2022.

    Caitlin Clark

    Caitlin Clark gestures to the crowd after the second round of the NCAA March Madness tournament in 2024.
    Caitlin Clark revolutionized the landscape of women’s college basketball.

    The all-time NCAA leading scorer — and first overall 2024 WNBA Draft pick by the Indiana Fever — is undoubtedly changing the way women’s sports are viewed.

    Her appearance in the 2023 Women’s NCAA March Madness championship game against LSU and its own major star, Angel Reese, was watched by nearly 10 million people, a 103% increase from 2022’s viewership, Nielsen reported.

    Later that year, she helped attract nearly 56,000 people to Kinnick Stadium for an outdoor exhibition game against DePaul University, Just Women’s Sports reported.

    Clark has embraced her role as a leading figure in the sport, telling post-game press after a win against Indiana University in 2024, “I’m all about growing the women’s game and I’m glad I’ve given something that little girls can scream about at the top of their lungs,” the Des Moines Register reported.

    She was named the WNBA Rookie of the Year, having averaged 19.2 points, 8.4 assists, and 5.7 rebounds per game.

    Althea Gibson

    Althea Gibson kisses her trophy for winning the French International Tennis Championships in 1956.
    Althea Gibson broke the color barrier in both tennis and golf.

    Althea Gibson is best known for breaking the color barrier in tennis, but she did so in golf, too.

    In 1950, Gibson became the first Black person to compete at the US National Championships, defeating Barbara Knapp in the first round, the International Tennis Hall of Fame reported. A year later, she also became the first Black player to compete at Wimbledon.

    Throughout her career, Gibson appeared in 19 major finals, winning 11 titles. She won the French International Tennis Championship in 1956, then became the first Black person to win Wimbledon, doing so back-to-back in 1957 and 1958. She also won the US Open those same years. In addition to her five singles titles, Gibson won five titles in women’s doubles and one title in mixed doubles.

    She was the first Black person to be ranked No. 1 in the world in tennis.

    After her tennis career, Gibson transitioned into golf where she became the first Black woman to compete on the women’s professional golf tour in 1963.

    ESPN reported that she played 171 events from 1963 to 1977 and although she never won, her presence was highly influential in creating representation for young Black female athletes.

    Simone Manuel

    Simone Manuel raised her arms and waived to the crowd on the podium after winning gold in the women's 100-meter freestyle at the 2016 Olympics.
    Simone Manuel is the first Black woman to win an individual gold medal in swimming.

    At the 2016 Olympics in Rio, Simone Manuel made history as the first Black woman to win an individual Olympic medal in swimming when she set an Olympic and American record in the 100-meter freestyle at 20 years old.

    She finished Rio with an additional two silver medals and another gold, for a total of four medals.

    She returned to the Olympic stage in 2021, winning the bronze medal in the women’s 4 x 100-meter freestyle relay. In 2024, she helped the same relay team reach silver as well as the women’s 4 x 200-meter freestyle relay team.

    Manuel is known for her activism in swimming, advocating for more diversity and inclusion in the sport.

    Ilona Maher

    Ilona Maher raised her arms in celebration and smiled after winning a bronze medal during the 2024 Olympics.
    Ilona Maher helped US women’s rugby win its first Olympic medal in history.

    US Women’s Rugby made history in Paris when they reached the Olympic podium for the first time with a bronze medal — and the player everyone was talking about was Ilona Maher.

    Maher was a member of the Tokyo Olympics’ squad, where she began to make a name for herself on social media as an influential advocate for body positivity.

    She’s continued her activism on TikTok, building a community of more than 3.5 million followers as she shares glimpses of life interacting with other athletes, comedy, outfits, and advice.

    Dawn Staley

    Dawn Staley, head coach of the South Carolina Gamecocks, posed with the trophy after winning the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament.
    Dawn Staley is the only person to win the Naismith Award as a player and as a coach.

    Though Dawn Staley is now known as the award-winning head coach of the University of South Carolina women’s basketball team, she was a star player, too.

    Staley won three Olympic gold medals, was selected for five WNBA All-Star games, and was inducted to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame.

    As head coach of the Gamecocks, she has won three NCAA Championships, including 2024’s perfect season victory over Caitlin Clark and the Iowa Hawkeyes.

    She is the only person to have won the Naismith Award as a player (1991, 1992) and as a coach (2020, 2022, 2023, 2024).

    The team will be looking to repeat their success during this year’s March Madness tournament.

    Ibtihaj Muhammad

    Ibtihaj Muhammad posed at the LA84 Foundation Summit.
    Ibtihaj Muhammad became the first Muslim American woman to win an Olympic medal in 2016.

    At the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, sabre fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad made history when she became the first Muslim American woman to compete in a hijab and win a medal.

    Muhammad and her teammates won bronze in the women’s sabre event, and she was also recognized as one of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of the year.

    She retired from the sport in 2019.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • 55 vintage photos show what life was like for women in the 1920s

    A woman smiled and held her lipstick and a stencil used to provide the perfect Cupid's Bow in 1925.
    Exaggerated Cupid’s Bows were a popular beauty trend in the 1920s.

    • In the 1920s, some women’s lives changed radically due to the introduction of new rights and jobs.
    • The 19th Amendment was ratified in August 1920, and some women voted in the November 1920 election.
    • Societal changes were reflected in fashion, which incorporated shorter, looser skirts and dresses.

    The 1920s brought huge changes for women. During World War I, they proved they could handle the jobs left by men who’d gone to war; the right to vote helped solidify some women’s new position in society; and the fashion pendulum swung away from constricting corsets and bustles toward shorter, looser dresses and skirts.

    However, despite this period of immense change, American beliefs surrounding race remained firmly rooted in the past. Black, Asian, Latina, and Indigenous women were still subjected to overt racism, violence, and prejudicial lawmaking that hindered — and even barred — their access to the rights and privileges afforded to many white women.

    Before the Great Depression hit, it was also a time of great prosperity, but only for a select few: In 1928, the highest 1% of families earned almost a quarter of all pretax income, the Pew Research Center reported. Thus, the Roaring Twenties were marked by the juxtaposition of the glitz and glamour of Gatsby’s New York City and the harsh realities often overlooked throughout history.

    In honor of Women’s History Month, here are 55 photos that offer a glimpse at what life was like for women in the 1920s.

    The 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote, was passed more than 100 years ago, although it would be many decades before all women could vote.

    Women in the early 1920s sitting around a table that has a "Votes for Women!" banner across it.
    The 19th Amendment was ratified in 1920.

    The women’s rights movement reached a national scale after the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention, in which leaders Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott spoke on the need for women’s suffrage. 

    When the 19th Amendment was ratified in August 1920, it largely benefited white women.

    Voter intimidation and discriminatory policies kept many Black women from the polls. The government also often denied Native American and Asian-American women citizenship, so they were also unable to vote. It wasn’t until the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and voting rights amendments in 1975 that some Black women and other women of color were finally able to cast their ballots.

    The 19th Amendment’s passage was the result of nearly 100 years of protests.

    A suffragette standing next to a National Ballot Box in 1920. Above the ballot box is a sign that reads, "Women of America! If you want to put a vote in in 1920 put a ($0.10, 1.00, 10.00) in now." She also appears to be holding a flag.
    Suffragettes protested for the right to vote.

    Women protested for their right to vote for nearly a century before the amendment was finally passed in 1920.

    Those who protested faced arrest, jail time, and harassment in their efforts to secure women’s rights.

    These were some of the first women to cast their ballots, just a few months after it became legal in 1920.

    Women casting their first votes for president in November 1920, New York City.
    Women cast their first votes for president in November 1920, New York City.

    They voted in the 1920 election for either Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge on the Republican ticket or James Cox and Franklin Delano Roosevelt on the Democratic ticket. Harding won by a landslide and became president in 1921.

    Women in London also protested for their right to vote.

    Labour Party Vice President Susan Lawrence, left, in front of a group of women protesting for the right to vote in London. Another woman holds a large sign that reads, "We want an equal franchise votes for women from 21 years."
    Women rally for the right to vote in London, 1920.

    Women’s suffrage in Great Britain was put into law differently than in the United States, The Independent reported. The country saw two stages of granting women the right to vote: the 1918 declaration of suffrage for women, and then the declaration of full suffrage for women in 1928.

    The 1918 declaration was highly exclusionary, only allowing women over the age of 30 who were married to members of their local government register.

    It was only in 1928 that women were granted equal voting rights to men, allowing women over the age of 21 to cast a ballot.

    Women both supported and protested Prohibition 100 years ago.

    A group of people in a car protesting Prohibition. The car is decorated with a sign that reads, "I'm no camel I want beer!"
    Women supported and protested Prohibition.

    Though the Women’s Christian Temperance Union was behind the movement that sparked Prohibition, there were also women against the alcohol ban.

    Female bootleggers were often far more successful than men at the time, reported “Whiskey Women” author Fred Minnick, because it was illegal for male officers to search women.

    Here, a woman demonstrates how to use a Prohibition-era book, which was made to hide a liquor flask.

    A split image of a woman with a Prohibition era book showing how it hides a liquor flask.
    A woman with a Prohibition-era book that hides a liquor flask.

    In addition to using devices like this, women would hide bottles of liquor in their socks or under their jackets to smuggle alcohol.

    In addition to being excellent bootleggers, some women enjoyed drinking, too.

    A group of four women drinking bottles of liquor in 1925.
    Women drinking liquor in 1925.

    Prohibition lasted nationwide from 1920 to 1933, but that didn’t stop these ladies from enjoying a drink in 1925.

    Women had been working members of society for years.

    Black women in uniform attending the Marcus Garvey rally in Harlem.
    Black women in uniform attend the Marcus Garvey rally in Harlem.

    Georgia Ann Hill Robinson was the first Black female police officer appointed to the Los Angeles Police Department, and possibly the country, in 1916. She worked for the LAPD for 12 years, and fought against segregation and for women’s welfare.

    Many women took jobs as switchboard operators, answering telephones and connecting calls.

    A group of women operating a switchboard in 1925. Another woman stands behind them, watching.
    Switchboard operators, circa 1925.

    Before the job became popular for women, teenage boys worked as the first switchboard operators, History.com reported. However, they reportedly proved to be too rude and unruly, and bosses brought in women instead, believing them to be naturally more polite and soft-spoken.

    Other women worked in manufacturing jobs, like at this tennis-ball factory.

    Workers, one man and five women, carrying trays of freshly manufactured tennis balls.
    Workers carried freshly manufactured tennis balls.

    World War I saw the first time that factory jobs, previously viewed as male positions, were taken over by women in the US.

    This woman also worked in manufacturing, at a milk bottling plant.

    A woman at a milk bottling plant in the 1920s.
    A woman at a milk bottling plant in the 1920s.

    Women began doing all sorts of jobs in the 1920s, per CCSU. They ran drill presses, did welding, operated cranes, used screw machines, and many other jobs that required heavy machinery.

    Factory work was often long and tedious, requiring workers to do the same task all day, every day.

    Women in York, England, weighing and packing Rowntree Fruit Pastilles in 1923. They all wore white dresses.
    These women weighed and packaged Rowntrees Fruit Pastilles.

    These women spent their days weighing and packing candies in York, England.

    Life on the farm was difficult for women, too.

    A woman holding a chicken while sitting on a stool in front of a chicken coop, 1925. Other chickens are seen on the ground.
    Some families in the Midwest produced eggs in addition to fruits and vegetables.

    In the 1920s, farms still didn’t have electricity, plumbing, or heating and cooling, PBS reported. Despite the hardship, families in the Midwest focused on growing fruits and vegetables, while also producing eggs and meat.

    This young woman in 1925 was operating a plow.

    A woman operating a plough in 1925.
    A woman operated a plow in 1925.

    Farmers across the US struggled to make a profit throughout the 1920s as a result of overproduction and the subsequent drop in prices. With farmers unable to pay their debts, “between 1920 and 1932, one in four farms was sold to meet financial obligations,” the Library of Congress reported.

    Though slavery was abolished in 1865, Black women were still not afforded many of the same opportunities as white women.

    Women, men, and children picking cotton in Texas.
    Women and men pick cotton in Texas.

    As pictured above, many Black women in the South picked cotton to make ends meet. 

    A study indicated that two in three Black women from Black landowning families were involved in cotton farming in the 1920s.

    The 1920s were a part of the segregation era in the South, in which Black women faced discrimination at work.

    Black female construction workers in the South holding wheelbarrows of materials.
    Black female construction workers in the South.

    Black women were often barred from working in the same jobs as white women, like these construction workers pictured above.

    Segregation, both de jure and de facto, continued to exist into the 1960s and we can still see its legacies today.

    These women worked in a lumber yard in Louisiana.

    Four Black women holding pieces of lumber at a lumber yard in Louisiana, circa 1925.
    Some women worked in a lumber yard.

    The Louisiana lumber boom lasted from about 1880 to 1925, resulting in 4.3 million acres of trees being cut down, the Louisiana Forestry Association reported.

    Other working women included the Black Cross Nurses, established in 1920 and modeled after the Red Cross.

    Black Cross nurses in a parade through Harlem during the world convention of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
    Black Cross nurses in a parade through Harlem during the world convention of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.

    Henrietta Vinton Davis established the Black Cross Nurses in 1920 as a part of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League. They offered health services and hygiene education to Black members of the community.

    At the time, hardly any nursing programs would admit people of African descent and many health facilities provided unequal care to Black patrons, an issue that persists today especially in maternal health care. The Black Cross Nurses became key figures for civil rights.

    Black women also faced racist acts of violence, like during the Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921.

    A woman rides on the back of truck during the Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921.
    A woman rides on the back of a truck during the Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921.

    In early 1921, the Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma was home to an affluent Black community who ran newspapers, churches, and scores of businesses and was known as the “Black Wall Street.” By June 1, it would largely be burned to the ground in “the single worst incident of racial violence in American history,” per the Oklahoma Historical Society.

    Although the exact details remain lost to history, it’s believed that on May 30, 1921, a Black man named Dick Rowland stepped on the foot of a white woman named Sarah Page when he entered the elevator of the Drexel Building. Page screamed and the town quickly exaggerated their tellings of the incident, leading to an attempted lynching of Rowland that night.

    An altercation at the courthouse led the unsuccessful, angry members of the white mob to riot and attack Black people and their businesses. The Tulsa Historical Society and Museum reported that 35 city blocks were burned down in the attacks, possibly killing as many as 300 people and injuring more than 800.

    In Japan, women were also working in factories. Here, they’re seen protesting unfair working conditions.

    Japanese women holding a demonstration to protest low wages paid to female factory workers.
    Japanese women hold a demonstration to protest low wages paid to female factory workers.

    In 1918 and 1919, there was a surge in protests at textile mills in Japan, where women demanded shorter working hours and wage increases. They were receiving far less money than their male counterparts, and they were doing important work like constructing war uniforms, for which there was huge demand at the time.

    Women began to take cooking positions outside the home.

    Women taking a cooking class in the 1920s; each of them stood by their own stove and wore white coats over their dresses.
    Women at the Soho School of Cookery in London in the 1920s.

    Though women were perceived as cooks, the role was relegated to the home, rather than a restaurant. However, the 1920s began to see women studying to be professional chefs.

    Many women worked as homemakers. Their lives were slowly made easier by new technologies, like the dishwasher.

    A woman demonstrating how to use one of the earliest dishwashers.
    A woman with one of the earliest dishwashers.

    Though the first practical dishwasher was invented in 1886 by Josephine Cochrane, The Independent reported, they did not become popular in homes until the 1920s.

    The introduction of permanent plumbing in homes made machines like dishwashers possible, though they were expensive and only found in the homes of wealthy families.

    Driving afforded women a freedom and mobility they hadn’t before experienced.

    A woman sitting in a car wearing a polka dot dress. A wide-brimmed hat sits on the seat next to her.
    A woman in her car in 1927.

    In 1909, 22-year-old Alice Ramsey (not pictured) became the first woman to drive across the continental United States, in part to prove that women were capable behind the wheel, the Smithsonian reported.

    Women 100 years ago also knew how to have fun.

    Dorothy Kelly, Virginia Hunter, Elaine Griggs, Hazel Brown, and Mary Ka Minsky laughing and sitting on a large block of ice on a golf course in 1920.
    Dorothy Kelly, Virginia Hunter, Elaine Griggs, Hazel Brown, and Mary Ka Minsky laughing and sitting on a large block of ice on a golf course, circa 1920.

    These women are seen cooling down on a block of ice on a hot summer day. Bikinis were not yet popularized, so these outfits were likely the most skin women in the 1920s would be seen showing.

    Dancing was a popular pastime for adults and children alike.

    A group of Black girls smiling and dancing in Harlem, New York City, in 1920. They wore coats and hats.
    A group of girls dancing in Harlem, New York City, circa 1920.

    The 1920s was the first decade to see free and unbridled movement on many dance floors. Dances called the Charleston, the Black Bottom, and the shimmy were all highly popular. 

    Women who went dancing at late-night parties were referred to as “good time girls.”

    One of the most famous women 100 years ago was Josephine Baker, who was known for her singing and dancing.

    Josephine Baker posed sitting down with her leg extended. She wore an elaborate ruffled dress that was on the floor all around her.
    Josephine Baker in the early 1920s.

    The National Women’s History Museum reported that Baker first became known in the US for her Vaudeville shows, but she really became a star when she moved to Paris. Baker’s shows became famous for her African-inspired dance moves, her singing, and her elaborate costumes.

    She was a key figure in the French Resistance during World War II as well as an activist for civil rights in the US. Although she died in 1975, Baker became the first Black woman to be buried in France’s Panthéon, the country’s highest honor, in 2021.

    Actress Mary Pickford led the silent-film era.

    Mary Pickford (front center) and other Warner Brothers' actresses posed for a photo at her tea party in 1928.
    Mary Pickford (front center) was one of the most popular movie stars of her generation.

    The Oscars described Pickford as the definition of a “movie star,” known best for her work throughout the silent film era with movies like “Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm,” “Stella Maris,” “My Best Girl,” and “Sparrows.”

    She was a founding member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and in 1930 was the recipient of the second Oscar for best actress.

    Clara Bow was nicknamed “The It Girl.”

    A photo of Clara Bow resting her head on her hands circa 1928.
    Clara Bow was one of the most popular actresses in Hollywood in the 1920s.

    She starred in the first best picture winner, “Wings,” alongside Charles Rogers and Richard Arlen, and was widely known as a popular movie star throughout the decade.

    You may also recognize her name from Taylor Swift’s 2024 album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” which had a song titled “Clara Bow.”

    Tennis was a popular sport for women.

    Helen Willis playing in the Wimbledon final in 1924.
    Helen Wills playing in the Wimbledon final in 1924.

    Wimbledon opened its famous courts to women in 1884. Here, American Helen Wills competed against Brit Kitty McKane in the 1924 Ladies’ Singles Final.

    Sporting outfits were definitely different from what we know today.

    Kitty McKane and Suzanne Lenglen posed together after their women's singles final at the French National Hard Court Championships in 1925. They wore loose-fitting white shirts and long white skirts to compete. They also each wore thick headbands.
    French tennis champion Suzanne Lenglen, right, was known for her provocative tennis fashions.

    Though modest by today’s standards, French tennis star Suzanne Lenglen, right, was known for her provocative style on display above.

    The International Tennis Hall of Fame reported that Lenglen was first female player to forgo bulky undergarments and was known for wearing tops that displayed her bare arms and silk dresses that were trimmed above her calf. Coupled with painted nails, red lipstick, bobbed hair, a tendency to drink alcohol between sets, and a winning record, Lenglen was “a rare and fascinating champion.”

    Swimsuits were different, too, as seen on these women in the 1924 Miss Coney Island pageant.

    Marcella Miller, Kathryn Ray, and Agnes Leonard at a Miss Coney Island pageant in the 1920s. Ray wore a sash that read, "Miss Coney Island 1925" and Leonard wore a sash that read, "Miss Coney Island 1924."
    Marcella Miller, Kathryn Ray, and Agnes Leonard at a Miss Coney Island pageant in the 1920s.

    The first swimsuits were actually made of wool, as other materials like nylon and elastane weren’t yet invented.

    Not only were their swimsuits different, so were views on tanning.

    A group of men and women on a cruise ship in 1920. Many of the women wore large wide-brimmed hats.
    Women on a cruise ship in 1920.

    It wasn’t until the 1920s that tanning became popular. The Guardian reported that fashion designer Coco Chanel “may have inadvertently” created the trend with a photo showing her stepping off a cruise ship in Cannes after too much sun. The image was in every paper and created a new standard of beauty.

    Exercise was often a group event.

    Wives of the members of the Philadelphia Elks organization working out. The nine women all hung from a bar with their knees raised at a 90 degree angle, while a man stood nearby.
    Wives of the members of the Philadelphia Elks organization work out at the club gym.

    Stretching, rather than vigorous exercise, was viewed as the ideal method for women’s bodies and health, Byrdie reported.

    Stationary bikes and rowing machines were also invented in the 1920s, along with the Vibro-Slim, a machine with a vibrating belt that was meant to reduce belly fat.

    They also participated in exercise fads.

    A woman riding a 1920s mechanical bull while two women stood nearby and watched.
    Women riding a mechanical bull in the 1920s.

    Before the mechanical bull became a fun attraction at a bar, it was invented to train rodeo competitors. In the 1920s, it became a popular exercise fad after women realized it could help tone their abs and strengthen their core.

    They also used very simple rowing machines to work out.

    Helen Chadwick smiling and using a 1920s rowing machine.
    Helen Chadwick used a rowing machine in the 1920s.

    Here, movie star Helen Chadwick used the rowing machine to stay fit. 

    Baseball was a popular sport for men and women. Pictured is Barnard College’s baseball team practicing in 1925.

    Barnard College's baseball team training in 1925 as others watched nearby.
    Barnard College’s baseball team training in 1925.

    With New York Yankees stars like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, it’s no surprise that the sport attracted the attention of both men and women in the city.

    Women would go on to make their mark in baseball in the following decades, with 60 playing in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League during World War II, the National Baseball Hall of Fame reported.

    American women were allowed to compete in swimming at the Olympics for the first time in 1920.

    US Olympic swimmers Aileen Riggin, Gertrude Ederle, and Helen Wainright posed in uniform.
    US Olympic swimmers Aileen Riggin, Gertrude Ederle, and Helen Wainright.

    Women’s swimming was the first aerobic sport accepted by the International Olympic Committee, according to USA Swimming, and was first introduced at the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm.

    Pictured are US Olympic swimmers Aileen Riggin, Gertrude Ederle, and Helen Wainwright.

    Ethelda Bleibtrey won three gold medals at the 1920 Olympics in Antwerp.

    Ethelda Bleibtrey at the 1920 Olympics wearing a Team USA swimsuit.
    Bleibtrey won three gold medals in swimming.

    Bleibtrey won all three women’s swimming races, including the 100-meter freestyle, 4×100-meter relay, and the 300-meter freestyle, per the Olympics.

    Just one year prior, she had been arrested at Manhattan Beach for taking off her stockings before swimming, an act considered “nudity.” However, outrage from her arrest sparked a change in “acceptable” swimwear — women no longer had to wear stockings — and Bleibtrey was not penalized.

    The Harlem Renaissance was a major period for Black literature, art, and music. Poet and critic Jessie R. Fauset was a key figure.

    A photograph of poet and critic Jessie Redmon Fauset in 1920.
    Poet and critic Jessie Redmon Fauset in 1920.

    After graduating from Cornell University with a degree in classical languages in 1905, Fauset spent time as a teacher before turning to writing in 1912.

    Poets.org reported that she wrote poems, essays, and reviews for the NAACP’s magazine, The Crisis, for seven years before becoming literary editor.

    During the 1920s, Fauset introduced the world to legendary writers like Langston Hughes, Claude McKay, and Anne Spencer while also publishing her own novels “There Is Confusion” and “Plum Bum.”

    Jazz music was popularized during the 1920s.

    Joe "King" Oliver and his Creole Jazz Band posing in 1922. The band included: Johnny Dodds, clarinet; Baby Dodds, drums; Honore Dutrey, trombone; Louis Armstrong, second trumpet; King Oliver, lead trumpet; Lil Hardin, piano; and Bill Johnson, banjo.
    Lil Hardin, Louis Armstrong’s wife, played piano for King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band.

    Lil Hardin Armstrong (pictured above) was just one of many women who would influence jazz music from the 1920s on.

    The New York Times reported that Hardin helped her future husband Louis Armstrong become band leader of King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band; she also served as his first manager and was a pianist and frequent co-composer.

    “Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith was a popular blues and jazz singer during the Harlem Renaissance.

    A closeup of Bessie Smith smiling in 1925.
    Bessie Smith was the highest-paid Black entertainer of the time.

    The National Museum of African American History and Culture reported that Smith was mentored by “Mother of the Blues,” Ma Rainey, who taught her how to navigate the music industry and capture an audience’s attention. Smith signed a record deal with Columbia Records in 1923, releasing “Down-hearted Blues,” a major hit.

    Smith became the highest-paid Black entertainer of the time and she recorded with iconic jazz musicians like Sidney Bechet and Louis Armstrong.

    The Great Depression caused Smith’s career to be cut short, and she later died from injuries sustained in a car accident in 1937.

    Beauty standards can be seen through women’s popular fashion at the time.

    A woman in the 1920s shows off the decade's classic fashion, which included a headband, loose dress, and long chain necklace..
    A woman in the 1920s shows off the decade’s classic fashion.

    1920s female fashion was characterized by loose fabrics, lots of fringe, and glamorous jewelry and details. Hair cut short into a bob was also popular, as seen in the woman above.

    Among the wealthy, large brimmed hats with fringe and long pearl necklaces were popular accessories.

    A woman at an Ascot horse race wore a loose, short-sleeve dress, a long necklace, and a ruffled, wide-brimmed hat.
    A woman at an Ascot horse race, circa 1920.

    Long, straight skirts with low waists were the dominant style.

    The loose skirts and dresses were very different from the constricting clothes of the previous decades, and were far more movable and comfortable.

    Flappers and showgirls show another facet of 1920s female beauty.

    The Dolly Sisters on stage in the 1920s. They wore elaborate, detailed costumes and headpieces.
    The Dolly Sisters were German Vaudeville performers.

    Art Deco style and Gatsby-esque outfits were also popular for 1920s women. Showgirls and Vaudeville performers would dress up in decadent velvet and satin dresses, with pearl and gem details throughout.

    Zelda Fitzgerald, wife of author F. Scott Fitzgerald, was a popular flapper.

    Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald posing together in 1926.
    Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald in 1926.

    Zelda was a major influence on Scott’s writing, with the couple drawing lots of public attention throughout the 1920s. A writer and painter, too, Zelda’s first and only novel, “Save Me the Waltz,” was released in 1932.

    Unfortunately, her life was largely cut short after being diagnosed with schizophrenia (now understood as bipolar disorder) and committed to sanatoriums. She died at age 47.

    Fur coats and soft, form-fitting hats were also in style.

    Two women sit at an outdoor café table in Paris in 1920.
    Women at a café in Paris, circa 1920.

    Though they were popularized 100 years ago, there are plenty of vintage outfits like these that are still trendy today.

    But women also got dressed up for fun, as seen through these women and their Halloween costumes.

    Women in the 1920s dressed up for Halloween; one is wearing a witch mask and carrying a broom while the other appears to hold a basket for candy that resembles a cartoon head.
    Women in the 1920s dressed up for Halloween.

    1920s Halloween costumes were more about inspiring fear than dressing up as celebrities and TV characters. Clowns, ghosts, and witches were all highly popular costume choices back then.

    Elizabeth Arden’s products became a key part of 1920s beauty standards.

    Elizabeth Arden in 1922 at the Southampton Fair and Circus.
    Elizabeth Arden in 1922 at the Southampton Fair and Circus.

    Elizabeth Arden helped popularize makeup — once believed to be exclusively for movie stars —for the masses in the early 1920s. Arden started a marketing campaign that helped create the idea that wearing makeup was “appropriate and even proper,” per the Library of Congress.

    By 1925, Arden had salons open around the world in cities like New York, Paris, and London.

    Dark-red lips with an exaggerated cupid’s bow was a popular beauty trend of the time.

    A woman smiled and held her lipstick and a stencil used to provide the perfect Cupid's Bow in 1925.
    Exaggerated Cupid’s Bows were a popular beauty trend in the 1920s.

    Beauty companies even made stencils, like the one above, to help women achieve the perfect Cupid’s Bow.

    Nail polish became popular, too.

    A'Lelia Walker, daughter of Madame C.J. Walker, getting her nails done in the 1920s.
    A’Leila Walker, daughter of Madame C.J. Walker, got her nails done at one of her mother’s beauty shops in the 1920s.

    Though the first nail salon in the US was opened in the late 1870s, nail polish began to really take off in the 1920s, Byrdie reported, thanks to the work of brands like Cutex and what would later become known as Revlon.

    Wedding dresses from the 1920s were inspired by the modern, shorter style.

    Captain W Howard Green and Irene Harman were married in London in 1928. Harman wore a mid-length white gown with a long veil. Her bridesmaids are seen in the background in matching dresses.
    Captain W Howard Green and Irene Harman’s wedding in London, 1928.

    Wedding dresses followed the 1920s style: They were short, like the flapper dresses, with form-fitting bucket hats.

    These brides and grooms gathered to get married on Christmas Day, which used to be a tradition.

    A large group of brides and grooms at St. George Church on Christmas in 1920.
    Brides and grooms gathered in the St. George Church on Christmas Day in 1920.

    It used to be popular to have weddings on Christmas Day in Britain, as churches would hold nuptials for brides and grooms every year. It was often the only time that working class couples could get married, as they’d have Christmas and Boxing Day off.

    Another key part of American society was the impact of immigration. Shown below are Japanese “picture brides” who immigrated to the US in 1920 to marry American men.

    Japanese picture brides lined up at Angel Island in 1920.
    Japanese picture brides faced many hardships in the US.

    The 1907 Gentlemen’s Agreement limited immigration from Japan to the US, but it had an exception that Japanese wives of current American residents could enter the country. This exception started a system where men would choose Japanese wives based on their pictures alone.

    These “picture brides” immigrated between 1907 and 1924, and faced many hardships. Many of their husbands were older and poorer than the women anticipated, and the wives faced spousal abuse in addition to societal racism fueled by anti-Asian sentiments, Women & the American Story reported.

    The 1924 Immigration Act ended the practice, as it barred any immigrant “who by virtue of race or nationality was ineligible for citizenship,” per the US State Department. People of Asian descent were denied full citizenship based on laws dating from 1790 and 1870.

     

    Immigration policies of the 1920s heavily favored migrants from northern Europe.

    A group of immigrant women doing embroidery on Ellis Island in 1920.
    Immigrant women doing embroidery on Ellis Island in 1920.

    In 2015, the Pew Research Center reported that in the 1920s, the US government enacted quotas reducing the number of immigrants granted entry. The first quota on immigration was passed in 1921 and allowed only 350,000 total immigrants; this was decreased to 165,000 in 1924. Nationality quotas were also imposed on Europeans.

    The quotas were largely fueled by xenophobic fears toward Southern and Eastern European migrants, who’d come to the US during the second wave of migration from 1890-1919.

    Meanwhile, immigration from most countries in Asia was already prohibited.

    Prior to the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act, passed in 1965, 70% of the quota visas available belonged to residents of Ireland, Germany, and the UK, the Pew Research Center reported.

    Indigenous women throughout the US were subject to racist violence and prejudicial laws.

    A portrait of an Osage woman and her three children circa 1918-1922.
    Portrait of an Osage woman and her children circa 1918-1922.

    Women of the Osage Nation were among those targeted and killed by William K. Hale and his accomplices in the early 1920s.

    The Osage Nation reported that Hale and his associates are believed to be connected to more than 20 killings, though there were more than 60 murders total from 1920 to 1925. The killings were motivated by Hale’s desire to inherit money held by the Osage people from the oil boom.

    The tragedy was the subject of Martin Scorsese’s Oscar-nominated film “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

    Read the original article on Business Insider