| Name | Year Issued | Contribution |  | 
|---|
| Queen Isabella of Spain | 1893 | Her patronage of Christopher Columbus made his trips to the New World possible. |  | 
| Martha Washington | 1902 | First First Lady of the United States. |  | 
| Pocahontas | 1907 | The Powhatan princess who saved the life of Captain John Smith. |  | 
| Molly Pitcher | 1928 | Mary Hayes McCauley earned the name Molly Pitcher by carrying water to the men in the battle of Monmouth in 1778. |  | 
| Eleanor Roosevelt | 1930, 1984, 1998 | American diplomat, writer, social reformer, and First Lady to Franklin D. Roosevelt. |  | 
| Susan B. Anthony | 1936, 1955 | Feminist who spent more than 50 years fighting for women's rights. |  | 
| Virginia Dare | 1937 | First European child born on American soil, in 1587. |  | 
| Louisa May Alcott | 1940 | American author famous for her books Little Women and Little Men. |  | 
| Frances E. Willard | 1940 | Educator, reformer, lecturer, and women's suffrage supporter. |  | 
| Jane Addams | 1940 | Founder of Hull House in Chicago, a social welfare center. |  | 
| Clara Barton | 1948 | Founded the American Red Cross. |  | 
| Juliette Gordon Low | 1948 | Founded the Girl Scouts of America. |  | 
| Moina Michael | 1948 | Initiated the Veterans of Foreign Wars fundraising drive, selling red poppies in 1915. |  | 
| Betsy Ross | 1952 | America's most famous flagmaker. |  | 
| Sacajawea | 1954 | Shoshone guide who led the Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804. |  | 
| Amelia Earhart | 1963 | First woman to fly solo, nonstop across the Atlantic Ocean. |  | 
| Mary Cassatt | 1966, 1988 | American painter best known for her works of mothers and children. | | ![Mary Cassatt Commemorative Stamp]() (Painting by Mary Cassatt) | 
 | 
| Lucy Stone | 1968 | Nineteenth century abolitionist and women's rights leader. |  | 
| Grandma Moses | 1969 | Anna Mary Robertson Moses took up painting at the age of 76. She continued to paint until her death at age 101. | | ![Grandma Moses Commemorative Stamp]() (Painting by Grandma Moses) | 
 | 
| Emily Dickinson | 1971 | American poet who wrote more than 1,700 poems. |  | 
| Willa Cather | 1973 | Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist. |  | 
| Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell | 1973 | First woman physician in the U.S. |  | 
| Sybil Ludington | 1975 | Sixteen-year-old Revolutionary War hero. |  | 
| Clara Maass | 1976 | Twenty-five-year-old U.S. Army nurse who advanced medical science when she volunteered to be bitten by a mosquito carrying yellow fever. |  | 
| Harriet Tubman | 1978 | Leader of the Underground Railroad, which brought slaves to freedom. |  | 
| Emily Bissell | 1980 | Leader in the fight against tuberculosis who introduced Christmas seals in the United States. |  | 
| Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan | 1980 | Famous student who overcame tremendous handicaps and her extraordinary teacher. |  | 
| Dolley Madison | 1980 | First Lady who saved White House treasures during the capture of the capital by the British in 1814. |  | 
| Frances Perkins | 1980 | First woman member of the presidential Cabinet (Secretary of Labor) appointed by F.D. Roosevelt. |  | 
| Edith Wharton | 1980 | Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist known for her novels Ethan Frome and The Age of Innocence. |  | 
| Rachel Carson | 1981 | The publication of her book Silent Spring in 1961 touched off a major controversy over the effects of pesticide. |  | 
| Edna St. Vincent Millay | 1981 | American poet whose work was first published when she was just 14 years old. |  | 
| Mildred (Babe) Didrikson Zaharias | 1981 | One of the greatest athletes of the twentieth century. She excelled in track, golf, baseball, and basketball. |  | 
| Dr. Mary Walker | 1982 | Devoted herself to the care and treatment of the sick and wounded during the Civil War. |  | 
| Dorothea Dix | 1983 | Nineteenth-century crusader for the poor and mentally handicapped. |  | 
| Pearl S. Buck | 1983 | Author of more than 100 books, she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for The Good Earth. |  | 
| Lillian M. Gilbreth | 1984 | Engineering pioneer who analyzed how tasks are done, hoping to increase the efficiency of workers. |  | 
| Abigail Adams | 1985 | First Lady to John Adams, she influenced American politics through her letters to her husband. |  | 
| Mary McLeod Bethune | 1985 | Educator and social activist who founded the Daytona Educational and Industrial Training School for Negro Girls, currently known as Bethune-Cookman College. |  | 
| Belva Ann Lockwood | 1986 | First woman candidate for president. |  | 
| Margaret Mitchell | 1986 | Pulitzer Prize-winning author best known for Gone with the Wind. |  | 
| Sojourner Truth | 1986 | Born Isabella Baumfree, she was the first black woman to speak publicly against slavery. |  | 
| Julia Ward Howe | 1987 | Composer of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” |  | 
| Mary Lyon | 1987 | Education pioneer who founded Mount Holyoke College. |  | 
| Helene Madison | 1990 | A gold medalist in the 1932 Olympic Games in swimming. |  | 
| Marianne Moore | 1990 | Poet who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1951 for her Collected Poems. |  | 
| Ida Wells | 1990 | Civil rights activist who cofounded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. |  | 
| Hazel Wightman | 1990 | Olympic gold medalist credited with doing more to build American and international women's tennis than any other player. |  | 
| Fanny Brice | 1991 | Singer and comedienne who created the “Baby Snooks” radio character. |  | 
| Harriet Quimby | 1991 | First American woman pilot to fly the English Channel. |  | 
| Dorothy Parker | 1992 | Poet and short story writer. |  | 
| Patsy Cline | 1993 | Popular American country singer. |  | 
| Grace Kelly | 1993 | American film actress. |  | 
| Dinah Washington | 1993 | “Queen of the Blues.” |  | 
| Clara Bow, ZaSu Pitts, Theda Bara | 1994 | Silent film actresses. |  | 
| Nellie Cashman | 1994 | The “Angel of Tombstone,” an anti-violence advocate who raised orphans and campaigned against public hanging. |  | 
| Ethel Waters, Bessie Smith,
 Billie Holiday,
 Mildred Bailey,
 Ethel Merman
 | 1994 | Famous American singers. |  | 
| Annie Oakley | 1994 | American sharpshooter. |  | 
| Virginia Apgar | 1994 | Doctor who developed a newborn assessment method. |  | 
| Ruth Benedict | 1995 | American anthropologist. |  | 
| Mary Chesnut, Phoebe Pember | 1995 | Heroic Confederate women. | 
 | 
| Bessie Coleman | 1995 | First woman to earn an international pilot's license. |  | 
| Alice Hamilton | 1995 | Pioneer in industrial medicine. |  | 
| Marilyn Monroe | 1995 | American film actor. |  | 
| Alice Paul | 1995 | Founder of National Women's Party and author of the Equal Rights Amendment. |  | 
| Jacqueline Cochran | 1996 | Pioneer pilot who had more than 200 aviation records, firsts, and awards. She was the first woman to break the sound barrier. |  | 
| Georgia O'Keeffe | 1996 | Abstract American painter. Her most famous and popular works are of huge flowers. | | ![Georgia O'Keeffe Commemorative Stamp]() (Painting by Georgia O'Keeffe) | 
 | 
| Dorothy Fields | 1997 | Popular song writer of the 1920s and 1930s. She wrote the words for “On the Sunny Side of the Street.” |  | 
| Lily Pons, Rosa Ponselle
 | 1997 | Opera singers. |  | 
| Women in Military Service | 1997 | This stamp honored the nearly 2 million women have have served and are serving in the U.S. armed forces. |  | 
| Mary Breckinridge | 1998 | Founder of the Frontier Nursing Service. |  | 
| Mahalia Jackson, Roberta Martin,
 Sister Rosetta Tharpe,
 Clara Ward
 | 1998 | Gospel singers. |  | 
| Margaret Mead | 1998 | Famous anthropologist who studied child rearing, personality, and culture, mainly in the South Pacific. |  | 
| Madame C. J. Walker | 1998 | African American who became one of the wealthiest women in the 1910s by developing and selling hair care products. |  | 
| Ayn Rand | 1999 | Author of the novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. |  | 
| Patricia Roberts Harris | 2000 | Lawyer and political adviser; in 1977 she became the first African American woman named to a presidential cabinet. |  | 
| Louise Nevelson | 2000 | Twentieth-century American sculptor who worked with wood, metals, and found objects. | 
 | ![Louise Nevelson Commemorative Stamp]() (Details of Sculptures by Louise Nevelson) | 
 | 
| Hattie Wyatt Caraway | 2001 | First woman elected to U.S. Senate. |  | 
| Rose O'Neill | 2001 | American illustrator. | | ![Rose O'Neill Commemorative Stamp]() (Painting by Rose O'Neill) | 
 | 
| Lucille Ball | 2001 | Famed American comedienne and actress. |  | 
| Frida Kahlo | 2001 | Influential Mexican artist. |  | 
| Nellie Bly, Marguerite Higgins, Ethel Payne, Ida Tarbell | 2002 | Journalists |  | 
| Zora Neale Hurston | 2003 | African American novelist in the Harlem Renaissance |  | 
| Audrey Hepburn | 2003 | Film actress and goodwill ambassador for UNICEF |  | 
| Mary Cassatt | 2003 | American artist known for her portraits of motherhood |  | 
| Agnes de Mille, Martha Graham | 2004 | Choreographers |  | 
| Wilma Rudolph | 2004 | Track and field star |  | 
| Marian Anderson | 2005 | Opera singer who was the first African-American to sing at the Metropolitan Opera |  | 
| Greta Garbo | 2005 | Actress of the silver screen |  | 
| Hattie McDaniel | 2006 | Singer and actress who was the first African-American to win an Oscar |  | 
| Frances E. Willis | 2006 | Diplomat |  | 
| Judy Garland | 2006 | Actress and singer, star of The Wizard of Oz |  | 
| Ella Fitzgerald | 2007 | Jazz singer |  | 
| Gerty Cori | 2008 | biochemist | ![Gerty Cori]() | 
| Bette Davis | 2008 | actress |  | 
| Martha Gellhorn | 2008 | journalist who covered the Spanish Civil War, World War II, and the Vietnam War |  | 
| Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings | 2008 | Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Yearling |  | 
 | Mary Eliza Church Terrell | 2009 | civil rights and women's rights activist |  | 
 | Mary White Ovington | 2009 | civil rights activist |  | 
 | Daisy Gatson Bates | 2009 | civil rights activist |  | 
 | Fannie Lou Hamer | 2009 | civil rights activist |  | 
 | Ella Baker | 2009 | civil rights activist |  | 
 | Ruby Hurley | 2009 | civil rights activist |  | 
 | Mary Lasker | 2009 | health activist and philanthropist |  | 
 | Anna Cooper | 2009 | African-American scholar |  | 
 | Lucille Ball | 2009 | actress |  | 
 | Vivien Vance | 2009 | actress |  | 
 | Dinah Shore | 2009 | entertainer |  | 
 | Fran Allison | 2009 | actress |  | 
 | Gracie Allen | 2009 | entertainer |  | 
 | Harriet Nelson | 2009 | actress |  | 
 | Katharine Hepburn | 2010 | entertainer |  | 
 | Kate Smith | 2010 | singer |  | 
 | Mother Teresa | 2010 | religious figure |  | 
 | Julia de Burgos | 2010 | poet |  | 
 | Carmen Miranda | 2011 | Latin music legend |  | 
 | Selena | 2011 | Latin music legend |  | 
 | Celia Cruz | 2011 | Latin music legend |  | 
 | Oveta Culp Hobby | 2011 | first secretary of the US Department of Health, Education and Welfare, first commanding officer of the Women's Army Corps |  | 
 | Helen Hayes | 2011 | actor |  | 
 | Maria Goeppert Mayer | 2011 | scientist |  | 
 | Greta von Nessen | 2011 | industrial designer |  | 
 | Barbara Jordan | 2011 | American politician and a leader of the Civil Rights movement |  | 
 | Elizabeth Bishop | 2012 | poet |  | 
 | Gwendolyn Brooks | 2012 | poet |  | 
 | Denise Levertov | 2012 | poet |  | 
 | Sylvia Plath | 2012 | poet |  | 
 | Edith Piaf | 2012 | singer |  | 
 | Isadora Duncan | 2012 | choreographer |  | 
 | Katherine Dunham | 2012 | choreographer |  | 
 | Lady Bird Johnson | 2012 | First Lady |  | 
 | Rosa Parks | 2013 | Civil Rights activist |  |