Biographies of women from parks in Washington, Oregon Idaho and far western Montana
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San Juan Island National Historical Park
Article 1: Shirley Williams
Pacific Northwest Indigenous activist Shirley Williams has been a force in using the ancestral homelands of the San Juan Island National Historical Park as a site for community healing through preservation of the Straits Salish culture. Read more
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Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area
Article 2: Christina McDonald McKenzie Williams
Christina McDonald McKenzie Williams was a multi-ethnic and multi-lingual fur trader, interpreter, rancher, and businesswoman who gained skills growing up in what is now the Lake Roosevelt Recreation Area that served her for a lifetime. She was born on September 20, 1847 to Angus McDonald, a Scottish fur trapper, and Catherine Baptiste, a Nez Perce woman who was related to the chief Eagle-of-the-Light. Read more
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Nez Perce National Historical Park
Article 3: Ida Blackeagle
Ida Blackeagle was a Cultural Demonstrator at the Nez Perce National Historical Park who was instrumental to the revitalization of Nimíipuu cornhusk weaving in the mid-twentieth century. Her efforts showcasing the craft and mentoring the next generations of Nimíipuu weavers has preserved this art form, which uses dried and folded husks to create baskets and other vessels, traditionally used for storing food. Read more
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Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument
Article 4: Julie A. Meachen
Julie A. Meachen is a pathbreaking vertebrate paleontologist and morphologist who studies mammalian carnivores and megafauna from the late Pleistocene period (10,000 years ago) to the present day. Read more
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Minidoka National Historic Site
Article 5: Kimiko Kaye Tambara
Journalist and activist Kimiko “Kimi” Tambara was born in 1919, in Washington state to Seichiro and Kino Tambara, both of whom were first-generation Japanese immigrants. Read more
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Oregon Caves National Monument & Preserve
Article 6: Agnes Baker-Pilgrim
Before her death on November 27, 2019 at the age of 95, Agnes Baker-Pilgrim was the oldest living member of the Takelma Tribe.1 Better known as Grandma Aggie, Baker-Pilgrim was deeply committed to her role as a tribal elder. Read more
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City Of Rocks National Reserve
Article 7: Margaret Frink
Margaret Frink, who joined the Californian Gold Rush in the mid-nineteenth century, provides a glimpse of what life was like on the journey west through her meticulously kept diary. Read more
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John Day Fossil Beds National Monument
Article 8: Elizabeth Cant
Elizabeth Cant was part of a prominent ranching family who from 1918 to 1973 lived in the ranch house that currently sits on the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. Drawing on her farming and domestic skills, she journeyed thousands of miles to create a sustainable life for herself and her family. Read more
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Crater Lake National Park
Article 9: Elizabeth L. Horn
For nearly six decades Elizabeth L. Horn, a plant ecologist, has been connected to Crater Lake National Park. She began what she called her “long love affair with this fascinating landscape” during the 1960s. Read more
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Article 10: Annie Hall Strong
The life of Annie Hall Strong, a white woman who spent decades in Seattle before pursuing wealth in Alaska with her husband, highlights the connection between those two places during the Klondike Gold Rush. Read more
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Manhattan Project National Historical Park
Article 11: Karen Dorn Steele
Karen Dorn Steele is an environmental journalist known for breaking the story of nuclear experiments causing potential public health damage at the Hanford Nuclear Site. Read more
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Manhattan Project National Historical Park
Article 12: Leona Woods Marshall Libby
Dr. Leona Woods Marshall Libby was the only female member of the team that built the world’s first nuclear reactor—the Chicago Pile—and the only woman present when the reactor went critical. Read more
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North Cascades National Park
Article 13: Lucinda J. Davis
The life of Lucinda J. Davis and her family is intertwined with the North Cascades region. Her love of the wilderness and desire for independence drew her to the region in the late nineteenth century. Read more
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North Cascades National Park
Article 14: Irene, Harriet and Elizabeth Joy Buckner
Sisters Irene, Harriet, and Elizabeth Joy Bucker grew up on a family homestead in the Stehekin Valley in Chelan County, Washington, which became part of the Lake Chelan National Recreation Area. Their early lives at the northern end of Lake Chelan exemplify the family labor system essential to rural homesteads in the first part of the twentieth century. Read more
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Whitman Mission National Historic Site
Article 15: Maria Keawea Maki
Maria Keawea Maki was among the Native Hawaiians who participated in nineteenth-century Anglo-led missionary efforts in Oregon Territory. Read more
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Article 16: Nez Perce Women and the War of 1877
In the face of tremendous loss and suffering, Nez Perce women demonstrated resilience during the Nez Perce War of 1877. After the Battle of Big Hole, as the Nez Perce fled their homes and embarked on the Lolo Trail to reach the reservation in Montana, it was the women of the tribe who kept their people strong. Read more
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Fort Vancouver National Historic Site
Article 17: Catherine O'Byrne
Catherine O’Byrne made her way halfway across the world to find her home, like 2 million other Irish women from 1850-1900. Escaping the massive death tolls of the Great Famine and dire prospects, young women were like Catherine had to support themselves. Read more
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Article 18: Wetxuwiis
Wetxuwiis, a Nez Perce woman, played a significant diplomatic role that led to the opening of trade with white settlers and provided the Corps of Discovery with critical information to help them reach the Columbia River and the Pacific coast, the location of the Lewis and Clark National Historical Park. Read more
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Mount Rainier National Park
Article 19: Anna Louise Strong
Anna Louise Strong, a prolific writer and journalist, brought socialist politics to the mountains when she co-founded Cooperative Campers of the Pacific Northwest in 1916. As the outdoor club’s first president, Strong strove to make Mount Rainier National Park accessible to Seattle’s working class by providing affordable transportation, lodgings, food, and supplies to campers. Read more