Biographies of women in parks from southern California, southern Nevada, and northwest Arizona
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Cabrillo National Monument
Article 1: Maria Arcadia Israel
María Arcadia Alipás Israel’s experiences embody the nature of the work at the old Point Loma Lighthouse during the initial decades of California statehood. She lived and worked in the lighthouse for 18 years, for a time as assistant lighthouse keeper, and her presence is still evident at the site today through displays of her craftwork. Read more
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Lake Mead National Recreation Area
Article 2: Erma Ouida Godbey
Erma Ouida Godbey’s life exemplifies women’s experiences of and contributions to the Depression-era origins of Lake Mead and urban Nevada. Read more
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Castle Mountains National Monument
Article 3: Maite Arce
Maite Arce is a nonprofit leader and activist who has spearheaded environmental justice and equity, as well as encouraged Latinx communities to enjoy outdoor activities and advocate for conservation of the natural world. Read more
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Mojave National Preserve
Article 4: Mary Beal
Botanist, photographer, and writer Mary Beal often took people by surprise when they came across her all alone in the Mojave Desert. Read more
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Joshua Tree National Park
Article 5: Frances Lawton Keys
Frances Lawton Keys was part of a wave of Anglo pioneers who came to the arid Southern California desert in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, patching together a variety of ventures on public domain land. Read more
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Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area
Article 6: Alice Ballard
Alice Ballard was the youngest of seven children born to John and Amanda Ballard, the first African Americans to own a home above the Malibu coastline. She was born in 1870 in Agoura Hills and raised in the nearby Santa Monica Mountains. Read more
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Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument
Article 7: Margaret Lyneis
Margaret Lyneis was one of the few women present at the Tule Springs Fossil Beds “Big Dig” from 1962 to 1963, which aimed to test whether humans interacted with Late Pleistocene animals at this site as well as possible associations of Pleistocene animal fossils with charcoal and tools. Read more
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Death Valley National Park
Article 8: Petra “Maggie Moore” Romero
Petra Romero was born in Mexico around 1838 and joined the global migration to the North American West. Re-naming herself “Maggie Moore,” she became the owner and operator of a dance hall in Death Valley called Waterfall Dance House or “Madam Moore’s.” Read more